Yes. Before using the polynomial for any productive purpose, it would have to be cleaned up and simplified. In that process, the +3x4 and -3x4 would go away, and the highest-order term remaining would be the 4x3.
no
The numerical coefficient of it is 2 .
I does not so the question is misguided.
It's a third-degree polynomial with four terms. The number it represents completely depends on the value of 'x', and even that doesn't tell you much, because if 'x' changes, then the value of the whole expression also changes, in a flash.
12 why: 3x4=12 4x3=12 6x2=12
True.3x^4 + 4x^3 - 3x^4 + 5x + 1= 4x^3 + 5x + 1
The "degree" is the highest power - in this case, the 3 in 4x3 (4 times to the third power).
Yes, 4x3 or 3x4 does equal 12.
no
1x12, 2x6, 3x4, 4x3, 6x2 1x12 1x12, 2x6, 3x4, 4x3, 6x2 1x12
The numerical coefficient of it is 2 .
This polynomial doesn't factor. The only thing you can do is take out parts of some terms, e.g. 2(2x3 + 10x2 + x) - 3.
I does not so the question is misguided.
It's a third-degree polynomial with four terms. The number it represents completely depends on the value of 'x', and even that doesn't tell you much, because if 'x' changes, then the value of the whole expression also changes, in a flash.
the an is : 96 6+2= 8 4x3= 12 8x12 = 96
12 why: 3x4=12 4x3=12 6x2=12
(4x3)+2 = 14