leave them for last, so when you combine all like terms you can solve for that variable exponent. I personally hated Algebra, good luck!
You plug in what the variable is equal to for that variable then you will be able to finish the problem
If you don't know something in a math equation you can replace it with a variable and then solve it algebraically.
You use variable in math problems to help you solve the answer. For example, you could do 50+50=a. The (a) would be the variable. Or for that same problem you could do 50+y=100. Then the (y) would be the variable.
That is the correct spelling of "exponent" (an advocate, or the numerical power to which a number or variable is raised)
Depends on the problem.
Solve the problem using the + sign for the variable. Then solve the problem using the - sign for the variable. Report your answer as the answer that you got using + or the answer that you got using -.
leave them for last, so when you combine all like terms you can solve for that variable exponent. I personally hated Algebra, good luck!
You plug in what the variable is equal to for that variable then you will be able to finish the problem
Exponent is repeated multiplication
Get the variable by itselfWell my name is george, and thanks to intergers you can easily solve this problem correctly.
the variable's exponent
No. An expression can have a variable exponent (for instance, 2 to the power x, or x to the power y), but that is no longer a polynomial.
it is the number you would use to solve the problem
Whenever you see a variable (letter) without any exponent, it's exponent is 1.
If you don't know something in a math equation you can replace it with a variable and then solve it algebraically.
You use variable in math problems to help you solve the answer. For example, you could do 50+50=a. The (a) would be the variable. Or for that same problem you could do 50+y=100. Then the (y) would be the variable.