Examlex
Legal disputes are resolved by the court's deciding what has happened and then determining the legal effect of those facts. Courts must therefore make decisions (rulings) on what constitutes the facts and what is the law in each case. This means that the judges and the lawyers must be clear about which matters are questions of fact - established by evidence - and which are questions of law - established by legal argument.
For example, for a person to be guilty of theft, the court must decide whether the accused has dishonestly taken ('appropriated', in technical jargon) the property of another with the intention to deprive the other permanently of that property. But which of these elements involves a question of fact and which is a question of law? And are any of them capable of being mixed questions of fact and law?
Read the following statements and decide which are correct and which are not (select all that apply) .
Note: this is quite a difficult question to answer intuitively, but have a go, because it will help you to see how the distinction operates in practice.
Rational Expression
A rational expression is a fraction where the numerator and/or the denominator are polynomials.
Simplify
The process of reducing a mathematical expression or equation to its most concise and simple form, removing parenthesis and combining like terms when possible.
Rational Expression
A fraction where both the numerator and the denominator are polynomials.
Domain
The set of all possible input values for a function.
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