Answer:
No.
Explanation:
No, one easy way to see it is with quadratic formulas. There exists quadratic polynomials with no real solutions, then if you add, subtract or multiply two polynomials and obtain a quadratic formula, possibly this polynomial won't have real solutions.
I am going to give one counterexample:
We have the two polynomials
and
, then is we subtract q(x)-p(x) we obtain
![2x^2+3x+4-(x^2+2x+3) = 2x^2+3x+4-x^2-2x-3 = x^2+x+1.](https://img.qammunity.org/2020/formulas/mathematics/high-school/43hdmgg12yvekk50eq0njbty2j7mti2ddl.png)
The resulting polynomial is a quadratic polynomial of the form
with a=1, b=1 and c=1. This polynomial has no real solutions, you can check it with the discriminating
As the discriminating is negative, the polynomial has no real solutions.