The degree of a polynomial is the highest power of its terms.
The power of a term is the sum of the powers of all the variables in a term.
A polynomial is written starting with the greatest power in standard form.
In the first case, the power of the first term is 3, the power of the second is 3 (2 from x + 1 from y) but the power of x has decreased so it is the second term, and then so on.
In the second case, the power is starting form 2 and then increasing to 3. This is incorrect.
Therefore, Marcus' suggestion is correct.
Answer:
-5 1/x4
Step-by-step explanation:
Yes! This is because -150/10 can be simplified to be -15, which is a rational number.
The word “rational” sounds like another math word you’ve heard of before. Do you know what it is?
Well, it’s “ratio”!! Ratios can be seen in the forms x:y and x/y.
ANY RATIONAL NUMBER HAS THE ABILITY TO BE WRITTEN AS A RATIO!! This will completely exclude numbers with super long decimal points (ex: 1.2345678809928374737272828...)
This number also meets the requirements of being an integer. An integer is any whole number (this excludes decimals and fractions)
I know it’s written as a fraction. However, the fraction could be simplified, making it -15, which means this is both a rational number and an integer!!
It is 8 because you divided it