<h3>
Answer: sometimes true</h3>
=======================================================
Explanation:
The plane P can be thought of a perfectly flat ground. Now imagine a flag pole which represents line GH. If AB is drawn in chalk on the pavement, and this line AB intersects the base of the flagpole, then we've made AB and GH intersect. However, this example shows that GH is <u>not</u> on the plane P.
Is it possible to have GH be in the the plane? Yes. We could easily draw another chalk line on the ground to have it intersect AB somewhere. But as the previous paragraph says, it's also possible that GH is not in the plane.
Therefore, the statement is sometimes true
Hey there!
A binomial is a polynomial that contains two terms. Terms are separated from one another by mathematical symbols, such as +, –, and ×. A term can be a variable, a variable with a coefficient, a constant, or really any combination of coefficient, variable, and exponent that you can think of. For example...
(3x² – xy)
(x + 3)
(5x – 6y)
...are all binomials.
Hope this helped you out! :-)
Answer:
6
Step-by-step explanation:
x+6-10=2
x+6=12
x=12-6
<h2>x=6 </h2>
<h3>hence the number is 6</h3>
Is the 10 taking away 5 or was it meant to me 10.5 ?