Solve for x, 2(x + 10) - 5(2 - x) + 3 = 0

in Algebra 1 Answers by Level 1 User (620 points)

Your answer

Your name to display (optional):
Privacy: Your email address will only be used for sending these notifications.
Anti-spam verification:
To avoid this verification in future, please log in or register.

2 Answers

Best answer
Solution:
Given: 2(x + 10) - 5(2 - x) + 3 = 0
 
2(x + 10) - 5(2 - x) + 3 = 0
 
=> 2x + 20 - 10 + 5x + 3 = 0 [ By distributive Law ]
 
=> 2x + 5x + 20 - 10 + 3 = 0 [ By cumulative Law ]
 
=> 7x + 13 = 0 [ Combine like terms ]
 
=> 7x = -13
 
or x = −13/7.
 

If u have any difficulty to solve  Algebra Solver  it may help u.

by Level 4 User (5.6k points)
selected by
???????????????????? "solved" ?????????????

lier

that stuf look like yu dont no anser

2(x+10) -5(2-x) +3=0

2x+20+5x -10+3=0

7x+13=0

7x=-13

x=-13/7=-1.857142857142857...
by

Related questions

1 answer
asked Mar 13, 2023 in Other Math Topics by Leint | 609 views
1 answer
asked Oct 8, 2022 in Other Math Topics by Rawan Level 1 User (120 points) | 500 views
1 answer
1 answer
asked Apr 5, 2012 in Algebra 2 Answers by ginamarie Level 1 User (120 points) | 624 views
1 answer
1 answer
asked Oct 24, 2022 by anonymous | 318 views
1 answer
asked May 21, 2021 in Algebra 1 Answers by mark | 1.2k views
1 answer
Welcome to MathHomeworkAnswers.org, where students, teachers and math enthusiasts can ask and answer any math question. Get help and answers to any math problem including algebra, trigonometry, geometry, calculus, trigonometry, fractions, solving expression, simplifying expressions and more. Get answers to math questions. Help is always 100% free!
87,516 questions
100,279 answers
2,420 comments
731,964 users