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In mathematics, and in particular in the field of algebra, a polynomial expression in one or more given entities E1, E2, ..., is any meaningful expression constructed from copies of those entities together with constants, using the operations of addition and multiplication. For each entity E, multiple copies can be used, and it is customary to write the product E×E×...×E of some number n of identical copies of E as En; thus the operation of raising to a constant natural number power may also be used (as abbreviation) in a polynomial expression. Similarly, subtraction X – Y may be used to abbreviate X + (–1)×Y.
The entities used may be of various natures. They are usually not explicitly given values, since then the polynomial expression can just be evaluated to another such value. Often they are symbols such as "x", "λ" or "X", which according to the context may stand for an unknown quantity, a mathematical variable, a parameter, or an indeterminate, and in such cases the polynomial expression is just a polynomial. It is however also possible to form polynomial expressions in more complicated entities than just symbols. Here are examples of such uses of polynomial expressions.
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