its not false the leaf and pot always help no matter the problem.
Answer:
Factoring a monomial means breaking it down into each individual prime number and/or variable factor. This is also called "expanding" a monomial.
Step-by-step explanation:
Of the 100 students, 37 take only Spanish. Subtracting 37 from 100 gives us 63 students who are taking either both Spanish and Chinese or only Chinese.
So, there are 63 students who are taking Chinese (just Chinese or both Chinese and Spanish).
Since the number of students taking Chinese is 8 more than the number of students taking Spanish, 63 - 8 + 55 students taking Spanish (just Spanish or both Spanish and Chinese).
Of these 55 students, 37 are only taking Spanish, therefore, 55 - 37 = 18 students who are taking both languages.
I guess a whole lot shorter way of looking at this is: for there to be 8 more students taking Chinese than Spanish, there must be 8 more students who are taking only Chinese than who are taking only Spanish: 37 + 8 = 45. Since 37 are taking only Spanish and 45 are taking only Chinese, 100 - (37 + 45) = 18 students who are taking both languages.
Simplifying Rs = st + -1Rt Solving sR = st + -1tR Solving for variable 's'. Move all terms containing s to the left, all other terms to the right. Add '-1st' to each side of the equation. sR + -1st = st + -1st + -1tR Combine like terms: st + -1st = 0 sR + -1st = 0 + -1tR sR + -1st = -1tR Combine like terms: -1tR + tR = 0 sR + -1st + tR = 0