NICETY
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.
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
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