The polynomial 7x3 + 6x2 - 2 has a degree of 3, making it cubic.
A polynomial has 2 or more variables. It can also have a negative exponent and a fractional exponent. It's different from a monomial.****BrandonW****
Too bad that's not a^2 - ab - 42b^2 That factors to (a + 6b)(a - 7b)
The GCF is 2.
We won't be able to answer this accurately without knowing the polynomials.
No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).No. A quadratic polynomial is degree 2 (2 is the highest power); a cubic polynomial is degree 3 (3 is the highest power).
To square an expression, multiply it by itself. And to multiply a polynomial by a polynomial, multiply each part of one polynomial by each part of the other polynomial.
It is a quadratic polynomial.
A polynomial of degree 2.
It is a polynomial if the square root is in a coefficient but not if it is applied to the variable. A polynomial can have only integer powers of the variable. Thus: sqrt(2)*x3 + 4*x + 3 is a polynomial expression but 2*x3 + 4*sqrt(x) + 3 is not.
The degree of this polynomial is 2.
A binomial is a polynomial with exactly 2 terms.
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The polynomial 7x3 + 6x2 - 2 has a degree of 3, making it cubic.
2 or 5
Oh, dude, it's like this: all quadratic equations are polynomials, but not all polynomials are quadratic equations. A quadratic equation is a specific type of polynomial that has a degree of 2, meaning it has a highest power of x^2. So, like, all squares are rectangles, but not all rectangles are squares, you know what I mean?
No. Even if the answer is zero, zero is still a polynomial.