Welcome to midwood_trail's "About Me" page!
midwood_trail(310)
About midwood_trail: I love God, my son, math and solo guitar.
What did midwood_trail acccomplish on this site?
- midwood_trail has no published lessons yet.
- midwood_trail has no published solvers yet.
- midwood_trail wrote 310 solutions (see them).
Comment from student: okay but how do i find the domain
Comment from student: oh yea i get it, thanks a lot!
Comment from student: thank you midwood for helping me with my homework
Comment from student: um what is the degree
Comment from student: Ok thank you
Comment from student: Thank you so much for your help...
Comment from student: Thank you very much!
Comment from student: ok thank you
Comment from student: Thank you for your help
Comment from student: Thank you VERY much :) I got x=285 or x=290 What do you think??
Comment from student: no
Comment from student: no
Comment from student: no
Comment from student: is the answer -4w?
Comment from student: Thank You for taking your time with the queestions!
Comment from student: thank you soo much. I never knew we had to reduce these types of answers.
Comment from student: still need help I think. second answer I came up with is 112.
on -11= -4+d I came up with -7 ?
1.6k= -15 I came up with 9.375?
Comment from student: I was able to get that far. I am having trouble determining where to go from there.
Comment from student: thank you
Comment from student: Thanks for helping. I didn't really get this one even though I followed all the steps I was taught.
Once again, thank you.
Grishma Mehta
Comment from student: i understand setting the equation to zero, but im having trouble with the next step. do i divide or set all the x's to zero
Comment from student: Thanks Midwood,
Your answer was ver helpful. I should be able to fiqure out the rest of the problem.
Thanks again, I appreciate your help.
Comment from student: Thanks so much, i've got it.
Comment from student: Thank you for your help
Comment from student: Thank you so much for your help!!!!!:)
Comment from student: Thank you! This is so much appreciated!
Comment from student: Thank you for helping me,i really appreciate your time.thankyou
Comment from student: I just wanted to thank you for this answer - my 11 year old is in pre-algebra and he got it wrong on his "master it" - (a weekly sheet that moms are not allowed to help on the first try. We disagreed on the answer and I could not find any problem similar in the 3 books that I have purchased.
Comment from student: Thank you so much. I had no idea where to begin.
Comment from student: midwood_trail;
Thank You for being a great help tonight I wood not have figured this out without your help and expertice Thank You very much!!
Comment from student: Thank you
Comment from student: um...sorry but it didnt help cause i didnt get it at all shouldn't there be a solution cause i got something different
Comment from student: thank you, you simplified it for me to understand. thank you again.
Comment from student: i still doN'T know how to ANSWER it!
Comment from student: i still doN'T know how to ANSWER it!
Comment from student: Thanks for that...I see now it was easy, but I just had a blank....appreciate your help
Comment from student: THANKS SO MUCH FOR YOUR HELP!!
Comment from student: y=x+x x=2 and z=7
Comment from student: thank you for helping me with this problem.
Comment from student: Thank you! For helping me with my answer!
Comment from student: thank you so very much I think you are awesome for helping people like this !!!!
Comment from student: thank you so very much I think you are awesome for helping people like this !!!!
Comment from student: Thank you! I really appreciate your help. I will be coming back for help with future problems.
Thanks! :)
Comment from student: i am sorry i meant to write the first one that you wrote over there
(6/x^2) + 2 = (3/x)
Comment from student: i am sorry i meant to write the first one that you wrote over there
(6/x^2) + 2 = (3/x)
Comment from student: i am sorry i meant to write the first one that you wrote over there
(6/x^2) + 2 = (3/x)