Obtain the sum and the product of the zeros of the following quadratic polynomial without finding the zeros: $4x^{2} - 4x + 1$.

  • A
    $1, \frac{1}{4}$
  • B
    $2, \frac{1}{3}$
  • C
    $2, \frac{2}{7}$
  • D
    $3, \frac{2}{4}$

Explore More

Similar Questions

Find the zeros of the following quadratic polynomial: $p(x) = 3x^2 + 15x$. (in $, -5$)

For $p(x) = x^{2} - 2x - 3$,$p(3) = \ldots \ldots \ldots . .$

Which of the following is not the graph of a quadratic polynomial?

Are the following statements 'True' or 'False'? Justify your answers.
If the graph of a polynomial intersects the $x$-axis at only one point,it cannot be a quadratic polynomial.

Given that two of the zeroes of the cubic polynomial $ax^3 + bx^2 + cx + d$ are $0$,the third zero is

Vedclass Products

For Students

Vedclass Test Series

Mock tests in real JEE/NEET style with performance analysis. 5-day free trial.

Start Free Trial
For Teachers

Exam Paper Generator

Generate Set A/B/C/D exam papers from 7.5L+ questions in 2 minutes. 3 chapters free.

Try Free
For Institutes

Online Exam Module

Live online exams with unlimited students, 360° analytics & white-label branding.

See Demo