How do you factor #5y^2- 5y + 5/4#? Algebra Polynomials and Factoring Factorization of Quadratic Expressions 1 Answer George C. May 24, 2015 #5y^2-5y+5/4 = 5/4(4y^2-4y+1) = 5/4(2y-1)(2y-1)# Separating out the scalar factor #5/4# gave a quadratic with integer coefficients in lowest terms that was easier to work with. #(4y^2-4y+1)# was easily recognisable as #(2y-1)^2# much as #441# is recognisable as #21^2# and #144# as #12^2#. Answer link Related questions How do you factor trinomials? What is factorization of quadratic expressions? How do you factor quadratic equations with a coefficient? What are some examples of factoring quadratic expressions? How do you check that you factored a quadratic correctly? How do you factor #x^2+16x+48#? How do you factor #x^2-9x+20#? Question #3fdac How do you factor #8+z^6#? There is no GCF to be factor out, so is there another method to complete this? How do you factor #2t^2+7t+3#? See all questions in Factorization of Quadratic Expressions Impact of this question 1386 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License