Ive noticed you were asking quite alot of these geometry questions. I think you should pay more attention in class and you wouldnt need to ask home work questions, and plus, just knowing the answer wont help, youll have to know how to do it, especially if this is for a final exam...
2006-06-13 12:44:28
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answer #1
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answered by . 5
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Allen is correct. If there are () around 6x^2+3x, then factor out a 3x like this:
3x(2x+1)/3x
then cancel the 3x in the numerator with the 3x in the denominator and you are left with 2x+1.
If there are no () and you have "6x^2 'plus' 3x/3x", then it is simply 6x^2 + 1. (anything divided by itself is 1)
2006-06-13 12:30:12
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answer #2
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answered by cb.howell 1
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Hey, I'm with Allen on this one. Make sure you haven't left out any parentheses. If you did, divide both things being added by 3x. By the way, no matter what you do you are not going to get a number for an answer. You will just get something in terms of x.
2006-06-13 12:38:06
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answer #3
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answered by poisonsweetmadeira 1
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Did you intend to put parentheses somewhere? If there are supposed to be parentheses around (6x^2 + 3x)/3x, factor out 3x and see what happens. If no parentheses, it's just 6x^2 + 1.
2006-06-13 12:22:26
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answer #4
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answered by Allen 3
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6x^2 +1
2006-06-13 12:24:41
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answer #5
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answered by googoo2626 3
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6x^2+1
2006-06-13 12:21:52
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answer #6
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answered by me 5
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6x^2+3x/3x=factor out 3x and you get 3x(2x+1)/3x, the 3x on the top and the 3x on the bottom cancell. the answer is (2x+1)
2006-06-13 12:27:28
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answer #7
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answered by bas 1
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6XA2 WHICH IS THE FIRST TERM AND
3X/3X=1 . SO ANSWER IS 6XA2+1.NOTE THE A IS THE POWER OF X.
2006-06-13 12:37:04
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answer #8
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answered by jojo 2
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i believe it is 37x, but don't take my answer yet!!!
2006-06-13 12:22:14
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answer #9
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answered by tmancubs33 2
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