Pre-caculus 1 - Pre-Algebra 2 - Algebra I 3 - Geometry 4 - Algebra II 5 - Pre-Calculus 6 - Calculus
Rene Descartes was the mathematician that applied algebra to geometry.
Kids that are shall I say "Math Challenged" 8th-Math 8 9th-Pre-Algebra 10th-Algebra 1 11th-Geometry 12th-Algebra 2 Average Kids 8th-Math 8 Accelerated 9th-Algebra 1 10th-Geometry 11th-Algebra 2 12th-Trigonometry Honors Kids 8th-Algebra 1 9th-Geometry 10th-Algebra 2 11th-Trigonometry 12th-AP Calculus
Normal grades. 1.Pre-Algebra(7th grade) 2.Algebra I(8th) 3. Geometry(freshman) 4.Algebra II(sophmore) 5.Pre-calclulus/ Trig (junior) 6.Calculus(senior) 7. Multivariable Calculus 8. Matrix Algebra 9. Linear Algebra 10. Probability/Statistics However, Geometry may come after Algebra II, or a student might skip pre-Algebra. Also, Trigonometry can be included grouped with Geometry or separate. Statistics can be anywhere between Pre-Calc and after Linear Algebra.
In algebra z is a variable. What z equals would depend on the math problem you're doing and what the answer to that problem is.
No, he did not. Algebra was around long before he was.
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Chess and Algebra.
Yes. It was Al Khawarzmi who invented Algebra. (Refer: Ibn-i-Khaldoon)
Yes, they did take a part in it, but it wasn't as strong and as practical as the Arabic algebra which was founded later.
It was invented out of need; it was a very long and slow process.
No. The origins of algebra can be traced back to ancient Babylonia mathematicians roughly four thousand years ago.
George Boole invented it sometime in the 1840's.
It is said that algebra was developed in the Yemen city of Zabid.
Mohammed ibn-Musa al-Khwarizmi is who invented algebra,and also algebra has a Arabic root which means something like [breaking a thing and then assembling it correctly again] ,
Mathematical concepts developed by the Gupta Empire helped Muslims invent algebra.