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This question has two correct answers. E is clearly correct: we're adding two nonzero squares, so we get a positive result. But D is also correct. If x is positive and y is negative, x-y is clearly positive.

There's only one imaginable justification for saying D is wrong here: someone might claim "the difference of x and y" can mean y - x (which is negative). But it can't mean that. If someone says "the difference of x and y", that can sometimes be ambiguous: they either mean "x-y", or they mean the *positive difference* of x and y, so |x - y|. But in this question, there's no ambiguity: those are the same thing. The phrase can't mean "y - x", and if someone thought it could, it clearly wouldn't make sense to talk, as answer D does, about *the* difference of x and y, if that difference can have two different values.

So there's something wrong with the question.

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