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5 answers

I believe you have to find two squares that multiply each over to get 44. So it would be the square root of 4 * 11. With (4*11) under the root. and it would be 2(square root symbol) and 11 under it.

I think this is correct but I'm definately not positive. Good luck!

2007-05-21 15:32:25 · answer #1 · answered by Jay N 3 · 0 0

√44 = √(4 x 11) = 2 √11

2007-05-22 03:33:44 · answer #2 · answered by Como 7 · 0 0

First you find a factor of 44 that is a perfect square. 4 is a perfect square and a factor of 44. Then you rewrite sqrt(44) as sqrt(4*11) You know that sqrt(4) = 2, and you can pull that out of the radical so that you end up with 2 sqrt(11)

2007-05-21 22:32:32 · answer #3 · answered by wahiv4 3 · 0 0

44
^
2 22
^
2 11

Answer: 2 with a sq. root of 11

2007-05-21 22:31:33 · answer #4 · answered by Dawn 3 · 0 0

Very carefully. Since I don't know how you were taught to do it, I can't help you further. You can simplify it to 2 sqrt (11) if that helps any.

2007-05-21 22:31:53 · answer #5 · answered by cattbarf 7 · 0 0

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