How do you simplify 1−(x+4)?
2 Answers
Ok, so imagine there's a negative one in front of the
1−1(x+4)
Distribute the negative 1 into the equation by multiplying -1 by both
1−x−4
Because 1 minus 4 is
−3+−x
A way you can look at this is like this
This is the same as the original question, I just added a "1" before the brackets to indicate that the
So, we have
By distributing the -1, we get:
Simplifying by addition:
We could just write this as