NICETY
All it means to take the second derivative is to take the derivative of a function twice. For example, say you start with the function y=x2+2x The first derivative would be 2x+2 But when you take the derivative the first derivative you get the second derivative which would be 2
No, nice is an adjective.An adverb describes a verb.Such as:Running quickly.Speaking loudly.They generally have 'ly' on the end, so nicely is an adverb, but nice is not.
nicer
Good
the derivative of tangent dy/dx [ tan(u) ]= [sec^(2)u]u' this means that the derivative of tangent of u is secant squared u times the derivative of u.
This is an example of a sentence using the word derivative. The teacher liked it when the student used the derivative of the trash words
I have a good derivative.
English has many derivative words.
conserve
The English derivative for the Latin word "vita" is "vital."
derivative anagram
No. The word "neighboring" is a derivative, specifically the present participle, of the verb meaning of "neighbor".
In calculus, the derivative of a linear equation is a constant. y = 2x _ 5 dy/dx = 2 ( The constant).
a definition is what it means, a derivative is what it derives from, like a root word
Noun Derivative - a verb that becomes a noun by adding a suffix or suffixes at the end of the word. Adjective Derivative - a noun or verb that becomes an adjective by adding a suffix or suffixes at the end of the word. (sometimes nouns and verbs, or nouns and adjectives, have the same spelling) Verb occur --> noun occurrence (noun derivative) Verb depend --> noun dependence (noun derivative) or noun dependent Verb depend --> adjective dependent (adjective derivative) Verb react --> adjective reactive (adjective derivative)
demografisch
i would derive from this question you are not to bright. or somethin like that