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| Question 216187:  Hi, I'm taking an online college algebra class but can't quite recall all the review concepts and am really stuck on this problem--
 Factor the expression completely:
 4x^4 + 1 + 3x²
 Answer: (2x² + x + 1)(2x² - x - 1)
 I can't figure out how to get the answer, it won't factor like a regular trinomial and doesn't come out right if I separate out the x², for instance.
 And since I've been just trying to learn online so far (my textbook hasn't arrived yet), I really don't get how each set of terms has three factors instead of two. Hope my question makes sense, my math-speak probably isn't too great.
 I would really appreciate any help you can give me. And feel free to dumb it down! Also if you know where I could find more problems similar to this for practice, that would be fantastic.
 Thanks--
 EL
 Answer by stanbon(75887)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! Factor the expression completely: 4x^4 + 1 + 3x²
 Answer: (2x² + x + 1)(2x² - x - 1)
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 I would work it backwards. See if the product
 of those two factors gives you 4x^4 + 1 + 3x^2
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 (2x^2 + (x+1))(2x^2 -(x+1))
 = 4x^4 - (x+1)^2
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 = 4x^4 -[x^2 + 2x + 1]
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 = 4x^4 - x^2 - 2x -1
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 That is not the same as 4x^4 + 1 + 3x^2
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 I think your problem is asking you to do
 something that cannot be done.
 Cheers,
 Stan H.
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