Math, asked by nandninag, 1 month ago

zero of the polynomial​

Answers

Answered by susmita2891
1

\huge{\purple{\boxed{\red{\boxed{\mathfrak{Answer}}}}}}

A root or a zero of a polynomial are the value(s) of X that cause the polynomial to = 0 (or make Y=0). It is an X-intercept. The root is the X-value, and zero is the Y-value. It is not saying that imaginary roots = 0.

Answered by jayaharinisree
2

Step-by-step explanation:

A root or a zero of a polynomial are the value(s) of X that cause the polynomial to = 0 (or make Y=0). It is an X-intercept. The root is the X-value, and zero is the Y-value. It is not saying that imaginary roots = 0.

hope it helps

Similar questions