Algebra I All-in-One For Dummies. Mary Jane Sterling
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2 C. 14. Replacing the x with 5, you get
3 1. The 2x multiplies a binomial, making the expression all one term. There are two terms in the parentheses, but the expression is still just one term.
4 2. There are two exponents, each on the terms in the parentheses. They are both 2.
5 B. The answer
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8 3. The three terms are separated by the two subtraction symbols.
9 3. The number 3 divides each of the terms evenly (leaving no remainder).
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11 1. The number 1 is a term that stands alone and isn’t multiplying or dividing any other number. The 4 and 9 are both part of the coefficients of their respective terms.
12 5. The 5 multiplies the variable x.
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The number line is broken up into units of 0.2 in length. The number
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Chapter 2
Deciphering Signs in Expressions
IN THIS CHAPTER
Numbers have many characteristics: They can be big, little, even, odd, whole, fractions, positive, negative, and sometimes cold and indifferent. (I’m kidding about that last one.) Chapter 1 describes numbers’ different names and categories. But this chapter concentrates mainly on how numbers compare to one another, what their comparison looks like on the number line, the positive and negative characteristics of numbers, and how a number’s sign reacts to different manipulations. This chapter tells you how to add, subtract, multiply, and divide signed numbers, no matter whether all the numbers are all the same sign or a combination of positive and negative.
Assigning Numbers Their Place
Positive numbers are greater than 0. They’re on the opposite side of 0 from the negative numbers. If you were to arrange a tug-of-war between positive and negative numbers, the positive numbers would line up on the right side of 0. Negative numbers get smaller and smaller, the farther they are from 0. This situation can get confusing because you may think that –400 is bigger than –12. But just think of –400°F and –12°F.