Yes (x+3(x+3)
Yes; the factored form would be (9c+4)(9c+4) or just (9c+4)2 Since the two factors are the same, the beginning trinomial 81c2+72c+16 is a perfect square trinomial
It's a second degree trinomial expression in x. It's a perfect square, being the square of (x-2).
The given quadratic expression can not be factored as a perfect square.
Yes.
Yes (x+3(x+3)
Yes; the factored form would be (9c+4)(9c+4) or just (9c+4)2 Since the two factors are the same, the beginning trinomial 81c2+72c+16 is a perfect square trinomial
No.
It's a second degree trinomial expression in x. It's a perfect square, being the square of (x-2).
The given quadratic expression can not be factored as a perfect square.
false!
Yes.
True
Yes because if x2-14x+49 then it is (x-7)(x-7) when factored
Factors are (7y - 3)(7y - 2) so it's not a perfect square.
64
Yes. (Y+5)2