Answer:
![√(208)](https://img.qammunity.org/2021/formulas/mathematics/middle-school/zkxu9562mrzl66hh34s36y9pitydhjtb4i.png)
Explanation:
Getting this answer can simply be achieved by process of elimination. I started dividing
by numbers that I knew had perfect squares, and eventually I found 16.
![√(208)](https://img.qammunity.org/2021/formulas/mathematics/middle-school/zkxu9562mrzl66hh34s36y9pitydhjtb4i.png)
/\
![√(13)](https://img.qammunity.org/2021/formulas/mathematics/college/8v0laomqr8x2mvoubh414vl5rnw9efjmph.png)
![4√(13)](https://img.qammunity.org/2021/formulas/mathematics/college/z5wu6kzul745xmmwa30vqmh0ger1ewt2zq.png)
As you can see above once I got 16 and 13, I found the square root of 16, which was four, and I checked to see if I could find the square root of 13 as well, but unlike 16 it doe snot have a perfect square.