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$x > 4$

$\rightarrow$ $x - 1 > 3$

$\rightarrow$ $(x - 1)^2 > 9$ and obviously if $(x - 1)^2 > 9$ then $x^2 > 9$

gt6989b
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ming
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2 Answers2

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Why don't you use $$x>4\implies x^2>16>9$$

Note: How did we arrive at the second step from the first one?

Soham
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  • Oh that's probably better haha. But does mine make sense at least? Like if I used it on an exam would I get full marks? – ming Nov 18 '18 at 05:30
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    @ming Your argument is also correct however to be on the safe side in an exam, you should write that "...since,we know, $x^2$ is an increasing function, hence the result follows...". You should explicitly mention that $x^2$ is an increasing function. – Soham Nov 18 '18 at 15:50
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There are two underlying facts in what you label as "obvious" in your last step.

$x-1>3 \implies x-1>0$.

$x>x-1$ (this one is universal) and $x-1>0 \implies x^2>(x-1)^2$.

But of course the fastest way is as Andrés Mejía and tatan suggested.

Rócherz
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