Yup
3(x+y)
Yes, since the expression contains more than one variable, then 2x+5y+2 is a polynomial.
(2x - 1)(2x + 3)
It is: 2x(2x+11)
(2x - 9)(2x - 9)
6x2 + 11x + 3 = 6x2 + 9x + 2x + 3 = 3x(2x + 3) + 1(2x + 3) = (2x + 3)(3x + 1)
3(x+y)
A fifth degree polynomial.
It is 6x(2x+5) when factored
2x2+5x+3 = (2x+3)(x+1) when factored
Yes, since the expression contains more than one variable, then 2x+5y+2 is a polynomial.
(2x - 1)(2x + 3)
It is: 2x(2x+11)
Take out the common factor, 3: 3x + 6 = 3(x + 2).
2x^3 - 3x^2 + 4x - 3
No. It factors to (11x - 13)(2x - 3)
yes, and it is 14x