thomas harriet
No, they may also be found in expressions.
If it has an inequality sign, for example "less than", it is an inequality. If it doesn't have that, it is an expression.
They are: > means greater than and < means less than
An equation is a statement with symbols, that includes the equal sign. Examples: y = 5 5z + 3 = 10 An inequality is similar, but instead of the equal sign, it has a less-than, greater-than, less-than-or-equal, or greater-than-or-equal sign. Examples: 5x + 3 > 10 x < 15
"<", ">" or "≠"
"≠" is not equals.
"≠" is not equals.
The graph of an inequality is a region, not a line.
thomas harriet
They are: <, ≤, ≠, ≥ and >
june young kim sucks balls
No, they may also be found in expressions.
There is no inequality that can be seen in the question. Please resubmit your question spelling out the symbols as "plus", "minus", "equals", "squared", etc.
If it has an inequality sign, for example "less than", it is an inequality. If it doesn't have that, it is an expression.
Depending on the comparison operator used, that's either an equation, or an inequality.
Linear inequalities in one variable