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Yes, x times x equals x squared.
Well, honey, 1 times x squared is just x squared. It's like asking how many slices of cake you have when you only have one whole cake - you still have one cake, just like you still have x squared. Math is a piece of cake, darling!
The answer is 1. sin^2 x cos^2/sin^2 x 1/cos^2 cos^2 will be cancelled =1 sin^2 also will be cancelled=1 1/1 = 1
x[x+1] squared Simplified is, to my knowledge, x squared plus ( x + 1) squared
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32 x 1 = 9
Yes, x times x equals x squared.
That can be true when "x" and "y" are both zero, or both 1.
The answer is 1. sin^2 x cos^2/sin^2 x 1/cos^2 cos^2 will be cancelled =1 sin^2 also will be cancelled=1 1/1 = 1
If we are assuming that this 4 multiplied by 1 times x times x, then the answer will be 4x2. You can word this as 4 times x squared.
To find the product of x squared and 2x squared, you multiply the coefficients (2 and 1) to get 2, and then add the exponents of x (2 and 2) to get x to the power of 4. Therefore, x squared times 2x squared is equal to 2x^4.
x[x+1] squared Simplified is, to my knowledge, x squared plus ( x + 1) squared
16 to the 4th power, or 16 x 16 x 16 x 16 = 65,536
i think the answer is 1 X2+2xX-1 X=1 x times x = 1 plus (X times x) = 1 1+1 equals 2 minus one = 1Whoever above is, is wrong. the actual answer is X^(2)+2X-1: The part showing '^(2)' means to the power of two or squared on a computer.
I believe this is one: [(X,... X+1,... X+2,... X+3,...) squared] +1 Where X is any natural number. (X) squared + 1 (X + 1) squared + 1 (X + 2) squared + 1 (X + 3) squared + 1...
No. Cos squared x is not the same as cos x squared. Cos squared x means cos (x) times cos (x) Cos x squared means cos (x squared)