asked 51.1k views
16 votes
To rationalize a denominator that has more than one term, you multiply the

fraction by B+ B, where B is the conjugate of the denominator.

To rationalize a denominator that has more than one term, you multiply the fraction-example-1
asked
User AlexBerd
by
7.9k points

2 Answers

9 votes

false

you multiply both the denominator and the numerator not just the fraction.

answered
User Ravindra Mijar
by
8.4k points
9 votes

Answer:

False.

Step-by-step explanation:

To rationalize a denominator that has more than one term, you multiply the fraction by
(b)/(b), where "b" is the conjugate of the denominator not the numerator.

answered
User Hmn
by
8.0k points
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