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4 answers

The assumption I'm making is that you're describing 3 times the square root of 3 (as opposed to the cube root of 3)

3 root 3 is the same as writing root 3 + root 3 +root 3, in much the same way as 3(4) is the same as 4 + 4 + 4

Now, since 3 root 3 = root 3 + root 3 + root 3, subtracting root 3 leaves 2 root 3's left

you can confirm this for your self with a calculator. The square root of the 3 = ~1.732. Multiply by 3 = ~5.196, subtract the square root of 3 = 3.464 (which is the same as 2 times the square root of the 3

2006-10-16 15:54:54 · answer #1 · answered by Javelinl 3 · 0 0

listen
u mean to say

::

(root 3) - 3(root 3)

here base is same that is (root 3)
take it as an example

root 3 = a

a - 3a

gives u -2a

-2a = -2(root 3)

2006-10-16 15:46:55 · answer #2 · answered by shahidrock 3 · 0 0

3root 3 - root3 = 2root3

2006-10-16 15:46:18 · answer #3 · answered by san 1 · 0 0

are you talking square root or third root?

2006-10-16 15:45:01 · answer #4 · answered by mighty_power7 7 · 0 0

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