To solve the inequality ( x - 5 < 14 ), you add 5 to both sides:
[ x < 19. ]
Thus, the solution is all values of ( x ) that are less than 19.
2 is a solution of the equation, but not if it's an inequality.
Blue is not a solution.
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The answer, which may not even exist, depends on the inequality. There is, for example, no greatest solution for x > 5.
Solve the inequality: 75d ÷ 5 > d + 5 → 15d > d + 5 → 14d > 5 → d > 5/14 So any value of d greater than five fourteenths is a solution Thus any value less than or equal to five fourteenths (5/14) is a solution to the question as asked.
-2
(-7) - 5 - 2 = -14
19
A number is called a "solution" for an inequality if, when you plug that number into the variable, the inequality becomes true. For example, 4 is a solution to the inequality "x + 5 < 10", because when you plug in 4 for x, you get "4 + 5 < 10", which is true. (4 plus 5 is 9, which is less than 10.) On the other hand, 6 is not a solution to the inequality "x + 5 < 10", because when you plug in 6 for x, you get "6 + 5 < 10", which is false. (6 plus 5 is 11, which isn't less than 10.)
It is a linear inequality in one variable, a.
9 - 14 = -5
It is the same as 8/14 minus 3/14 = 5/14