There are many possible answers to this question. Some of these are
No, there can be many solutes in a solution, but only one solvent.
In mathematics, a contradiction is when you say two or more things that cannot both be true, such as, "The one and only solution is 3," and, "The one and only solution is 17."
Only a linear equation in one variable x , which is an equation of the form ax + b = 0, (where a is different than 0), has only one solution. The solution is: x = -b/a
It only has one solution.
That's when you say two or more things that cannot both be true, such as, "The one and only solution is 3," and, "The one and only solution is 17."
No, the correct capitalization is: "Only one solution is possible: you must cut your expenses."
In a nonlinear equation, each variable must only have one solution.
In algebra, one solution means that there is only one real value x that will satisfy its equation.
row reduce the matrix in question and see if it has any free variables. if it does then it has many solution's. If not then it only has one unique solution. which is of course the trivial solution (0)
Yes
If the equations or inequalities have the same slope, they have no solution or infinite solutions. If the equations/inequalities have different slopes, the system has only one solution.
The oils in the roasted bean are infused in the water during the brewing, combining the solvent + solute=solution. [Unless you were asking about the solution to a problem. Beacuse, coffee is not the solution for lack of sleep, the caffeine only helps. The solution could only be to sleep more.]