Help meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
10 poiiiiintsssss

Answer: no i do not agree.
Step-by-step explanation:
Try n = 2 and you will see the answer
8(2) + 6
16 + 6
22
2{4(2) + 3}
2(8+3)
2(11)
22
14(2)
All 3 do not equal to each other. Proving that Juwon's statement is wrong.
Answer:
The first two are equivalent but different than the third.
Step-by-step explanation:
[tex]8n+6 = 2(4n+3) => 6=6\\8n+6 = 14n => 6n = 6 => n = 1\\\\[/tex]
The first two are identical by factoring 2 out of the first one, or distributing 2 in the second one.
The equality of the first and third equations, suggests that it is only true for n = 1.
To prove it wrong, find a number that shows the inequality:
[tex]n = 2\\8n+6 = 2(4n+3) = 22\\14n = 28\\\\22 \neq 28[/tex]