Begin with the equation:
4Xn = 5Xn
Divide each side of the equation by n and you get
4=5
Therefore
2+2=5
5 times 2 is 10 2 times 1 is 2
2 times 2 is 4
(x + 3)(x - 2)
With the assumption your asking what a or b are in terms of each other. a=3b/(6b-2) b=2a/(6a-2)
You could use 35 and -2. 40 and -7 -28 and -5
y = x2-4x+4 Since the highest degree term is 2, it must have 2 roots
That factors to 2(x + 4)(x + 6) x = -4, -6
You can't it equals 2. You can't it equals 2.
If you mean 2 plus 2 equals 5 it is possible. 2 plus 2 equals 22 (or it could also be 4 if you want it but must be 22 to make 5...it makes sense) V is the 22nd letter in the alphabet and the roman numeral for V is 5. BOOM! 2 PLUS 2 EQUALS 5!
Using a calculator
Sinθ plus cosθ2 plus sinθ-cosθ2 equals 2 does not equal 2. It equals 2sinθ. The cosθ2 terms cancel out and you are left with sinθ + sinθ which is 2sinθ.
This would be a real bear to prove, mainly because it's not true.
Cannot prove that 2 divided by 10 equals 2 because it is not true.
This is a very difficult philosophical question. The best way to look at it is that 2 is defined as 1 plus 1 ! (If it isn't, how do you define 2?)
That's not real clear. It could be 2 times positive 1 (which is 2) plus 5, which equals 7. It could be 2x + 1 + 5 which equals 2x + 6 It could be 2x + 1 = 5, in which case x = 2
You use Plus as a symbol in Maths. Example, 2 Plus 2 equals 4. Or in symbols it would be 2+2=4. __________________________ Plus = + Equals = = (Equals equals =)
no if 1 plus 1 equals 2 then 2 plus 2 equals 4.
2 plus 3 equals 5 7 plus 2 equals 9 6 plus 9 equals 15 8 plus 4 equals 12 9 plus 7 equals 16 Am I missing something here? Probably. You say 2+3=5, but the question clearly states 2+3=10. Why would it say that? Suppose you had only one hand. You count 1,2,3,4,5,10,11,12. That last doesn't mean "twelve" as we know it, Jim. It means one hand (5), plus 2 spare ones. We could say: if 2+3=10, 5+2=12.
x could be 2 and y could be 1