yes it does always remember that :)
you foil it out.... for example take the first number or variable of the monomial and multiply it by everything in the polynomial...
Multiply the number by another number and the product is the multiple
you cannot add a and 8. you can multiply them to get 8a. but a variable and number cannot add
k = 10 3k = 30 When a number appears next to a variable (like "k") it usually means multiply the number times the variable.
You can add them.
It is the coefficient of the variable as for example 5n means 5 times n
yes it does always remember that :)
XnThat is an exponent.
Oh, honey, that's just a variable! A number and two letters in algebra usually represent a mathematical expression or equation where the number is multiplied by the variable. It's like the algebraic version of "X marks the spot."
Take a variable, and multiply it by another, making sure to only use variables to represent your outcome variable.
A variable is a symbol the represents another number. Example: 2y - 5y Y is the variable.
you foil it out.... for example take the first number or variable of the monomial and multiply it by everything in the polynomial...
yes you can so like 3x*5 would =15x
Multiply the number by another number and the product is the multiple
you cannot add a and 8. you can multiply them to get 8a. but a variable and number cannot add
it means to multiply the number by it self