Yes you can. In algebraic problems, you see them quite often. Example:
2x+4(y(2-7))-2
This means that you first must subtract 7 from 2, and thenmultiply it by y.
put it outside.
Nested parentheses are sets of parentheses inside sets of parentheses, where a set of parentheses refers to a left parenthesis and a right parenthesis. This is an example of nested parentheses: The mohel (a man who performs a bris (circumcision)) was setting up his equipment on the table.
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
before, (like this).
Parentheses go before the period in a sentence. If the entire sentence is contained within the parentheses, then the period goes inside. However, if the parentheses are used to add information or clarification within a larger sentence, the period should be placed outside the closing parenthesis.
Use a period inside a parenthetical when the full sentence inside the parentheses ends.
put it outside.
Parentheses are placed at the end of a sentence before the final punctuation mark. If the entire sentence is within the parentheses, the period goes inside the closing parenthesis. For example: "He bought apples (which were on sale)." If the parentheses contain a complete sentence, the period should be placed inside the closing parentheses.
No. Typically, you will only put ending punctuation (in this case, a period) if the sentence within the parentheses is a complete sentence.
Periods should typically go on the outside of parentheses. However, if the entire sentence is contained within the parentheses, then the period should go inside.
No, there is no space between the parentheses and the word or words inside them.
After you factor out the GCF, you will have as many as terms inside the parentheses as you had before.
yes
The process of multiplying a number outside a set of parentheses to everything inside the parentheses is called distributing or the distributive property. This property is used to simplify algebraic expressions by multiplying the external number to each term inside the parentheses.
the distributive law
Brackets.
Whether a question mark goes inside parentheses depends on the context of the sentence. If the entire sentence within the parentheses is a question, then the question mark should be inside. However, if the main sentence is a question but the content in the parentheses is not, the question mark remains outside. For example: "Did you see the movie (was it good)?"