No, it is rational.
It is rational. It is rational. It is rational. It is rational.
"Rational" is an adjective and so there cannot be "a rational" (and certainly not "an rational"). Any answer would depend on whether the question was about a rational number, a rational person, a rational argument or "a rational" combined with some other noun.
It is rational.
It is rational.
Rational zero test cannot be used to find irrational roots as well as rational roots.
Apex-type question, reworded to preserve answer
The rational basis test.
The rational basis test
Rational Functional Tester Jim www.RefinanceRight.org
least rigorous apex approved :P
least rigorous apex approved :P
Rational basis test for economic issues, strict scrutiny test for racial and fundamental liberty issues, and midlevel scrutiny for gender issues
The test you are referring to is likely the rational basis test. This test assesses whether a government action is rationally related to achieving a legitimate government purpose. If the action is found to meet this standard, it is generally considered constitutional under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
rational basis
In algebra, the rational root theorem (or rational root test, rational zero theorem or rational zero test) states a constraint on rational solutions (or roots) of a polynomialequationwith integer coefficients.If a0 and an are nonzero, then each rational solution x, when written as a fraction x = p/q in lowest terms (i.e., the greatest common divisor of p and q is 1), satisfiesp is an integer factor of the constant term a0, andq is an integer factor of the leading coefficient an.The rational root theorem is a special case (for a single linear factor) of Gauss's lemmaon the factorization of polynomials. The integral root theorem is a special case of the rational root theorem if the leading coefficient an = 1.
The suffix for empathy is "-y."