I really just dont know. I came on here for the answer, but I couldn't find it... so good luck! Wish me good luck too!
An example may help. If you have the fraction 1 / (2 + root(3)), where root() is the square root function, you multiply top and bottom by (2 - root(3)). If you multiply everything out, you will have no square root in the denominator, instead, you will have a square root in the numerator. If the denominator is only a root, eg root(3), you multiply top and bottom by root(3).
The DSE (DSA Specific Entry) is the root, or top-level, entry in an LDAP directory.
Carrot Top,
root CA
Beer and root beer.
Root just means the very top folder. So you open your microsd card, the first thing you see is your root folder.
The pineapple fruit is not a tap root. But the pineapple plant has a tap root.
at the top most part of roots
Convertible
root directory
No, because the root is the very top of the directory structure. It has to be unique.
root directory is the top of the directory tree. it is \ on windows (or c:\ d:\ etc.) and / on unix/linux