No, it's not. A quadratic form is something like
![ax^2+bx+c=0](https://img.qammunity.org/2019/formulas/mathematics/middle-school/sqi0vpyo2gdbkafqd1bbrq9iux67ftjuak.png)
They won't necessarily come in this exact form, but the important part is that there must be a constant term, and the other two terms must be powers of the variable, and one must be the square of the other.
In this case, for example,
is the square of
![x](https://img.qammunity.org/2019/formulas/mathematics/college/lhtxftojjkzsmo3o2h4ilq8naohracejui.png)
So, for example, an equation like
is in quadratic form, because there is a constant term (18), and
is the square of
. You can tell this because the exponents are one the double of the other.
So, in this case, you have
which is the cube of
, so this equation is not in quadratic form.