The degree of a polynomial is the highest exponent on any independent variable in the polynomial.
The Degree (for a polynomial with one variable) is the largest exponent of that variable.
The degree of a polynomial is the highest exponent in the polynomial.
The degree of a polynomial is equal to the highest degree of its terms. In the case that there is no exponent, the degree is 1. If there is no variable, the degree is 0.
the degree of polynomial is determined by the highest exponent its variable has.
The degree of a polynomial is the highest exponent on any independent variable in the polynomial.
That varies from polynomial to polynomial. Whatever the highest exponent is is called the "degree", so a quadratic like x2 + 2x + 8 has degree 2.
The Degree (for a polynomial with one variable) is the largest exponent of that variable.
The degree of a polynomial is the highest exponent in the polynomial.
The degree of a polynomial refers to the largest exponent in the function for that polynomial. A degree 3 polynomial will have 3 as the largest exponent, but may also have smaller exponents. Both x^3 and x^3-x²+x-1 are degree three polynomials since the largest exponent is 4. The polynomial x^4+x^3 would not be degree three however because even though there is an exponent of 3, there is a higher exponent also present (in this case, 4).
The Degree (for a polynomial with one variable, like x) is the largest exponent of that variable.
The degree of a polynomial is equal to the highest degree of its terms. In the case that there is no exponent, the degree is 1. If there is no variable, the degree is 0.
The greatest.
the degree of polynomial is determined by the highest exponent its variable has.
Ninth degree. Nine is the highest exponent.
the largest exponent of a polynomial is 2 good luck on NovaNet peoples
Not necessarily. If the exponent is not an integer then it is not a polynomial.