3x³+6x²+9x+10
or
6x³+9x²+3x+5
.
.
.
.
the constant can be any number.
Answer:
x = -3
Step-by-step explanation:

Answer:
The slope is 10 (y =10x +15)
Step-by-step explanation:
When using two coordinates to find the slope of a linear function, I choose (-2,-5) and (2,35) *but you can choose any two.
The formula for finding the slope is y-y divided by x-x.
so... (35)-(-5)=40 NOTE: I did 35 minus -5 but you can also do -5 minus 35.
2-(-2)=4 But just remember to do it the same order for
subtracting the x coordinates.
40/4=10
Use the formula given to you with the triangle and the two numbers that are in the triangle.
The general equation for a circle,

, falls out of the Pythagorean Theorem, which states that the square of the hypotenuse of a right triangle is always equal to the sum of the squares of its legs (you might have seen this fact written like

, where <em>a </em>and <em>b</em> are the legs of a right triangle and <em>c </em>is its hypotenuse. When we fix <em /><em>c</em> in place and let <em>a </em>and <em>b </em>vary (in a sense, at least; their values are still dependent on <em>c</em>), the shape swept out by all of those possible triangles is a circle - a shape defined by having all of its points equidistant from some center.
How do we modify this equation to shift the circle and change its radius, then? Well, if we want to change the radius, we simply have to change the hypotenuse of the triangle that's sweeping out the circle in the first place. The default for a circle is 1, but we're looking for a radius of 6, so our equation, in line with Pythagorus's, would look like

, or

.
Shifting the center of the circle is a bit of a longer story, but - at first counterintuitively - you can move a circle's center to the point (a,b) by altering the x and y portions of the equation to read: