You use long division of polynomials.
You divide each term of the binomial by the monomial, and add everything up. This also works for the division of any polynomial by a monomial.
Monomial.
Monomial. Monomial. Monomial. Monomial.
Binomial. Binomial. Binomial. Binomial.
You use long division of polynomials.
You divide each term of the binomial by the monomial, and add everything up. This also works for the division of any polynomial by a monomial.
binomial, trinomial, sixth-degree polynomial, monomial.
Monomial.
Monomial. Monomial. Monomial. Monomial.
Monomial.
Monomial.
its a monomial.....
no it is a binomial. terms in an algebriac expression are separated by addition or subtraction ( + or -) symbols and must not be like terms. then just count the terms. one term = monomial, 2 terms = binomial, 3 terms = trinomial. More than 3 terms are usually just referred to as polynomials.
polynomials have 4 or more terms. I learned about that today in my math class. monomial =1 binomial=2 trinomial=3 polynomial=4+
Binomial. Binomial. Binomial. Binomial.
No, it is a monomial.