Well, darling, the quotient of 100 and the quantity 6 plus w is technically 100/(6+w). So, if you want to keep it mathematically sassy, there you have it. Just plug in your value for w and let the numbers do the talking.
The quotient of 18 and a number
the quotient of a number plus 6 and 3 is d+3=d+6
the quotient of a number plus 6 and 3 would bed+6=d+3
4.8571
2x2-4x+5 divided by x-1 Quotient: 2x-2 Remainder: 3
The quotient is: x^2 +2x +3
Well, darling, the quotient of 100 and the quantity 6 plus w is technically 100/(6+w). So, if you want to keep it mathematically sassy, there you have it. Just plug in your value for w and let the numbers do the talking.
The quotient of 18 and a number
the quotient of a number plus 6 and 3 is d+3=d+6
It is: 20/5 = 4 which is the quotient
The quotient is 9n + 7
the quotient of a number plus 6 and 3 would bed+6=d+3
The quotient is 63/(9+5) = 4.5
(x + y)2 = x2 + 2xy + y2 So x2 + y2 = (x + y)2 - 2xy = a2 - 2b Then (x2 + y2)2 = x4 + 2x2y2 + y4 So x4 + y4 = (x2 + y2)2 - 2x2y2 = (a2 - 2b)2 - 2b2 = a4 - 4a2b + 4b2 - 2b2 = a4 - 4a2b + 2b2
No - a quotient is the answer to a division sum, not the answer to an addition sum.
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