I, a frustrated high school student who just doesn't get math, honestly appreciate what you're doing sir. I am able to understand your videos perfectly, they help me SOOO much. Thank you, Thank you, thank you. Consider myself very lucky to have found you. You're just the best teacher/person ever!!! Love you!!!
I just want you to know that even though I'm in college and just finished my final Algebra exam, I used your videos to help develop a more thorough understanding of what I was assigned. I managed to finish with an A despite being out of school for 6 years prior to this, but I was greatly helped by people like you and the young lady from Mathbff. I think you're a very positive influence for both students and educators (hopefully). Please keep being awesome and thank you.
So lemme understand this better. The denominator is what you wanna make a perfect cubed root? So you would multiply any number that would make it perfect cube root?
I'm just glad I was right. I'm an engineer and went to Univ of Md for 1 semester before transferring to Lehigh. All my math instructors were excellent at Md.
He turned it into the 4th root of 81, which is 3, by multiply the numerator and denominator by the 4th root of 3, technically multiplying the whole fraction by 1
TIt's like x/x. It equals 1. When multiply root expressions with the same number root (e.g. the third root or fourth root), you just multiply the numbers on the inside together and it becomes the number root of the result (nth root of x*y). Then you just simplify the expression. That's the whole lesson in a nutshell.
+Mart Angelo Ilagan As for how he did that, well if you have 4th root of 3 as the denominator, you need to think what number with a 4th root will equal 3. The answer to that is 81. So, to make the denominator 4th root of 81, well 3*27=81. So multiply 4th root of 3 by 4th root of 27, giving you 4th root of 81, which equals three. Of course, what you do to the bottom you must do to the top. The numerator is multiplied by 4th root of 27, becoming the 4th root of 52. Hope this helps! I know it's hard to understand without it being written in numbers, try your best!
This one doesn't make any sense to me, you just jumped into it expecting us to already have an idea of what to do. I don't know where the 27 came from under the radical but i understand you got 54 and 81 by multiplying across, idk how you got 3 from the 81.
I think what he did is, he multiple the Dominator to the power of 3 and add it to the bothside, which the answer will be 27, and later multiple 3 and 27 to give us 81 which is the perfect 4 root of 81 and later simplified it to give us 3
I, a frustrated high school student who just doesn't get math, honestly appreciate what you're doing sir. I am able to understand your videos perfectly, they help me SOOO much. Thank you, Thank you, thank you. Consider myself very lucky to have found you. You're just the best teacher/person ever!!! Love you!!!
Great video on high level radical simplification. I hope it helps you understand it well, and makes you feel good. YAY MATH!
yaymath Good work sir
I do not understand the first example
I just want you to know that even though I'm in college and just finished my final Algebra exam, I used your videos to help develop a more thorough understanding of what I was assigned. I managed to finish with an A despite being out of school for 6 years prior to this, but I was greatly helped by people like you and the young lady from Mathbff. I think you're a very positive influence for both students and educators (hopefully). Please keep being awesome and thank you.
I learned this today and I watch your videos after every lesson! It's like you're psychic and knew I learned this today!! :O
ay bro how is being an adult going for ya
You've been here for me since high school 🤘🏼 about to start college YAYMATH!!!
You are a excellent teacher .....you have made me fall in love with radicals ...thank you
6:56 Why does the 3 turn into a 6? Can somebody explain?
nevermind saw another comment haha. its 36
6:46 - I don't get how the 3ba^2 simplifies to 6a^2... where the hell did the b go?
It's 36 lol I was confused too
Oh god. Same problem here dude. it was 36 all along :|
That's exactly what I was thinking
At 20:42, i think it's cd 4th root of c, not square root of c? Correct me if im wrong coz I'm confused.
Rovejin Delapena I was wondering the same thing.
thankyou yaymath, this makes it really fun and interesting to learn!!
So lemme understand this better. The denominator is what you wanna make a perfect cubed root? So you would multiply any number that would make it perfect cube root?
For the last simplification, why isn't the rad(c) answer a (4rad(C)?
Real quick, how does root(3ba^4) simplify to 6a^2?
OH WAIT, that's the number 36.. oh man, i was stuck on that for awhile dude haha I even went to previous vids becuase that was just NOT making sense
Edgar Santana THANK YOU!
Facial hair? I'm in heaven....OK, I'll quit stalking your channel now haha.
he makes math so fun....
I just don't get this one very well
Um in the 3rd equation u changed the numerator: 3ba^4 to 6a^2. Can u explain why u did that?
Great sir I liked it so much
the extra element of challenge are the problem's with b's and 6's, with my teacher is 4 and y, and i and 1 following on the board
In the last problem in the video I think you should been left with the abs c * d * 4th root of c instead of the square root of c.
Agreed, I forgot the 4th root on the radical. Thank you for pointing it out!
I went in and added an annotation saying that. Much appreciated.
I'm just glad I was right. I'm an engineer and went to Univ of Md for 1 semester before transferring to Lehigh. All my math instructors were excellent at Md.
From 6:15 and forward, I don’t understand a thing.
why do I have algebra 2 work in my algebra 1. what is the madness.
How did you get 4th root of 27?
He turned it into the 4th root of 81, which is 3, by multiply the numerator and denominator by the 4th root of 3, technically multiplying the whole fraction by 1
Yeah, How did that happen I don't get it =.=
TIt's like x/x. It equals 1. When multiply root expressions with the same number root (e.g. the third root or fourth root), you just multiply the numbers on the inside together and it becomes the number root of the result (nth root of x*y). Then you just simplify the expression. That's the whole lesson in a nutshell.
+Mart Angelo Ilagan As for how he did that, well if you have 4th root of 3 as the denominator, you need to think what number with a 4th root will equal 3. The answer to that is 81. So, to make the denominator 4th root of 81, well 3*27=81. So multiply 4th root of 3 by 4th root of 27, giving you 4th root of 81, which equals three. Of course, what you do to the bottom you must do to the top. The numerator is multiplied by 4th root of 27, becoming the 4th root of 52. Hope this helps! I know it's hard to understand without it being written in numbers, try your best!
Thanks I will.
0:33 he looks like zack from ghost adventures
International sign for I Am Choking
This one doesn't make any sense to me, you just jumped into it expecting us to already have an idea of what to do. I don't know where the 27 came from under the radical but i understand you got 54 and 81 by multiplying across, idk how you got 3 from the 81.
I think what he did is, he multiple the Dominator to the power of 3 and add it to the bothside, which the answer will be 27, and later multiple 3 and 27 to give us 81 which is the perfect 4 root of 81 and later simplified it to give us 3
kind of got meaner and lazier after that ring showed up on his finger lol
Hi
🙏😊
Make ur vidios hd
Chit chatting is aggravating.....