How do you solve -x^2-4x>3? Precalculus Solving Rational Inequalities Polynomial Inequalities 1 Answer iceman Sep 27, 2015 -3 < x <-1 Explanation: -x^2-4x>3=> multiply by -1, reverse direction of inequality: x^2+4x<-3=> solving by completing the square: x^2+4x+4<4-3 (x+2)^2<1 -1 < (x+2)<1 -3 < x <-1 In interval form: (-3, -1) Answer link Related questions What are common mistakes students make when solving polynomial inequalities? How do I solve a polynomial inequality? How do I solve the polynomial inequality -2(m-3)<5(m+1)-12? How do I solve the polynomial inequality -6<=2(x-5)<7? How do I solve the polynomial inequality 1<2x+3<11? How do I solve the polynomial inequality -12<-2(x+1)<=18? How do you solve the inequality 6x^2-5x>6? How do you solve x^2 - 4x - 21<=0 A) [-3, 7] B) (-∞, -3] C) (-∞, -3] [7, ∞) D) [7, ∞)? How do you solve quadratic inequality, graph, and write in interval notation x^2 - 8x + 15 >0? How do you solve -x^2 - x + 6 < 0? See all questions in Polynomial Inequalities Impact of this question 2191 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License