Limits at infinity of quotients with square roots
I was given the following problem when performing the "Limits at infinity of quotients with square roots" practice.

I am confused by the statement "In the denominator, let's divide by -(x^10)^1/2, since for negative values, x^5 = -(x^10)^1/2." It is not the denominator that causes the limit to be negative; it is the numerator.
Would it be better to recognize that the numerator is dominated by the x^5 term and that the denominator is dominated by the x^10 term; such that, in the limit as x -> - infinity, the function can be simplified to x^5/(absolute value of x^5)? At large negative values, the numerator will be a large negative value, and the denominator will be the same value, but positive. Consequently, the limit as x-> - infinity is -1.
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