The raised number to the right of the base is called an exponent. It indicates how many times the base is multiplied by itself. For example, in the expression (2^3), the base is 2, and the exponent is 3, meaning (2) is multiplied by itself three times (2 × 2 × 2).
If you have a power, the "base" is the large number to the left; the "exponent" is the raised (and smaller) number to the right.
The base
the base
The base
the base
If you have a power, the "base" is the large number to the left; the "exponent" is the raised (and smaller) number to the right.
It is an exponent that tells you of what power the base number is to be raised by.
The power could then be called an exponent. The number that is being raised to a power is called the base. In the case of 42, the exponent is 2 and the base is 4.
base
The base
its called a base :)
The number that indicates how many times the base is used as a factor is the exponent, or power.
The base
The base
The base
The base
The base