I'm not sure it's possible to write a verbal phrase, as verbal phrases, by definition, are spoken. There's a chance you want this written down. 3(n + 7) < 16
Oh, dude, N number of times just means doing something N times. Like, if you're told to push a button N number of times, you just gotta push it that many times. It's like, not rocket science or anything, just a fancy way of saying "do it N times."
This would usually be written as:5n 5x 5a etc., i.e., 5, immediately followed by the desired variable.
3x5 ÷ 7y4
Let's call the number XTwice the number would be 2XFour times the same number would be 4XThe sum of these two is 2X + 4X = 6XThe answer is therefore six times the number.
An unknown number x times infinity would be infinity.
The phrase '8 times a number n' just means '8 times n', which can be modeled as 8 x n or 8n.
Let N represent the 'number'. It looks like the first phrase would be expressed as 2(N + 5) which expands to 2N + 10, while the second expression would be 2N + 5, which is not the same.Notice that the first one is 2 times the sum, while the second is 2 times a number.
twenty four times a number and add 19
It is "a squared minus eighteen b".
Four times a variable, named m, multiplied by itself four times. Technically (or pedantically) it is multiplied three times but that is one of the oddities of verbal expressions.
That verbal expression would read: 3(x+y)^2 + 5(2x -y) ^2 means 'squared' in the above example.
one is spoken - verbal and the other is non spoken - non verbal, so a phonecall would be verbal communication and a letter would be non verbal communication
For example you have w-1 a verbal expression for that algebraic expressionwould be a number decreased by 1. Another example is x+4 would be 4 more than a number. 5c is the product of 5 and a number. h/8 is a number divided by 8.
Let x represent the number. 2 times the number would be 2x, and 5 times the number would be 5x. The sum of the two would be 2X + 5x = 7x
You wouldn't italicize the entire phrase, no..You would italicize "New York Times" but not Bestseller.For example: "...in the New York Times Bestseller by..."
Oh, dude, N number of times just means doing something N times. Like, if you're told to push a button N number of times, you just gotta push it that many times. It's like, not rocket science or anything, just a fancy way of saying "do it N times."
the answer is three to a number minus one