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Chapter 4 Resource Masters

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Chapter 4Resource Masters

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Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.Printed in the United States of America. Permission is granted to reproduce thematerial contained herein on the condition that such material be reproduced onlyfor classroom use; be provided to students, teacher, and families without charge;and be used solely in conjunction with Glencoe Pre-Algebra. Any other reproduc-tion, for use or sale, is prohibited without prior written permission of the publisher.

Send all inquiries to:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill8787 Orion PlaceColumbus, OH 43240

ISBN: 0-07-827770-1

5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters

Consumable Workbooks

Many of the worksheets contained in the Chapter Resource Masters booklets are

available as consumable workbooks in both English and Spanish.

Study Guide and Intervention Workbook 0-07-827794-9

Study Guide and Intervention Workbook (Spanish) 0-07-827795-7

Skills Practice Workbook 0-07-827788-4

Skills Practice Workbook (Spanish) 0-07-827790-6

Practice Workbook 0-07-827789-2

Practice Workbook (Spanish) 0-07-827791-4

Answers for Workbooks The answers for Chapter 4 of these workbooks

can be found in the back of this Chapter Resource Masters booklet.

Spanish Assessment Masters Spanish versions of forms 2A and 2C

of the Chapter 4 Test are available in the Pre-Algebra Spanish Assessment

Masters (0-07-830412-1).

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iii

Vocabulary Builder............................vii

Lesson 4-1Study Guide and Intervention ........................165Skills Practice.................................................166Practice ..........................................................167Reading to Learn Mathematics......................168Enrichment .....................................................169

Lesson 4-2Study Guide and Intervention ........................170Skills Practice.................................................171Practice ..........................................................172Reading to Learn Mathematics......................173Enrichment .....................................................174

Lesson 4-3Study Guide and Intervention ........................175Skills Practice.................................................176Practice ..........................................................177Reading to Learn Mathematics......................178Enrichment .....................................................179

Lesson 4-4Study Guide and Intervention ........................180Skills Practice.................................................181Practice ..........................................................182Reading to Learn Mathematics......................183Enrichment .....................................................184

Lesson 4-5Study Guide and Intervention ........................185Skills Practice.................................................186Practice ..........................................................187Reading to Learn Mathematics......................188Enrichment .....................................................189

Lesson 4-6Study Guide and Intervention ........................190Skills Practice.................................................191Practice ..........................................................192Reading to Learn Mathematics......................193Enrichment .....................................................194

Lesson 4-7Study Guide and Intervention ........................195Skills Practice.................................................196Practice ..........................................................197Reading to Learn Mathematics......................198Enrichment .....................................................199

Lesson 4-8Study Guide and Intervention ........................200Skills Practice.................................................201Practice ..........................................................202Reading to Learn Mathematics......................203Enrichment .....................................................204

Chapter 4 AssessmentChapter 4 Test, Form 1 ..........................205–206Chapter 4 Test, Form 2A ........................207–208Chapter 4 Test, Form 2B ........................209–210Chapter 4 Test, Form 2C........................211–212Chapter 4 Test, Form 2D........................213–214Chapter 4 Test, Form 3 ..........................215–216Chapter 4 Open-Ended Assessment .............217Chapter 4 Vocabulary Test/Review.................218Chapter 4 Quizzes 1 & 2................................219Chapter 4 Quizzes 3 & 4................................220Chapter 4 Mid-Chapter Test ...........................221Chapter 4 Cumulative Review........................222Chapter 4 Standardized Test Practice....223–224

Standardized Test Practice Student Recording Sheet ..............................................A1ANSWERS ................................................A2–A31

CONTENTS

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iv

Teacher s Guide to Using theChapter 4 Resource Masters

The Fast File Chapter Resource system allows you to conveniently file the resources youuse most often. The Chapter 4 Resource Masters includes the core materials needed forChapter 4. These materials include worksheets, extensions, and assessment options. Theanswers for these pages appear at the back of this booklet.

All of the materials found in this booklet are included for viewing and printing in the Pre-Algebra TeacherWorks CD-ROM.

Vocabulary Builder Pages vii-viiiinclude a student study tool that presents up to twenty of the key vocabulary termsfrom the chapter. Students are to record definitions and/or examples for each term.You may suggest that students highlight or star the terms with which they are not familiar.

When to Use Give these pages to studentsbefore beginning Lesson 4-1. Encourage themto add these pages to their Pre-Algebra StudyNotebook. Remind them to add definitionsand examples as they complete each lesson.

Study Guide and InterventionEach lesson in Pre-Algebra addresses one ortwo objectives. There is one Study Guide andIntervention master for each lesson.

When to Use Use these masters as reteach-ing activities for students who need addi-tional reinforcement. These pages can alsobe used in conjunction with the StudentEdition as an instructional tool for studentswho have been absent.

Skills Practice There is one master foreach lesson. These provide computationalpractice at a basic level.

When to Use These masters can be usedwith students who have weaker mathematicsbackgrounds or need additional reinforcement.

Practice There is one master for each lesson. These problems more closely followthe structure of the Practice and Apply section of the Student Edition exercises.These exercises are of average difficulty.

When to Use These provide additionalpractice options or may be used as home-work for second day teaching of the lesson.

Reading to Learn MathematicsOne master is included for each lesson. Thefirst section of each master asks questionsabout the opening paragraph of the lesson inthe Student Edition. Additional questionsask students to interpret the context of andrelationships among terms in the lesson.Finally, students are asked to summarizewhat they have learned using various repre-sentation techniques.

When to Use This master can be used as a study tool when presenting the lesson or as an informal reading assessment after presenting the lesson. It is also a helpful tool for ELL (English Language Learner)students.

Enrichment There is one extension master for each lesson. These activities may extend the concepts in the lesson, offeran historical or multicultural look at theconcepts, or widen students’ perspectives on the mathematics they are learning.These are not written exclusively for honorsstudents, but are accessible for use with alllevels of students.

When to Use These may be used as extracredit, short-term projects, or as activitiesfor days when class periods are shortened.

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Assessment OptionsThe assessment masters in the Chapter 4Resource Masters offer a wide range ofassessment tools for intermediate and finalassessment. The following lists describe eachassessment master and its intended use.

Chapter Assessment Chapter Tests• Form 1 contains multiple-choice questions

and is intended for use with basic levelstudents.

• Forms 2A and 2B contain multiple-choicequestions aimed at the average level student. These tests are similar in formatto offer comparable testing situations.

• Forms 2C and 2D are composed of free-response questions aimed at the averagelevel student. These tests are similar informat to offer comparable testing situa-tions. Grids with axes are provided forquestions assessing graphing skills.

• Form 3 is an advanced level test withfree-response questions. Grids withoutaxes are provided for questions assessinggraphing skills.

All of the above tests include a free-response Bonus question.

• The Open-Ended Assessment includesperformance assessment tasks that aresuitable for all students. A scoring rubric isincluded for evaluation guidelines. Sampleanswers are provided for assessment.

• A Vocabulary Test, suitable for all stu-dents, includes a list of the vocabularywords in the chapter and ten questionsassessing students’ knowledge of thoseterms. This can also be used in conjunc-tion with one of the chapter tests or as areview worksheet.

Intermediate Assessment• Four free-response quizzes are included

to offer assessment at appropriate inter-vals in the chapter.

• A Mid-Chapter Test provides an optionto assess the first half of the chapter. It iscomposed of both multiple-choice andfree-response questions.

Continuing Assessment• The Cumulative Review provides

students an opportunity to reinforce andretain skills as they proceed throughtheir study of Pre-Algebra. It can also be used as a test. This master includesfree-response questions.

• The Standardized Test Practice offerscontinuing review of pre-algebra conceptsin various formats, which may appear onthe standardized tests that they mayencounter. This practice includes multiple-choice, grid-in, and open-ended questions.Bubble-in and grid-in answer sections areprovided on the master.

Answers• Page A1 is an answer sheet for the

Standardized Test Practice questions that appear in the Student Edition onpages 196–197. This improves students’familiarity with the answer formats theymay encounter in test taking.

• The answers for the lesson-by-lesson masters are provided as reduced pageswith answers appearing in red.

• Full-size answer keys are provided for theassessment masters in this booklet.

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vii

This is an alphabetical list of key vocabulary terms you will learn in Chapter 4.As you study this chapter, complete each term’s definition or description.Remember to add the page number where you found the term. Add these pages toyour Pre-Algebra Study Notebook to review vocabulary at the end of the chapter.

Reading to Learn MathematicsVocabulary Builder

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ____________ PERIOD _____

44

Vocabulary FoundDefinition/Description/ExampleTerm on Page

algebraic fraction

base

composite number

divisible

expanded form

exponent

factor

factor tree

Vo

cab

ula

ry B

uild

er

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viii

Reading to Learn MathematicsVocabulary Builder (continued)

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ____________ PERIOD _____

44

Vocabulary FoundDefinition/Description/ExampleTerm on Page

greatest commonfactor (GCF)

monomial

power

prime factorization

prime number

standard form

scientific notation

simplest form

Venn Diagram

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Use divisibility rules to determine whether each number is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10.

1. 105 2. 600

3. 462 4. 197

List all the factors of each number.

5. 76 6. 42

7. 182 8. 80

Determine whether each expression is a monomial. Explain why or why not.

9. 13 10. x � y

11. 3(x � 1) 12. 5st

Determine whether 108 is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10.

Number Divisible? Reason2 yes The ones digit is 8, and 8 is divisible by 2.

3 yes The sum of the digits is 9, and 9 is divisible by 3.

5 no The ones digit is 8, not 0 or 5.

6 yes 108 is divisible by 2 and by 3.

10 no The ones digit is not 0.

108 is divisible by 2, 3, and 6.

A monomial is a number, a variable, or a product of numbers and/or variables. So, 108 is a monomial. The expression 5q is also a monomial since it is the product of a number and a variable, 5 � q. However, 2x � 1 is not a monomial since it is the sum of two terms.

Finding Factors Two or more numbers that are multiplied to form a product are called factors. Anynumber is divisible by its factors. The following rules can be used to determine mentally whether a number is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10.

A number is divisible by:

• 2 if the ones digit is divisible by 2.

• 3 if the sum of the digits is divisible by 3.

• 5 if the ones digit is 0 or 5.

• 6 if the number is divisible by 2 and by 3.

• 10 if the ones digit is 0.

ExampleExample

Study Guide and InterventionFactors and Monomials

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-14-1

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 165 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

ExercisesExercises

Less

on

4-1

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 166 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Skills PracticeFactors and Monomials

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-14-1

Use divisibility rules to determine whether each number is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10.

1. 100 2. 66

3. 88 4. 123

5. 240 6. 280

7. 255 8. 165

9. 318 10. 1000

List all the factors of each number.

11. 36 12. 29

13. 45 14. 81

15. 125 16. 117

17. 16 18. 63

Determine whether each expression is a monomial. Explain why or why not.

19. p 20. 73

21. 2 � n 22. h � w

23. 3(a � 6) 24. �3k

25. q � r 26. 4y � 6

27. 3(x � 3) 28. 6s � 4p

29. SEATING Can 132 graduates be seated in rows of 6 at the graduation ceremony?Explain.

30. SCHOOL SUPPLIES When Alex’s mother buys pencils for school, she divides themequally among Alex and his sister. Should she buy the pencils in packages of 15 or 30?Explain.

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PracticeFactors and Monomials

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-14-1

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 167 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Use divisibility rules to determine whether each number is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10.

1. 476 2. 117

3. 426 4. 29

5. 735 6. 276

7. 1200 8. 2370

9. 700 10. 4200

List all the factors of each number.

11. 48 12. 24

13. 121 14. 82

15. 37 16. 196

17. 95 18. 110

19. 96 20. 200

Determine whether each expression is a monomial. Explain why or why not.

21. 82 22. 4(�m)

23. m 24. rv

25. 6(x � 6) 26. 8n � 8

27. (�12)(�8)x 28. w � �

29. 2� � 2w 30. 2s � t

NEWSPAPERS For Exercises 31 and 32, refer to the following information.

Brandon delivers newspapers in his neighborhood. On Sunday, he must deliver 112 papers.Since he rides his bike, he separates the papers into smaller stacks and delivers one stackat a time.

31. What size stacks can he make?

32. If Brandon can carry no more than 30 papers at a time and can return home to restockno more than 5 times, how can he organize the 112 papers?

Less

on

4-1

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 168 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Reading to Learn MathematicsFactors and Monomials

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-14-1

How are side lengths of rectangles related to factors?

Do the activity at the top of page 148 in your textbook. Writeyour answers below.

a. Use grid paper to draw as many other rectangles as possible with an area of 36 square units. Label the length and width of each rectangle.

b. Did you draw a rectangle with a length of 5 units? Why or why not?

c. List all of the pairs of whole numbers whose product is 36. Compare this list to the lengths and widths of all the rectangles that have an area of 36 square units. What do you observe?

d. Predict the number of rectangles that can be drawn with an area of 64 square units. Explain how you can predict without actually drawingthem.

Write a definition and give an example of each new vocabulary word.

4. Is the expression 2x � 1 a monomial? Explain.

Helping You Remember5. Explain in your own words how to determine whether an expression is a monomial.

Pre-Activity

Reading the Lesson

Vocabulary Definition Example

1. factors

2. divisible

3. monomial

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Enrichment

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-14-1

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 169 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Determine whether 4032 is divisible by 7.

4032 Cross out the ones digit.

� 4 Subtract twice the value of the ones digit from the rest of the number.

399 If the difference is a number that you know is divisible by 7, stop. If not,

� 18

21 Since 21 is divisible by 7, 4032 is divisible by 7.

1. 266

4. 936

7. 2957

2. 4312

5. 13,293

8. 3124

3. 8976

6. 7085

9. 6545

Divisibility rule for 7

Divisibility rule for 11

Determine whether 5159 is divisible by 11.

Method 1

5159 Cross out the ones digit.

� 9 Subtract the value of the ones digit from the rest of the number.

506 If the difference is a number that you know is divisible by 11, stop. If not,

� 6

44 Since 44 is divisible by 11, 5159 is divisible by 11.

Method 2

5159

5 � 5 � 10 Add the odd-numbered digits (first and third).

1 � 9 � 10 Add the even-numbered digits (second and fourth).

0 Subtract the sums. If the difference is divisible by 11, the number is

Since 0 is divisible by 11, 5159 is divisible by 11.

Determine whether 62,382 is divisible by 11.

6 � 3 � 2 � 11 Add the odd-numbered digits.

2 � 8 � 10 Add the even-numbered digits.

1 Subtract the sums.

Since 1 is not divisible by 11, 62,382 is not divisible by 11.

Determine whether each number is divisible by 7 or 11.

Divisibility

X

X

X

Less

on

4-1

repeat.

divisible by 11.

repeat.

X

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Write each expression using exponents.

a. 10 � 10 � 10 � 10 � 10

The base is 10. It is a factor 5 times, so the exponent is 5.

10 � 10 � 10 � 10 � 10 � 105

b. ( p � 2)( p � 2)(p � 2)

The base is p � 2. It is a factor 3 times, so the exponent is 3.

( p � 2)( p � 2)( p � 2) � ( p � 2)3

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 170 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

A number that is expressed using an exponent is called a power. The base is the number that is multiplied. The exponent tells how many times the base is used as a factor. So, 43 has a base of 4 and an exponent of 3, and 43 � 4 � 4 � 4 � 64.

Evaluate x2 � 4 if x � �6.

x2 � 4 = (�6)2 � 4 Replace x with �6.

= (�6)(�6) � 4 �6 is a factor 2 times.

= 36 � 4 Multiply.

= 32 Subtract.

Study Guide and InterventionPowers and Exponents

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

Example 1Example 1

4-24-2

Example 2Example 2

Write each expression using exponents.

1. 5 � 5 � 5 � 5 � 5 � 5 � 5 2. (–7)(–7)(–7)

3. d � d � d � d 4. x � x � y � y

5. (z – 4)(z – 4) 6. 3(–t)(–t)(–t)

Evaluate each expression if g � 3, h � �1, and m � 9.

7. g 5 8. 5g2

9. g2 � m 10. hm2

11. g3 � 2h 12. m � hg3

ExercisesExercises

Expressions involving powers are evaluated using order of operations. Powers are repeated multiplications. They are evaluated after any grouping symbols and before other multiplication or division operations.

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Skills PracticePowers and Exponents

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-24-2

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 171 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Write each expression using exponents.

1. 7 � 7 2. (�3)(�3)(�3)(�3)(�3)

3. 4 4. (k � k)(k � k)(k � k)

5. p � p � p � p � p � p 6. 3 � 3

7. (�a)(�a)(�a)(�a) 8. 6 � 6 � 6 � 6

9. 9 � 9 � 9 10. 4 � y � z � z � z

11. s � s � s � s � t � u � u 12. 5 � 5 � 5 � q � q

Express each number in expanded form.

13. 135 14. 8732

15. 1005 16. 989

Evaluate each expression if b � 8, c � 2, and d � �3.

17. 4c 18. c0

19. b3 20. c3 � 3c

21. 3c 22. c4

23. c2 � d 24. 2b2

25. b2 � c3 26. d2

27. d3 28. b2 � d3

29. b2d 30. (b � c)2

Less

on

4-2

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 172 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

PracticePowers and Exponents

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-24-2

Write each expression using exponents.

1. 11 � 11 � 11 2. 2 � 2 � 2 � 2 � 2 � 2 � 2 � 2

3. 5 4. (�4)(�4)

5. a � a � a � a 6. n � n � n � n � n

7. 4 � 4 � 4 8. (b � b)(b � b)(b � b)

9. (�v)(�v)(�v)(�v) 10. x � x � z � z � z

11. 2 � 2 � 2 � 2 � 2 � t � t 12. m � m � m � n � p � p

Express each number in expanded form.

13. 13 14. 1006

15. 17,629 16. 897

Evaluate each expression if x � 3, y � �2, and z � 4.

17. yx 18. 510

19. z2 20. x2

21. 9x 22. z2 � 22

23. y5 24. z2 � y4

25. x2 � y2 � z2 26. z2 � x2

FAMILY TREE For Exercises 27 and 28, refer to the following information.

When examining a family tree, the branches are many. You are generation “now.” One generationago, your 2 parents were born. Two generations ago your 4 grandparents were born.

27. How many great-grandparents were born three generations ago?

28. How many “great” grandparents were born ten generations ago?

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Reading to Learn MathematicsPowers and Exponents

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-24-2

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 173 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Why are exponents important in comparing computer data?Do the activity at the top of page 153 in your textbook. Write youranswers below.

a. Write 16 as a product of factors of 2. How many factors are there?

b. How many factors of 2 form the product 128?

c. One megabyte is 1024 kilobytes. How many factors of 2 form the product 1024?

Write a definition and give an example of each new vocabulary word or phrase.

6. Write each expression using exponents.

a. 4 � 4 � 4 � 4 b. x � x � x � y � y

c. (�2)(�2)(�2) d. 5 � r � r � m � m � m

7. The number (3 � 103) � (5 � 102) � (0 � 101) � (2 � 100) is written in

form, while 3502 is written in form.

Helping You Remember8. Explain how the terms base, power, and exponent are related. Provide an example.

Pre-Activity

Reading the Lesson

Less

on

4-2

Vocabulary Definition Example

1. base

2. exponent

3. power

4. standardform

5. expandedform

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 174 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Enrichment

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-24-2

ExponentsNumbers can be expressed in several ways. Some numbers are expressed as sums. Somenumbers are expressed as products of factors, while other numbers are expressed as powers.

Two ways to express 27 are 3 � 3 � 3 and 33.

The number 1 million can be expressed in the following ways.

1,000,000 1000 � 1000 100 � 100 � 100 102 � 102 � 102

1,000,0001 10002 1003 106

Write names for each number below using the given exponents.

1. 16; exponents: 2 and 4 2. 81; exponents: 2 and 4

3. 64; exponents: 2 and 6 4. 256; exponents: 2 and 8

5. 625; exponents: 2 and 4 6. 729; exponents: 2 and 6

7. 2401; exponents: 2 and 4 8. 4096; exponents: 2 and 12

9. 6561; exponents: 2 and 8 10. 390,625; exponents: 2 and 8

Numbers that can be named as powers with like bases can be multiplied by adding theexponents.

8 � 8 � 23 � 23

� 23�3

� 26

Write the product of each pair of factors in exponential form.

11. 9 � 9 12. 4 � 4

13. 16 � 8 14. 125 � 25

15. 27 � 9 16. 81 � 27

17. 49 � 49 18. 121 � 121

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Find the prime factorization of 48.

Determine whether each number is prime or composite.

1. 27 2. 151

3. 77 4. 25

Write the prime factorization for each number. Use exponents for repeated factors.

5. 16 6. 45

7. 78 8. 70

Factor each monomial.

9. 6m3 10. –20xy2

11. a2b2c3 12. 25h

Example 2Example 2

A prime number is a whole number that has exactly two factors, 1 and itself. A composite number is a whole number that has more than two factors. Zero and 1 are neither prime nor composite.

Determine whether 29 is prime or composite.

Find the factors of 29.

29 � 1 � 29

The only factors of 29 are 1 and 29, therefore 29 is a prime number.

Any composite number can be written as a product of prime numbers. A factor tree can be used to findthe prime factorization.

Example 1Example 1

Study Guide and InterventionPrime Factorization

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-34-3

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 175 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

The prime factorization of 48 is 2 � 2 � 2 � 2 � 3 or 24 � 3.

In algebra, monomials can be factored as a product of prime numbers and variables with no exponentgreater than 1. So, 8x 2 factors as 2 � 2 � 2 � x � x.

48 is the number to be factored.

Find any pair of whole number factors of 48.

Continue to factor any number that is not prime.

The factor tree is complete when there is a row of prime numbers.2 � 2232

48

6 � 8

2 � 3 2 � 4

ExercisesExercises

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 176 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Skills PracticePrime Factorization

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-34-3

Determine whether each number is prime or composite.

1. 41 2. 29

3. 87 4. 36

5. 57 6. 61

7. 71 8. 103

9. 39 10. 91

11. 47 12. 67

Write the prime factorization of each number. Use exponents for repeated factors.

13. 20 14. 40

15. 32 16. 44

17. 90 18. 121

19. 46 20. 30

21. 65 22. 80

Factor each monomial.

23. 15t 24. 16r2

25. �11m2 26. �49y3

27. 21ab 28. �42xyz

29. 45j2k 30. 17u2v2

31. 27d4 32. �16cd2

Page 22: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

PracticePrime Factorization

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-34-3

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 177 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Determine whether each number is prime or composite.

1. 11 2. 63

3. 73 4. 75

5. 49 6. 69

7. 53 8. 83

Write the prime factorization of each number. Use exponents for repeated factors.

9. 33 10. 24

11. 72 12. 276

13. 85 14. 1024

15. 95 16. 200

17. 243 18. 735

Factor each monomial.

19. 35v 20. 49c2

21. �14b3 22. �81h2

23. 33wz 24. �56ghj

25. NUMBER THEORY Twin primes are a pair of consecutive odd primes, which differ by 2. For example, 3 and 5 are twin primes. Find the twin primes less than 100.(Hint: There are 8 pairs of twins less than 100.)

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 178 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Reading to Learn MathematicsPrime Factorization

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-34-3

How can models be used to determine whether numbers are prime?Do the activity at the top of page 159 in your textbook. Write youranswers below.

a. Use grid paper to draw as many different rectangular arrangements of2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 squares as possible.

b. Which numbers of squares can be arranged in more than one way?

c. Which numbers of squares can only be arranged one way?

d. What do all rectangles that you listed in part c have in common?Explain.

Pre-Activity

Reading the Lesson

Write a definition and give an example of each new vocabulary word or phrase.

Helping You Remember

6. Composite is a word used in everyday English.

a. Find the definition of composite in the dictionary. Write the definition.

b. Explain how the English definition can help you remember how composite is used in mathematics.

Vocabulary Definition Example

1. compositenumber

2. factor

3. factor tree

4. primefactorization

5. primenumber

Page 24: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Enrichment

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-34-3

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 179 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Prime PyramidA prime number is a whole number that has exactly two factors—itself and 1. The pyramid below is called a prime pyramid. Each row begins with 1 and ends with the numberof that row. So, row 2 begins with 1 and ends with 2, row 3 begins with 1 and ends with 3, andso on. In each row, the numbers from 1 to the row number are arranged such that the sum ofany two adjacent numbers is a prime number.

For example, look at row 4:

• It must contain the numbers 1, 2, 3, and 4.• It must begin with 1 and end with 4.• The sum of adjacent pairs must be a prime number:

1 � 2 � 3, 2 � 3 � 5, 3 � 4 � 7

1. Complete the pyramid by filling in the missing numbers.

2. Extend the pyramid to row 13.

3. Explain the patterns you see in the completed pyramid.

1 12

1 11

1 10

1 98567432

1 8

1 75

1 4 3 2 5 6

1 4 3 2 5

1 2 3 4

1 2 3

1

*

2

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Page 25: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 180 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

The greatest number that is a factor of two or more numbers is the greatest common factor (GCF).Two ways to find the GCF are shown below.

Find the GCF of 24 and 32.

Method 1 List the factors.

factors of 24: 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24 Look for factors common to both lists, 1, 2, 4, and 8.

factors of 32: 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32

The greatest common factor of 24 and 32 is 8.

Method 2 Use prime factorization.

24 � 2 � 2 � 2 � 3 Find the common prime factors of 24 and 32.

32 � 2 � 2 � 2 � 2 � 2

Multiply the common prime factors. The greatest common factor of 24 and 32 is 2 � 2 � 2 or 8.

In algebra, greatest common factors are used to factor expressions.

Factor 5x � 10.

First, find the GCF of 5x and 10.

5x � 5 � x

10 � 2 � 5 The GCF is 5.

Now write each term as a product of the GCF and its remaining factors.

5x � 10 � 5(x) � 5(2)

� 5(x � 2) Distributive Property

So, 5x � 10 � 5(x � 2).

Study Guide and InterventionGreatest Common Factor (GCF)

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

Example 1Example 1

4-44-4

Example 2Example 2

Find the GCF of each set of numbers.

1. 30, 42 2. 15, 33 3. 44, 110 4. 16, 48

Factor each expression.

5. 4g � 16 6. 2d � 6 7. 8a � 24

8. f 2 � 2f 9. 6 � 3j 10. 16n2 � 40n

ExercisesExercises

Page 26: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Skills PracticeGreatest Common Factor (GCF)

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-44-4

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 181 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Find the GCF of each set of numbers or monomials.

1. 15, 50 2. 24, 81

3. 18, 27 4. 36, 64

5. 88, 40 6. 54, 63

7. 11, 22 8. 14, 25

9. 20, 30 10. 16, 18

11. 64, 80 12. 16, 24

13. 30t, 40t2 14. 6, 9t

15. 16k2, 40k 16. 9m, 15n

17. 7pq, 8q 18. 18p, 45

Factor each expression.

19. 5b � 15 20. 7t � 49

21. 6w � 18 22. 100 � 50x

23. 7x � 7 24. 12n � 60

25. 24 � 8g 26. 50 � 5f

27. 3n � 24 28. 9� � 63

29. 6u � 36 30. 70 � 7c

31. 42 � 21x 32. 12y � 16

33. 6p � 12 34. 9r � 81

35. 6 � 8q 36. 21x � 33 Less

on

4-4

Page 27: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 182 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

PracticeGreatest Common Factor (GCF)

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-44-4

Find the GCF of each set of numbers or monomials.

1. 9, 36 2. 42, 60

3. 16, 60 4. 29, 58

5. 18, 35 6. 90, 480

7. 80, 45 8. 700, 200

9. 17, 85 10. 24, 84, 168

11. 55, 105 12. 252, 126

13. 5p, 20p2 14. 28a, 49ab

15. 8b, 5c 16. 6a2, 18b2

17. 88s2t, 40st2 18. 42a2b, 60ab2

Factor each expression.

19. 10x � 40 20. 8v � 56

21. 9t � 9 22. 13m � 39

23. 90 � 45n 24. 15p � 60

25. 48 � 8r 26. 11z � 55

27. 18q � 54 28. 125 � 25h

29. 42a � 77 30. 30 � 45s

31. 50n � 30 32. 18 � 12d

33. 27m � 105 34. 65 � 39b

35. 21d � 63 36. 48 � 84m

37. SCHOOL TRIP Thirty-two seventh graders, 48 eighth graders, and 60 ninth graders aretaking a ski trip. In order to help students get better acquainted, students from eachgrade level are to ride each bus. What is the greatest number of buses that can be usedif students from each grade level are divided equally among the buses?

Page 28: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Reading to Learn MathematicsGreatest Common Factor (GCF)

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-44-4

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 183 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

How can a diagram be used to find the greatest common factor?

Do the activity at the top of page 164 in your textbook. Writeyour answers below.

a. Which numbers are in both circles?

b. Find the product of the numbers that are in both circles.

c. Is the product also a factor of 12 and 20?

d. Make a Venn diagram showing the prime factors of 16 and 28. Thenuse it to find the common factors of the numbers.

Pre-Activity

Reading the LessonWrite a definition and give an example of each new vocabulary word or phrase.

Helping You Remember3. Summarize in your own words how to find the greatest common factor of two numbers using

each method.

a. prime factorization

b. lists of factors

c. a Venn diagram

Vocabulary Definition Example

1. Venndiagram

2. greatestcommon factor

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on

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 184 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Enrichment

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-44-4

GCFs by Successive DivisionAnother way to find the greatest common factor (GCF) of two numbers is to use successivedivision. This method works well for large numbers.

Find the GCF of 848 and 1325.

Step 1 Divide the smaller number into the greater number.

1 R477848 �1�3�2�5�

848477

Step 2 Divide the remainder into the divisor. Repeat this step until you get a remainder of 0.

1 R371 1 R106 3 R53 2 R0477 �8�4�8� 371�4�7�7� 106 �3�7�1� 53 �1�0�6�

477 371 318 106371 106 53 0

The last divisor is the GCF of the two original numbers. So the GCF of 848 and 1325 is 53.

Use the method above to find the GCF of each pair of numbers.

1. 187; 578 2. 161; 943

3. 215; 1849 4. 453; 484

5. 432; 588 6. 279; 403

7. 1325; 3498 8. 9840; 1751

9. 3484; 5963 10. 1802; 106

11. 45,787; 69,875 12. 35,811; 102,070

Page 30: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Simplify �2346aab2

2�.

�2346aab2

2� � Divide the numerator and denominator by the GCF, 2 � 2 � 3 � a.

� �2

3� b

� a� b

� or �23ba

2� Simplify.

2 � 2 � 2 � 3 � a � b � b���

2 � 2 � 3 � 3 � a � a

Simplify each fraction. If the fraction is already in simplest form, write simplified.

1. �1220� 2. �

1366� 3. �

17050

4. �165� 5. �

284� 6. �

38

7. �cc3� 8. �

rr

4

2� 9. �1241bb

10. �2246ww� 11. �

152st

� 12. �3dd2�

Example 2Example 2

A fraction is in simplest form when the GCF of the numerator and the denominator is 1. One way towrite a fraction in simplest form is to write the prime factorization of the numerator and the denominator.Then divide the numerator and denominator by the GCF.

Write �1284� in simplest form.

Write the prime factorization of the numerator and the denominator.

�1284� � �

22� 2

� 3� 2

� 3� 3

� Divide the numerator and denominator by the GCF, 2 � 3.

� �2

3� 2� or �

34

� Simplify.

Algebraic fractions can also be written in simplest form. Again, you can write the prime factorizationof the numerator and the denominator, then divide by the GCF.

Example 1Example 1

Study Guide and InterventionSimplifying Algebraic Fractions

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-54-5

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 185 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

ExercisesExercises

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on

4-5

1 1

1 1

/ // /

1 1 1 1

1 1 1 1

/ / / // / / /

Page 31: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 186 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Skills PracticeSimplifying Algebraic Fractions

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-54-5

Write each fraction in simplest form. If the fraction is already in simplest form,write simplified.

1. �1700� 2. �

1128� 3. �

3405�

4. �284� 5. �

46

� 6. �5663�

7. �1284� 8. �

479� 9. �

1339�

10. �2316� 11. �

3420� 12. �

346�

13. �4545� 14. �

144� 15. �

3468�

16. �8910� 17. �

255� 18. �

5764�

19. �2422� 20. �

178� 21. �

dd

3

4�

22. �yy3� 23. �

qq

3� 24. �

ss

4

2�

25. �xy

2� 26. �

192aa

� 27. �186tt

28. �1244gg

� 29. �3450j

� 30. �210000pp2�

31. �17050nn3� 32. �

261kk

5

2� 33. �34ab�

34. �2146db

� 35. �284aa

� 36. �355tt

3

2�

Page 32: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

PracticeSimplifying Algebraic Fractions

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-54-5

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 187 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Write each fraction in simplest form. If the fraction is already in simplest form,write simplified.

1. �396� 2. �

160� 3. �

1597�

4. �2214� 5. �

369� 6. �

18050

7. �1762� 8. �

13326

� 9. �4752�

10. �4962� 11. �

3555� 12. �

6840�

13. �5670� 14. �

1576� 15. �

3633�

16. �3640� 17. �

2542� 18. �

19068

19. �4458� 20. �

1249� 21. �

xx

3

7�

22. �mm

4

5� 23. �aa

7

4� 24. �uu

5�

25. �2214yy

� 26. �144qq

2

2� 27. �1158xx

2

2�

28. �16236cc

� 29. �11211vv

2� 30. �

4429b2�

31. �ee

2

3

ff

2� 32. �

mp3

2� 33. �

120aa

3b5b

4�

34. SKI RESORT A local ski resort is open for business 13 weeks in the winter. Write a

fraction in simplest form that represents the fraction of a year the resort is open.

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on

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 188 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Reading to Learn MathematicsSimplifying Algebraic Fractions

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-54-5

How are simplified fractions useful in representing measurements?Do the activity at the top of page 169 in your textbook. Writeyour answers below.

a. Are the three fractions equivalent? Explain your reasoning.

b. Which figure is divided into the least number of parts?

c. Which fraction would you say is written in simplest form? Why?

Pre-Activity

Reading the Lesson

Write a definition and give an example of each new vocabulary phrase.

3. Use a Venn diagram to explain how to simplify �1485�.

Vocabulary Definition Example

1. simplestform

2. algebraicfraction

Helping You Remember

4. Explain the similarities and differences between simplifying a numerical fraction andsimplifying an algebraic fraction.

Page 34: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Enrichment

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-54-5

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 189 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Matching Equivalent Fractions

Cut out the pieces below and match the edges so that equivalent fractions meet.The pieces form a 4 � 6 rectangle. The outer edges of the rectangle formed willhave no fractions.

17

38

1242

210

59

1535

324910

58

1628

45501112

47

820

40451213 89

37

515

321

12

5256310911

1521

4044

19

3577

713

18

49

1848

218

810

2733

4991

110

2454

220112

45

68

2133

78

13

318

57

915

4448711

15

1456

511

34

46

933

14

28

1628

27

25

35401314

67

2545

336

23

620

35

36

4852311

2032

30351011

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on

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Page 35: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Find �((�

88))

4

2�. Express your answer using exponents.

�((�

88))

4

2� � (�8)4� 2 The common base is �8.

� (�8)2 Subtract the exponents.

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 190 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

When multiplying powers with the same base, add the exponents.

Symbols Example

am � an � am +n 42 � 45 � 42 + 5 or 47

When dividing powers with the same base, subtract the exponents.

Symbols Example

�aa

m

n� � am � n, where a � 0 �55

6

2� � 56 � 2 or 54

Find 2a2(3a). Express your answer using exponents.

2a2(3a) � (2 � 3)(a2 � a) Use the Commutative and Associative Properties.

� (6)(a2 � 1) The common base is a.

� 6a3 Add the exponents.

Find each product or quotient. Express your answer using exponents.

1. 47 � 46 2. v5 � v4 3. ( f 3)( f 9)

4. 225 � 225 5. 7h(5h3) 6. �10x2(7x3)

7. �77

5

2� 8. �11

8

6� 9. �((�

1122))

3

3�

10. 38 � 33 11. �cc

2

1

0

3� 12. �((�

pp

))

1

1

8

2�

13. �7u6(�6u5) 14. �22ww

3� 15. �5m3(4m6)

16. the product of two cubed and two squared

17. the quotient of six to the eighth power and six squared

Study Guide and InterventionMultiplying and Dividing Monomials

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

Example 1Example 1

4-64-6

Example 2Example 2

ExercisesExercises

Page 36: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Skills PracticeMultiplying and Dividing Monomials

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-64-6

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 191 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Find each product or quotient. Express your answer using exponents.

1. 23 � 25 2. 102 � 107

3. 14 � 1 4. 63 � 63

5. (�3)2(�3)3 6. (�9)2(�9)2

7. a2 � a3 8. n8 � n3

9. ( p4)( p4) 10. (z6)(z7)

11. (6b3)(3b4) 12. (�v)3(�v)7

13. 11a2 � 3a6 14. 10t2 � 4t10

15. (8c2)(9c) 16. (4f 8)(5 f 6)

17. �55

1

2

0� 18. �

1100

6

2�

19. �77

9

6� 20. �1122

8

3�

21. �110000

9

8� 22. �(�

22)3

23. �rr

8

7� 24. �zz

1

8

0�

25. �qq

8

4� 26. �gg

1

8

2�

27. �((�

yy))

7

2� 28. �((�

zz))

1

5

2�

29. the product of two squared and two to the sixth power

30. the quotient of ten to the seventh power and ten cubed

31. the product of y squared and y cubed

32. the quotient of a to the twentieth power and a to the tenth power

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on

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 192 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

PracticeMultiplying and Dividing Monomials

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-64-6

Find each product or quotient. Express your answer using exponents.

1. 42 � 43 2. 98 � 96

3. 74 � 72 4. 132 � 134

5. (�8)5(�8)3 6. (�21)9(�21)5

7. t9 � t3 8. h4 � h13

9. (m6)(m6) 10. (u11)(u10)

11. (�r)7(�r)20 12. (�w)(�w)9

13. 4d5 � 8d6 14. 7j50 � 6j50

15. �5b9 � 6b2 16. 121 � 122

17. �66

1

3

1� 18. �

1155

3

2�

19. �99

9

7� 20. �1188

4

4�

21. �((�

77))

6

5� 22. �9955

2

1

1

8�

23. �vv

3

2

0

0� 24. �nn

1

1

9

1�

25. the product of five cubed and five to the fourth power

26. the quotient of eighteen to the ninth power and eighteen squared

27. the product of z cubed and z cubed

28. the quotient of x to the fifth power and x cubed

29. SOUND Decibels are units used to measure sound. The softest sound that can be heardis rated as 0 decibels (or a relative loudness of 1). Ordinary conversation is rated atabout 60 decibels (or a relative loudness of 106). A rock concert is rated at about 120decibels (or a relative loudness of 1012). How many times greater is the relative loudness of a rock concert than the relative loudness of ordinary conversation?

Page 38: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Reading to Learn MathematicsMultiplying and Dividing Monomials

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-64-6

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 193 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

How are powers of monomials useful in comparing earthquake magnitudes?Do the activity at the top of page 175 in your textbook. Writeyour answers below.

a. Examine the exponents of the factors and the exponents of the productsin the last column. What do you observe?

b. Make a conjecture about a rule for determining the exponent of theproduct when you multiply powers with the same base. Test your ruleby multiplying 22 � 24 using a calculator.

Pre-Activity

Reading the Lesson

1. When multiplying powers with like bases, the exponents.

2. When dividing powers with like bases, the exponents.

3. Write a division expression whose quotient is 72.

4. Write a multiplication expression whose product is v5.

5. Find each product.

a. 4 � 43 b. y7 � y5

c. (�2x2)(5x2) d. �3r2 � r

6. Find each quotient.

a. �77

4

2� b. �vv

9

3�

c. �66

7

6� d. �ab

2b2

2�

Helping You Remember

7. Explain how dividing powers is related to simplifying fractions. Provide an example aspart of your explanation.

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on

4-6

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 194 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Enrichment

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-64-6

Dividing Powers with Different BasesSome powers with different bases can be divided. First, you must be able to write both aspowers of the same base. An example is shown below.

�28

5

2� � �(223

5

)2� To find the power of a power, multiply the exponents.

� �22

5

6�

� 2�1 or �12

This method could not have been used to divide �29

5

2�, since 9 cannot be written as a power of2 using integers.

Simplify each fraction using the method shown above. Express the solution without exponents.

1. �82

2

2� 2. �1863

4� 3. �

93

3

3�

4. �8314

4� 5. �

831

9

2� 6. �3126

4

4�

7. �122553

2� 8. �

261

6

62� 9. �11000

6

03�

10. �6845

3� 11. �

2974

5� 12. �

34735

3�

Page 40: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Study Guide and InterventionNegative Exponents

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-74-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 195 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Extending the pattern below shows that 4–1 = �14

� or �411� .

42 � 16� 4

41 � 4� 4

40 � 1� 4

4�1 � �14

This suggests the following definition.

a�n = �a1n�, for a � 0 and any integer n.

Write each expression using a positive exponent.

a. 3�4 b. y�2

3�4 � �314� y�2 � �

y12�

We can evaluate algebraic expressions with negative exponents using the definition of

negative exponents.

Write each expression using a positive exponent.

1. 6�4 2. (�7)�8 3. b�6 4. n�1

Write each fraction as an expression using a negative exponent other than �1.

5. �212� 6. �

1134� 7. �

215� 8. �

419�

Evaluate each expression if m � �4, n � 1, and p � 6.

9. p�2 10. m�3 11. (np) –1 12. 3m

Evaluate b�2 if b� 3.

b�2 � 3�2 Replace b with 3.

� �312� Definition of negative exponent

� �19

� Find 32.

Example 1Example 1

Example 2Example 2

ExercisesExercises

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on

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 196 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Skills PracticeNegative Exponents

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-74-7

Write each expression using a positive exponent.

1. 3�4 2. 8�7 3. 10�4

4. (�2)�6 5. (�40)�3 6. (�17)�12

7. n�10 8. b�8 9. q�5

10. m�4 11. v�11 12. p�2

Write each fraction as an expression using a negative exponent other than �1.

13. �812� 14. �

1105� 15. �

213�

16. �617� 17. �

1174� 18. �

2112�

19. �317� 20. �

912� 21. �

312�

22. �1121� 23. �

215� 24. �

316�

Evaluate each expression if x � 1, y � 2, and z � �3.

25. y�z 26. z�2 27. x�8

28. y�5 29. z�3 30. y�1

31. z�4 32. 5 z 33. x�99

34. 1z 35. 4z 36. yz

Page 42: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

PracticeNegative Exponents

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-74-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 197 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Write each expression using a positive exponent.

1. 7�8 2. 10�6 3. 23�1

4. (�5)�2 5. (�18)�10 6. m�99

7. (�1)�12 8. c�6 9. p�5

10. g�17 11. 5z�4 12. 3t�1

Write each fraction as an expression using a negative exponent.

13. �2110� 14. �

2193� 15. �

414�

16. �319� 17. �

8117� 18. �

m1

4�

19. �x13� 20. �

a12� 21. �

419�

22. �18

� 23. �1144� 24. �

1169�

Evaluate each expression if x � 3, y � �2, and z � 4.

25. x�4 26. y�2 27. y�5

28. z�4 29. 5y 30. 10y

31. 3z�1 32. zy 33. (xz)�2

34. HAIR Hair grows at a rate of �614� inch per day. Write this number using negative

exponents.

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on

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 198 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Reading to Learn MathematicsNegative Exponents

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-74-7

How do negative exponents represent repeated division?

Do the activity at the top of page 181 in your textbook. Writeyour answers below.

a. Describe the pattern of powers in the first column. Continue the pattern by writing the next two powers in the table.

b. Describe the pattern of values in the second column. Then completethe second column.

c. Verify that the powers you wrote in part a are equal to the valuesthat you found in part b.

d. Determine how 3�1 should be defined.

Pre-Activity

Reading the Lesson

1. Explain the value of 5�3 using a pattern.

2. Using what you know about the Quotient of Powers rule, fill in the missing number.

5�3 = �5?5�

Helping You Remember

3. Are �x2 and x�2 equivalent? Explain.

Power Value

51 5

50 1

5�1 �15

5�2 �215�

5�3

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Enrichment

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-74-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 199 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Proving Definitions of ExponentsRecall the rules for multiplying and dividing powers with the same base. Use these rules,along with other properties you have learned, to justify each definition. Abbreviations forsome properties you may wish to use are listed below.

Associative Property of Multiplication (APM) Additive Identity Property (AIP)Multiplicative Identity Property (MIP) Inverse Property of Addition (IPA)Inverse Property of Multiplication (IPM)

Write the reason for each statement.

1. Prove: a0 � 1

StatementLet m be an integer, and let a be any nonzero number.

am � a0 � am � 0

am � a0 � am

�a1m� � (am � a0) � �

a1m� � am

��a1m� � am� � a0 � �

a1m� � am

1 � a0 � 1

a0 � 1

2. Prove: a–n � �a1n�

StatementLet n be an integer, and let a be any nonzero number.

a–n � an � a–n � n

a–n � an � a0

a–n � an � 1

(a–n � an) � �a1n� � 1 � �

a1n�

a–n � �an � �a1n�� � 1 � �

a1n�

a–n � 1 � 1 � �a1n�

a–n � �a1n�

Reasona. Given

b.

c.

d.

e.

f.

g.

Reason

a. Given

b.

c.

d.

e.

f.

g.

h.

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on

4-7

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 200 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

When you deal with very large numbers like 5,000,000 or very small numbers like 0.0005, it is difficult tokeep track of place value. Numbers such as these can be written in scientific notation. A number isexpressed in scientific notation when it is written as a product of a factor and a power of 10. The factormust be greater than or equal to 1 and less than 10.

By definition, a number in scientific notation is written as a � 10n, where 1 a 10 and n is an integer.

Express each number in scientific notation.

a. 62,000,00

To write in scientific notation, place the decimal point after the first nonzero digit, then find the power of 10.

62,000,000 � 6.2 � 107 The decimal point moves 7 places. The power of 10 is 7.

b. 0.00025

0.00025 � 2.5 � 10�4 Place the decimal point after the first nonzero digit. The power of 10 is �4.

1. 4.12 � 106 2. 5.8 � 102 3. 9.01 � 10�3

4. 6.72 � 10�7 5. 8.72 � 104 6. 4.44 � 10�5

Express each number in scientific notation.

7. 12,000,000,000 8. 5000 9. 0.00475

10. 0.00007463 11. 235,000 12. 0.000377

Choose the greater number in each pair.

13. 4.9 � 104, 9.9 � 10�4 14. 2.004 � 103, 2.005 � 10–2

15. 3.2 � 102, 700 16. 0.002, 3.6 � 10�4

Study Guide and InterventionScientific Notation

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-84-8

Express each number in standard form.

a. 6.32 � 105

6.32 � 105 � 632,000 Move the decimal point 5 places to the right.

b. 7.8 � 10�6

7.8 � 10�6 � 0.0000078 Move the decimal point 6 places to the left.

Example 1Example 1

Example 2Example 2

ExercisesExercises

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Skills PracticeScientific Notation

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-84-8

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 201 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Express each number in standard form.

1. 1.5 � 103 2. 4.01 � 104

3. 6.78 � 102 4. 5.925 � 106

5. 7.0 � 108 6. 9.99 � 107

7. 3.0005 � 105 8. 2.54 � 105

9. 1.75 � 104 10. 1.2 � 10�6

11. 7.0 � 10�1 12. 6.3 � 10�3

13. 5.83 � 10�2 14. 8.075 � 10�4

15. 1.1 � 10�5 16. 7.3458 � 107

Express each number in scientific notation.

17. 1,000,000 18. 17,400

19. 500 20. 803,000

21. 0.00027 22. 5300

23. 18 24. 0.125

25. 17,000,000,000 26. 0.01

27. 21,800 28. 2,450,000

29. 0.0054 30. 0.000099

31. 8,888,800 32. 0.00912

Choose the greater number in each pair.

33. 8.8 � 103, 9.1 � 10�4 34. 5.01 � 102, 5.02 � 10�1

35. 6.4 � 103, 900 36. 1.9 � 10�2, 0.02

37. 2.2 � 10�3, 2.1 � 102 38. 8.4 � 102, 839

Less

on

4-8

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 202 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

PracticeScientific Notation

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-84-8

Express each number in standard form.

1. 2.4 � 104 2. 9.0 � 103

3. 4.385 � 107 4. 1.03 � 108

5. 3.05 � 102 6. 5.11 � 1010

7. 6.000032 � 106 8. 1.0 � 101

9. 8.75 � 105 10. 8.49 � 10�2

11. 7.1 � 10�6 12. 1.0 � 10�3

13. 4.39 � 10�7 14. 1.25 � 10�4

Express each number in scientific notation.

15. 40,000 16. 16

17. 876,000,000 18. 4500

19. 151 20. 0.00037

21. 83,000,000 22. 919,100

23. 5,000,000,000,000 24. 0.13

25. 0.0000007 26. 0.0067

NIAGARA FALLS For Exercises 27 and 28, use the following information.

Every minute, 840,000,000,000 drops of water flow over Niagara Falls.

27. Write this number in scientific notation.

28. How many drops flow over the falls in a day?

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Reading to Learn MathematicsScientific Notation

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-84-8

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 203 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Why is scientific notation an important tool in comparingreal-world data?

Do the activity at the top of page 186 in your textbook. Writeyour answers below.

a. Write the track length in millimeters.

b. Write the track width in millimeters. (1 micron � 0.001 millimeter)

Pre-Activity

Reading the LessonWrite a definition and give an example of the new vocabulary phrase.

2. To multiply by a power of 10, move the decimal point to the if the exponent is positive.

3. Which is larger, �2.1 × 104 or �2.1 × 10�4? Explain.

Helping You Remember4. Explain how to express each number in scientific notation.

a. a number greater than 1

b. a number less than one

c. the number 1

Vocabulary Definition Example

slope intercept form See students’ work.1.

Less

on

4-8

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 204 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Enrichment

NAME ______________________________________________ DATE ______________ PERIOD _____

4-84-8

Scientific NotationIt is sometimes necessary to multiply and divide very large or very small numbers usingscientific notation.

To multiply numbers in scientific notation, use the following rule.

For any numbers a and b, and any numbers c and d,(c � 10a)(d � 10b) � (c � d) � 10a � b.

For any numbers a and b, and any numbers c and d, (d � 0)(c � 10a) � (d � 10b) � (c � d) � 10a � b.

(3.0 � 104)(�5.0 � 10�2) � [3.0 � (�5.0)] � 104 � (�2)

� �15.0 � 102

� �1.5 � 103 or �1500

(24 � 10�4) � (1.5 � 102) � (24 � 1.5) � 10�4 � 2

� 16 � 10�6

� 1.6 � 10�5 or 0.000016

Multiply or divide. Express each product or quotient in scientific notation.

1. (2.7 � 109) � (3.1 � 102) 2. (6.1 � 10�2) � (1.3 � 105)

3. (5.4 � 10�3) � (1.8 � 102) 4. (6.9 � 10�3) � (3.0 � 10�8)

5. (1.1 � 10�5) � (9.9 � 10�1) 6. (4.0 � 100) � (1.0 � 10�2)

Solve. Write your answers in standard form.

To divide numbers in scientific notation, use the following rule.

7. The distance from Earth to the Moon is about 2.0 � 105 miles. The distance from Earth to the Sun is about 9.3 � 107 miles. How many times farther is it to the Sun than to the Moon?

8. If each of the 3.0 � 104 people employed by Sunny Motors earned 4.0 � 104 dollars lastyear, how much money did the company pay out to its employees?

Example 1Example 1

Example 2Example 2

Page 50: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Chapter 4 Test, Form 1

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 205 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Ass

essm

ent

Write the letter for the correct answer in the blank at the right of each question.

1. Use divisibility rules to determine which number is a factor of 39.A. 3 B. 5 C. 6 D. 10 1.

2. Determine which expression is not a monomial.A. 36 B. x C. x � 5 D. 4k 2.

3. Write (6)(6)(6) using exponents.A. 36 B. 66 C. 13 D. 63 3.

4. Evaluate k3 if k � 2.A. 2 B. 6 C. 8 D. 27 4.

5. Write the prime factorization of 18.A. 2 � 9 B. 2 � 3 � 3 C. 2 � 2 � 3 D. 3 � 6 5.

6. Factor 35x2y completely.A. 5 � 7 � x � x � y B. 35 � 1 � x � x � yC. 5 � 7 � x � y � y D. 5 � 7 � x2 � y 6.

For Questions 7 and 8, find the GCF of each set of numbers or monomials.

7. 12, 20A. 2 B. 32 C. 240 D. 4 7.

8. 6, 8A. 2 B. 3 C. 4 D. 48 8.

9. Factor 3b � 12.A. 12(3b � 1) B. 4(b � 3) C. 3(b � 4) D. b(3 � 12) 9.

For Questions 10 and 11, write each fraction in simplest form.

10. �1221�

A. �67� B. �

73� C. �

47� D. �

12� 10.

11. �1255aa�

A. �35� B. �

35a� C. �

35aa�

D. �53a�

11.

14

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 206 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Chapter 4 Test, Form 1 (continued)

12. Eight inches is what part of 1 foot?

A. �29� B. �

23� C. �2

25�

D. �12� 12.

Find each product.

13. 45 � 42

A. 167 B. 452 C. 410 D. 47 13.

14. m4 � mA. 4m B. m5 C. m4 D. 2m4 14.

For Questions 15 and 16, find each quotient.

15. �55

4

2�

A. 12 B. 56 C. 52 D. 58 15.

16. �tt3�

A. 13 B. t3 C. t4 D. t2 16.

17. Write �315� using a negative exponent.

A. 3�5 B. 5�3 C. �35 D. �53 17.

18. Evaluate y�2 if y � 4.

A. ��18� B. �1

16�

C. 8 D. ��116�

18.

19. The speed of light is 300,000,000 meters per second. Express this number in scientific notation.A. 300 � 103 B. 30.0 � 108 C. 3.0 � 108 D. 0.03 � 107 19.

20. Choose the true statement.A. 3.1 � 105 2.7 � 105 B. 1.8 � 10�1 � 1.1 � 101

C. 5.4 � 104 � 3.7 � 107 D. 3.7 � 10�4 3.4 � 10�1 20.

Bonus Dyenitha is renting tables for her wedding reception. B:She can choose from tables that seat 6 or 8. If she is expecting 176 people and wants the same number of people at each table, which size table should she order?

NAME DATE PERIOD

14

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Chapter 4 Test, Form 2A

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 207 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Ass

essm

ent

Write the letter for the correct answer in the blank at the right of each question.

1. Use divisibility rules to determine which number is a factor of 126.A. 6 B. 10 C. 4 D. 5 1.

2. Determine which expression is not a monomial.A. �16xyz B. 7(x � y) C. 12 D. u 2.

3. Write ( y)( y)( y)( y)( y) using exponents.A. 5 � y B. 5y C. 5y D. y5 3.

4. Evaluate 3m2 if m � 5.A. 21 B. 30 C. 75 D. 225 4.

5. Write the prime factorization of 36.A. 2 � 2 � 9 B. 2 � 2 � 2 � 2 C. 6 � 6 D. 2 � 2 � 3 � 3 5.

6. Factor 20x2y completely.A. 2 � 2 � 5 � x � x � y B. 2 � 25x2yC. 4 � 5 � x � x � y D. 2 � 10 � x � x � y 6.

7. Find the GCF of 14x and 35x2.A. 490x B. 7x C. 490x2 D. 14x3 7.

8. Factor 5 � 10y.A. 5y(1 � 2) B. 5(1 � 10y) C. 5(1 � 2y) D. 5y(1 � 2y) 8.

For Questions 9 and 10, write each fraction in simplest form.

9. �3757�

A. �151�

B. �12� C. �

1343�

D. �13� 9.

10. �2500aabb2

A. �2a

5b

� B. �52ab� C. �

25aabb2

� D. �25b� 10.

11. Twenty centimeters is what part of a meter?

A. �15� B. �5

10�

C. �110�

D. �49� 11.

14

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 208 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Chapter 4 Test, Form 2A (continued)

Find each product.

12. 84 � 84

A. 164 B. 88 C. 816 D. 648 12.

13. 4x2 � 5x4

A. 9x6 B. 9x8 C. 20x6 D. 20x8 13.

For Questions 14 and 15, find each quotient.

14. �mm

5�

A. m4 B. 5 C. m6 D. 15 14.

15. �44

6

2�

A. 14 B. 43 C. 44 D. 48 15.

16. Write �516� as an expression using a negative exponent.

A. �5�6 B. 5�6 C. 6�5 D. �6 16.

For Questions 17 and 18, evaluate each expression if a � �2 and b � 3.

17. b�3

A. �217�

B. �9 C. ��217�

D. 27 17.

18. 2a

A. ��12� B. �

14� C. ��

14� D. 4 18.

19. A red blood cell is about 7.5 � 10�4 centimeter long. Express this number in standard form.A. 0.0075 B. 0.07500 C. 7500 D. 0.00075 19.

20. Choose the number that is greater than 2.7 � 104.A. 26,000 B. 1.4 � 105 C. 3.1 � 10�6 D. 2.5 � 104 20.

Bonus Order the planets in B:the table at the right fromleast to greatest diameter.

NAME DATE PERIOD

14

Planet Diameter (mi)

VenusUranusNeptuneEarth

7.52 � 103

3.18 � 104

3.08 � 104

7.93 � 103

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Chapter 4 Test, Form 2B

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 209 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Ass

essm

ent

Write the letter for the correct answer in the blank at the right of each question.

1. Use divisibility rules to determine which number is a factor of 105.A. 4 B. 5 C. 6 D. 10 1.

2. Determine which expression is not a monomial.A. 3(x � y) B. �13xyz C. 16 D. w 2.

3. Write (m)(m)(m)(m) using exponents.A. 4 � m B. 4m C. 4m D. m4 3.

4. Evaluate 3m3 if m � 6.A. 54 B. 648 C. 216 D. 5832 4.

5. Write the prime factorization of 24.A. 2 � 2 � 3 B. 2 � 2 � 2 � 3 C. 4 � 6 D. 2 � 2 � 3 � 3 5.

6. Factor 28xy2 completely.A. 4 � 7 � x � y � y B. 2 � 2 � 7 � x � y � yC. 1 � 28 � x � y � y D. 2 � 2 � 7 � x � y2 6.

7. Find the GCF of 16x and 64x2.A. 4x B. 8x2 C. 16x D. 32x3 7.

8. Factor 12 � 6y.A. 12(1 � 6y) B. 6(2 � y) C. 2(6 � y) D. 6(3y) 8.

For Questions 9 and 10, write each fraction in simplest form.

9. �3666�

A. �12� B. �

1383�

C. D. �1222�

9.

10. �3500aa2

A. �35� B. �

35a� C. �

3500a

� D. �65� 10.

11. Twenty-five centimeters is what part of a meter?

A. �14� B. �

2356�

C. �12� D. �4

10�

11.

6�11

14

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 210 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Chapter 4 Test, Form 2B (continued)

Find each product.

12. 103 � 106

A. 1009 B. 1036 C. 1018 D. 109 12.

13. (3y2)(6y3)A. 18y5 B. 9y4 C. 18y6 D. 9y5 13.

For Questions 14 and 15, find each quotient.

14. �xx6�

A. 16 B. 6 C. x7 D. x5 14.

15. �((��

33))4

1�

A. 13 B. 4 C. (�3)3 D. (�3)5 15.

16. Write �417� as an expression using a negative exponent.

A. �4�7 B. 4�7 C. �74 D. �7 16.

For Questions 17 and 18, evaluate each expression if s � �2 and t � 3.

17. t�2

A. ��32� B. �9 C. �

19� D. ��

19� 17.

18. 4�1

A. �14� B. �4 C. ��

14� D. 4 18.

19. Bacteria are among the smallest living things. Some of the largest bacteria measure 7.87 � 10�5 inch across. Express this number in standard form.A. 0.0000787 B. 787,000 C. 0.00787 D. 0.000787 19.

20. Choose the number that is less than 3.4 � 10�4.A. 2.1 � 106 B. 2.1 � 102 C. 43,000 D. 5.4 � 10�6 20.

Bonus Order the planets in the table at the right from least to greatest diameter.

NAME DATE PERIOD

14

B:Planet Diameter (mi)

SaturnUranusJupiterNeptune

1.21 � 105

5.11 � 104

1.43 � 105

4.95 � 104

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Chapter 4 Test, Form 2C

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 211 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Use divisibility rules to determine whether each number is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10.

1. 1000 1.

2. 324 2.

For Questions 3 and 4, determine whether each expression is a monomial.

3. 10m(n � 8) 3.

4. 9b(7e) 4.

5. Write (2)(2)(2)(2)(2) using exponents. 5.

6. Evaluate 7a3 if a � 2. 6.

Write the prime factorization of each number or monomial.

7. 88 7.

8. 42a3x 8.

For Questions 9 and 10, find the GCF of each set of numbers or monomials.

9. 20, 36, 48 9.

10. 20y, 30y2 10.

11. Factor 18b � 9. 11.

For Questions 12 and 13, write each fraction in simplest form.

12. �1605�

12.

13. �2450rr2

� 13.

14. Forty minutes is what part of an hour? 14.

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE 14

Ass

essm

ent

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 212 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Chapter 4 Test, Form 2C (continued)

Find each product. Express using exponents.

15. m4 � m3 15.

16. (11x3y)(5y) 16.

Find each quotient. Express using exponents.

17. �((��

44))7

2� 17.

18. �bb11� 18.

For Questions 19 and 20, write each expression using a negative exponent other than �1.

19. �319� 19.

20. 0.0001 20.

21. Evaluate b�3 if b � 5. 21.

22. Express 5.09 � 10�4 in standard form. 22.

23. Scientists have discovered that many mammals can expect 23.to live for 1.5 billion heartbeats. Write this number in scientific notation.

24. The distance between Saturn and Mars is 7.53 � 108 miles. 24.The distance between Mars and Mercury is 8.37 � 107 miles.Is Mars closer to Saturn or to Mercury?

25. David is packing bundles of 3-inch-by-5-inch cards, face up, 25.into a square box. He places the cards side-by-side so that there is no wasted space. Find the smallest possible measure for the edge of the box.

Bonus Write the prime factorization of 1188. Use exponents B:for repeated factors.

NAME DATE PERIOD

14

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Chapter 4 Test, Form 2D

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 213 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Use divisibility rules to determine whether each number is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10.

1. 98 1.

2. 360 2.

For Questions 3 and 4, determine whether each expression is a monomial.

3. 9k(p � 3) 3.

4. 6a(4c) 4.

5. Write (3)(3)(3)(3)(3)(3) using exponents. 5.

6. Evaluate 5y4 if y � 3. 6.

Write the prime factorization of each number or monomial.

7. 68 7.

8. 32p2x 8.

For Questions 9 and 10, find the GCF of each set of numbers or monomials.

9. 20, 30, 45 9.

10. 16x2, 18x 10.

11. Factor 20a � 4. 11.

Write each fraction in simplest form.

12. �1684�

12.

13. �1260aa2

� 13.

14. Forty-five seconds is what part of a minute? 14.

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE 14

Ass

essm

ent

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 214 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Chapter 4 Test, Form 2D (continued)

Find each product. Express using exponents.

15. d3 � d2 15.

16. (12x2y)(3y) 16.

Find each quotient. Express using exponents.

17. �((��

33))5

2� 17.

18. �aa16� 18.

For Questions 19 and 20, write each expression using a negative exponent other than �1.

19. �417� 19.

20. 0.001 20.

21. Evaluate a�4 if a � 2. 21.

22. Express 4.68 � 10�4 in standard form. 22.

23. The number of different hands possible in the game of 23.bridge is about 635 billion. Write this number in scientific notation.

24. The number of neurons in the neocortex of the human 24.brain is 3.0 � 1010. The neocortex of a gorilla contains 7.5 � 108 neurons. Which mammal has more neurons?

25. Scott is packing bundles of 4-inch-by-6-inch cards, face up, 25.into a square box. He places the cards side-by-side so that there is no wasted space. Find the smallest possible measure for the edge of the box.

Bonus Write the prime factorization of 1584. Use exponents B:for repeated factors.

NAME DATE PERIOD

14

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Chapter 4 Test, Form 3

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 215 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Use divisibility rules to determine whether each number is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10.

1. 6036 1.

2. 12,420 2.

3. 22,523 3.

Determine whether each expression is a monomial.Explain why or why not.

4. 6a � 2b 4.

5. (�12x)(13y) 5.

6. 14k(2p � 3) 6.

7. �29c2d(3c � 4)

7.Write each expression using exponents.

8. 3 � 3 � x � x � y 8.

9. 7 � (2 � d) � (2 � d) 9.

Evaluate each expression if a � �2, b � 3, and c � 5.

10. 4a4 � 3b 10.

11. 2(3a � c)4 11.

Determine whether each number is prime or composite.

12. 211 12.

13. 57 13.

Factor each number or monomial completely.

14. 99 14.

15. �45qr2s3 15.

Find the GCF of each set of numbers or monomials.

16. 26, 65, 91 16.

17. 12a2c2, 30a3b2 17.

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE 14

Ass

essm

ent

Page 61: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 216 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Chapter 4 Test, Form 3 (continued)

Factor each expression.

18. x2 � 3x 18.

19. 18 � 6y 19.

For Questions 20 and 21, write each fraction in simplest form. If already in simplest form, write simplified.

20. �19516�

20.

21. �6293ppq2

� 21.

22. Forty-four feet is what part of a mile? 22.

23. Twelve inches is what part of one yard? 23.

For Questions 24–27, find each product or quotient.Express using exponents.

24. (�5x3)(3x2) 24.

25. (4s4t)(st2) 25.

26. �ba5

3

ab2� 26.

27. ��3mm4

����m12

2�� 27.

28. Write �316�

using a negative exponent other than �1. 28.

Evaluate each expression if a � 4, b � �3, and c � �1.

29. (b3)(3c) 29.

30. (bc)�5 30.

31. Express 1.057 � 10�4 in standard form. 31.

32. To find how many seconds it takes light to travel from the 32.Sun to Earth, divide the total distance, 93,000,000 miles,by the distance light travels in one second, 186,000 miles.Write the result in scientific notation.

33. Order 3.13 � 10�4, 0.0313, 3.03 � 10�4, 0.00303, and

33.

3.0 � 10�4 from least to greatest.

Bonus Write all of the prime numbers between 1 and 50.B:

NAME DATE PERIOD

14

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Chapter 4 Open-Ended Assessment

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 217 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Demonstrate your knowledge by giving a clear, concise solutionto each problem. Be sure to include all relevant drawings andjustify your answers. You may show your solution in more thanone way or investigate beyond the requirements of the problem.

1. Methods of finding prime numbers have intriguedmathematicians for years. For example, Goldbach’s conjecturestates that every even number greater than 2 can be written asthe sum of two prime numbers. Choose three even numbersgreater than 20 and less than 100. Write each as the sum of two prime numbers.

2. Write an argument or counterexample to support your answers tothe following questions.a. Are all numbers that are divisible by 9 also divisible by 3?b. Are all numbers that are divisible by 3 also divisible by 9?

3. The Warrior High School band and drill team have been invitedto participate in the Thanksgiving parade. There are 210 membersin the band and 40 members in the drill team.a. Can the band march in a rectangular formation having

8 band members in each row? Why or why not? If not, give anexample of a rectangular formation that would be possible.

b. Twenty-six drill team members and 140 band members turnedin their permission slips for the Thanksgiving trip. Explainhow to tell whether a greater fractional part of the drill teamor band turned in their slips. Find which part is greater.

4. To understand mathematics, you must understand the languageor symbols used.a. Explain the difference in the meanings of 3a and a3.b. Explain the difference in the meanings of �3b and b�3.

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE 14

Ass

essm

ent

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 218 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Chapter 4 Vocabulary Test/Review

Write the letter of the term that best matches each statement or phrase.

1. shows relationships among sets of numbers or objects using overlapping circles in a rectangle

2. a whole number with exactly two factors,1 and itself

3. tells how many times a number is used as a factor

4. GCF of the numerator and denominator is 1

5. (1 � 103) � (3 � 102) � (2 � 101) � (7 � 100)

6. language that uses a base two system of numbers

7. a number, variable, or product of numbers and/or variables

8. the greatest number that is a factor of two or more numbers

9. a number that is expressed using an exponent

In your own words—Define each term.

10. scientific notation

11. base

12. algebraic fraction

algebraic fractionbasebase twobinarydivisible

expanded formexponentfactor greatest common factor (GCF) monomial

power prime number scientific notation simplest form Venn diagram

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE 14

a. power

b. binary

c. exponent

d. Venn diagram

e. monomial

f. GCF

g. expanded form

h. simplest form

i. prime number

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Chapter 4 Quiz (Lessons 4—1 and 4—2)

14

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 219 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Use divisibility rules to determine whether each number is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10.

1. 52 2. 90

3. 711 4. 435

Determine whether each expression is a monomial.Explain why or why not.

5. xy 6. x � y

Write each expression using exponents.

7. x � x � x 7.

8. (9 � 9 � 9) � (9 � 9) 8.

Evaluate each expression if x � 2, a � 3, and b � 2.

9. 12x4 9.

10. a2b3 10.

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE

Chapter 4 Quiz (Lessons 4—3 and 4—4)

Write the prime factorization of each number.Use exponents for repeated factors.

1. 27 2. 63 3. 112

Factor each monomial completely.

4. 21b 4.

5. 30x2y 5.

Find the GCF of each set of numbers or monomials.

6. 12, 16 6.

7. 120, 130, 140 7.

8. 28x4, 35x6 8.

Factor each expression.

9. 4a � 14 9.

10. 30 � 5y 10.

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE 14

Ass

essm

ent

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

1.

2.

3.

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 220 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Write each fraction in simplest form. If the fraction is already in simplest form, write simplified.

1. �2346�

2. �3402�

3. �2480xx6

4. Fifteen centimeters is what part of a meter?

5. Standardized Test Practice Which fraction is �5r2r�

written in simplest form?

A. �51r�

B. 5r C. �5r

� D. �5r�

Find each product or quotient. Express using exponents.

6. 36 � 34 7. x4 � x7 � x2 8. (2x3)(5x2)

9. �((��

44))6

6� 10. �xx1

9

3�

Chapter 4 Quiz

Write each expression using a positive exponent.

1. 7�5 2. y�3

Evaluate each expression if x � 3 and y � 2.

3. x�4 4. (xy)�3

Write each number in scientific notation.

5. 0.0000001602 6. 200,000,000 7. 3,000,000,000

Choose the greater number in each pair.

8. 4.62 � 10�3, 0.000462 9. 3.06 � 10�5, 3.60 � 10�5

10. The table at the right shows the masses of three subatomic particles. Write the names of the particles in order from least to greatest mass.

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE

Chapter 4 Quiz 14

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE

14

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

Particle Mass

electron 9.10 � 10�31

neutron 1.68 � 10�27

proton 1.67 � 10�27

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Chapter 4 Mid-Chapter Test (Lessons 4—1 through 4—8)

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 221 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Write the letter for the correct answer in the blank at the right of each question.

1. Determine which expression is not a monomial.A. 9(a � b) B. �29x2yz C. 112 D. k 1.

2. Evaluate 2x2 if x � 3.A. 36 B. 8 C. 18 D. 12 2.

3. Write the prime factorization of 84.A. 2 � 2 � 21 B. 2 � 2 � 2 � 3 � 7C. 4 � 21 D. 2 � 2 � 3 � 7 3.

4. Factor 21b � 35.A. 3(7b � 5) B. 7(3b � 5)C. b(21 � 35) D. 7(3 � 5b) 4.

5. Factor 15 � 45y.A. 15 � 3y B. 15(1 � 3y)C. 60y D. y(15 � 45) 5.

6. Choose the number that is prime.A. 21 B. 55 C. 37 D. 49 6.

7. Determine whether 252 is divisible by 2, 3, 5, 6, or 10. 7.

8. Write (3)(3)(3)(2)(2) using exponents. 8.

Factor each number or monomial completely.

9. 66 9.

10. 24x3y2 10.

In Questions 11 and 12, find the GCF of each set of numbers or monomials.

11. 32, 56 11.

12. 20x2, 8x 12.

13. Amy raised chickens for her 4-H project. The chickens have 13.laid 70 eggs. Does Amy have enough eggs to completely fill cartons that contain 12 eggs each? Why or why not?

Part II

Part I

NAME DATE PERIOD

SCORE 14

Ass

essm

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 222 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Chapter 4 Cumulative Review (Chapters 1—4)

1. State the domain and range of the relation 1.{(2.3, 4), (5, 3.2), (4.6, 3.3)}. (Lesson 1–6)

2. Determine whether a scatter plot of the outside temperatures 2.and the corresponding air conditioning bills might show a positive, negative, or no relationship. Explain your answer.(Lesson 1–7)

For Questions 3 and 4, simplify each expression. 3.

3. �7m � (�15m) 4. 9x � (�23x) 4.(Lesson 3–2) (Lesson 3–2)

5. Evaluate ��34kh

� if h � 6 and k � �2. (Lesson 2–3) 5.

6. Find the average (mean) of �24, 16, 21, 9, �12. (Lesson 2–5) 6.

7. Name the quadrant in which the graph of (6, �5) lies. 7.(Lesson 2–6)

8. When you divide a number by �9, the result is 18. 8.Write and solve an equation to find the number. (Lesson 3–4)

Graph the solution of each equation on a number line.

9. 2 � y � �1 (Lesson 3–3) 9.

10. �4 � z � 2 (Lesson 3–3) 10.

For Questions 11 and 12, evaluate each expression if n � 6 and r � 4.

11. n4 (Lesson 4–2) 11.

12. 15r3 (Lesson 4–2) 12.

13. Write the prime factorization of 78. (Lesson 4–3) 13.

14. Factor 810abc3 completely. (Lesson 1–6) 14.

For Questions 15 and 16, find the GCF of each set of numbers or monomials.

15. 45, 75, 90 (Lesson 4–4) 15.

16. 36r2s4t, 81r3t2 (Lesson 4–2) 16.

17. Factor 18 � 42y. (Lesson 4–4) 17.

�1�2�3�4 0 1 2 43

�1�2�3�4 0 1 2 43

NAME DATE PERIOD

14

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Standardized Test Practice (Chapters 1—4)

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 223 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

1. Lenora wants to buy a CD player that costs $169 (including tax). She has $108 in the bank, she earns $30 babysitting, $18 taking care of a neighbor’s pet, and receives $12 in allowance. How much more money does she need to buy the CD player? (Lesson 1–1)

A. $7 B. $1 C. $4 D. none 1.

2. Simplify 7(k � 5) � 9k. (Lesson 1–4)

E. 16k � 35 F. 10k � 12 G. 16k � 5 H. 17k � 5 2.

3. Simplify (�4)(3a)(�4b). (Lesson 2–4)

A. 48ab B. �48ab C. �11ab D. �5ab 3.

4. Evaluate the expression �xy� if x � �60 and y � 5. (Lesson 2–5)

E. 12 F. �12 G. �112�

H. ��112�

4.

5. Name the ordered pair for the point A graphed on the coordinate plane at the right. (Lesson 2–6)

A. (3, 4) B. (3, �4)C. (�4, 3) D. (�4, �3) 5.

6. In the school cafeteria, an apple costs a cents and a carton of milk costs 40 cents. Which expression represents the total cost of an apple and 2 cartons of milk for s students? (Lesson 3–1)

E. a � 80 � s F. s(a � 80) G. sa � 80 H. s(a � 40) 6.

7. Wanda drove for w hours on a trip. Her husband drove 3 hours more than Wanda. Which expression represents the total time they spent driving? (Lesson 3–2)

A. w � 6 B. 2w � 3 C. w � 6 D. 2w � 3 7.

8. If z � 5 � �9, find the numerical value of �2z � 5. (Lesson 3–3)

E. 23 F. �33 G. �13 H. 3 8.

9. Nine more than eight times a number is �47. Translate this sentence into an equation. (Lesson 3–6)

A. 8n � 9 � �47 B. 9n � 8 � �47C. 8(n � 9) � �47. D. 9(8 � n) � �47 9.

10. The formula d � rt can be rewritten as (Lesson 3–7)

E. dr � t. F. r � �dt�. G. t � �

dr�. H. r � dt. 10. HGFE

DCBA

HGFE

DCBA

HGFE

DCBA

HGFE

DCBA

HGFE

DCBA

NAME DATE PERIOD

44

Ass

essm

ent

Part 1: Multiple Choice

Instructions: Fill in the appropriate oval for the best answer.

y

xO

A

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 224 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Standardized Test Practice (continued)

11. Choose the expression that is not a monomial. (Lesson 4–1)

A. (4k2)(9m) B. �3r

4�s

s� C. �29xy2 D. �

173c2� 11.

12. Write (a)(a)(a)(b)(b) using exponents. (Lesson 4–2)

E. a3b2 F. a�3b�2 G. 3a2b H. 3a32b2 12.

13. Write the prime factorization of 42. (Lesson 4–3)

A. 1 � 42 B. 2 � 21 C. 2 � 3 � 7 D. 6 � 7 13.

14. Find the GCF of 36 and 54. (Lesson 4–4)

E. 2 F. 3 G. 6 H. 18 14.

15. Simplify �11162cc4

2�. (Lesson 4–5)

A. �71c42

� B. �1c42� C. �c

72� D. 7c4 15.

16. Which is �1144�

written with a negative exponent? (Lesson 4–7)

E. 14�2 F. �1122� G. 144�2 H. 12�2 16.

17. The end zone of a football field is 30 feet wide 17. 18.and 160 feet long. What is its area in square feet? (Lesson 3–7)

18. What is the least 3-digit number that is divisible by 4 and 7? (Lesson 4–1)

19. Order the integers {32, �18, 2, 7, 0, �5, �11} from least to 19.greatest. (Lesson 2–1)

20. Saturn is about 799,800,000 miles from Earth. Write this 20.number in scientific notation. (Lesson 4–8)

Part 3: Short Response

Instructions: Write your answer in the blank at the right of each question.

0 0 0

.. ./ /

.

99 9 987654321

87654321

87654321

87654321

0 0 0

.. ./ /

.

99 9 987654321

87654321

87654321

87654321

HGFE

DCBA

HGFE

DCBA

HGFE

DCBA

NAME DATE PERIOD

44

NAME DATE PERIOD

Part 2: Grid In

Instructions: Enter your answer by writing each digit of the answer in a column boxand then shading in the appropriate oval that corresponds to that entry.

Page 70: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Standardized Test PracticeStudent Record Sheet (Use with pages 196—197 of the Student Edition.)

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A1 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

NAME DATE PERIOD

44

An

swer

s

Select the best answer from the choices given and fill in the corresponding oval.

1 4 7 10

2 5 8 11

3 6 9

Solve the problem and write your answer in the blank.

For Questions 15, 17, and 19, also enter your answer by writing each number orsymbol in a box. Then fill in the corresponding oval for that number or symbol.

12 15 17 19

13

14

15 (grid in)

16

17 (grid in)

18

19 (grid in)

20

21

Record your answers for Question 22 on the back of this paper.

0 0 0

.. ./ /

.

99 9 987654321

87654321

87654321

87654321

0 0 0

.. ./ /

.

99 9 987654321

87654321

87654321

87654321

0 0 0

.. ./ /

.

99 9 987654321

87654321

87654321

87654321

DCBADCBADCBA

DCBADCBADCBADCBA

DCBADCBADCBADCBA

Part 2 Short Response/Grid InPart 2 Short Response/Grid In

Part 1 Multiple ChoicePart 1 Multiple Choice

Part 3 Extended ResponsePart 3 Extended Response

Page 71: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

lenc

oe/M

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w-H

ill16

6G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

Skil

ls P

ract

ice

Fact

ors

an

d M

on

om

ials

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-1

4-1

Use

div

isib

ilit

y ru

les

to d

eter

min

e w

het

her

eac

h n

um

ber

is

div

isib

le b

y 2,

3,5,

6,or

10.

1.10

02,

5,10

2.66

2,3,

6

3.88

24.

123

3

5.24

02,

3,5,

6,10

6.28

02,

5,10

7.25

53,

58.

165

3,5

9.31

82,

3,6

10.

1000

2,5,

10

Lis

t al

l th

e fa

ctor

s of

eac

h n

um

ber

.

11.

361,

2,3,

4,6,

9,12

,18,

3612

.29

1,29

13.

451,

3,5,

9,15

,45

14.

811,

3,9,

27,8

1

15.

125

1,5,

25,1

2516

.11

71,

3,9,

13,3

9,11

7

17.

161,

2,4,

8,16

18.

631,

3,7,

9,21

,63

Det

erm

ine

wh

eth

er e

ach

exp

ress

ion

is

a m

onom

ial.

Exp

lain

wh

y or

wh

y n

ot.

19.

pye

s;a

vari

able

20.

73ye

s;a

nu

mb

er

21.

2 �

nn

o;

sum

of

two

ter

ms

22.

h�

wn

o;

dif

fere

nce

of

two

ter

ms

23.

3(a

�6)

no

;su

m o

f tw

o t

erm

s24

.�

3kye

s;p

rod

uct

of

a n

um

ber

an

d

a va

riab

le25

.q

�r

no

;su

m o

f tw

o t

erm

s26

.4y

�6

no

;d

iffe

ren

ce o

f tw

o t

erm

s

27.

3(x

�3)

no;d

iffer

ence

oftw

ote

rms

28.

6s�

4pye

s;p

rod

uct

of

nu

mb

ers

and

var

iab

les

29.

SEA

TIN

GC

an 1

32 g

radu

ates

be

seat

ed i

n r

ows

of 6

at

the

grad

uat

ion

cer

emon

y?E

xpla

in.

Yes.

Sin

ce 1

32 is

div

isib

le b

y 2

and

by

3,it

is d

ivis

ible

by

6.S

o t

he

gra

du

ates

can

be

seat

ed in

ro

ws

of

6 w

ith

no

ext

ra p

eop

le o

rem

pty

ch

airs

.

30.

SCH

OO

L SU

PPLI

ESW

hen

Ale

x’s

mot

her

bu

ys p

enci

ls f

or s

choo

l,sh

e di

vide

s th

emeq

ual

ly a

mon

g A

lex

and

his

sis

ter.

Sh

ould

sh

e bu

y th

e pe

nci

ls i

n p

acka

ges

of 1

5 or

30?

Exp

lain

.S

he

sho

uld

bu

y p

acka

ges

of

30 s

ince

30

is d

ivis

ible

by

2,bu

t 15

is n

ot.

Use

div

isib

ilit

y ru

les

to d

eter

min

e w

het

her

eac

h n

um

ber

is d

ivis

ible

by

2,3,

5,6,

or 1

0.

1.10

53,

52.

600

2,3,

5,6,

10

3.46

22,

3,6

4.19

7n

on

e

Lis

t al

l th

e fa

ctor

s of

eac

h n

um

ber

.

5.76

1,2,

4,19

,38,

766.

421,

2,3,

6,7,

14,2

1,42

7.18

21,

2,7,

13,1

4,26

,91,

182

8.80

1,2,

4,5,

8,10

,16,

20,4

0,80

Det

erm

ine

wh

eth

er e

ach

exp

ress

ion

is

a m

onom

ial.

Exp

lain

wh

y or

wh

y n

ot.

9.13

yes;

a n

um

ber

10.

x�

yn

o;

sum

of

two

ter

ms

11.

3(x

�1)

no

;12

.5s

tye

s;p

rod

uct

of

a n

um

ber

dif

fere

nce

of

two

ter

ms

and

var

iab

les

Det

erm

ine

wh

eth

er 1

08 i

s d

ivis

ible

by

2,3,

5,6,

or 1

0.

Nu

mb

erD

ivis

ible

?R

easo

n2

yes

Th

e on

es d

igit

is

8,an

d 8

is d

ivis

ible

by

2.

3ye

sT

he

sum

of

the

digi

ts i

s 9,

and

9 is

div

isib

le b

y 3.

5n

oT

he

ones

dig

it i

s 8,

not

0 o

r 5.

6ye

s10

8 is

div

isib

le b

y 2

and

by 3

.

10n

oT

he

ones

dig

it i

s n

ot 0

.

108

is d

ivis

ible

by

2,3,

and

6.

A m

onom

ial

is a

num

ber,

a va

riab

le,o

r a

prod

uct

of n

umbe

rs a

nd/o

r va

riab

les.

So,

108

is

a m

onom

ial.

The

exp

ress

ion

5qis

als

o a

mon

omia

l si

nce

it i

s th

e pr

oduc

t of

a n

umbe

r an

d a

vari

able

,5�

q.H

owev

er,2

x�

1 is

not

a m

onom

ial

sinc

e it

is

the

sum

of

two

term

s.

Fin

din

g F

acto

rsTw

o or

mor

e nu

mbe

rs t

hat

are

mul

tiplie

d to

form

a p

rodu

ct a

re c

alle

d fa

ctor

s.A

nynu

mbe

r is

div

isib

le b

y its

fact

ors.

The

follo

win

g ru

les

can

be u

sed

to d

eter

min

e m

enta

lly w

heth

er a

nu

mbe

r is

div

isib

le b

y 2,

3,

5, 6

, or

10.

A n

umbe

r is

div

isib

le b

y:

•2

if th

e on

es d

igit

is d

ivis

ible

by

2.

•3

if th

e su

m o

f th

e di

gits

is d

ivis

ible

by

3.

•5

if th

e on

es d

igit

is 0

or

5.

•6

if th

e nu

mbe

r is

div

isib

le b

y 2

and

by 3

.

•10

if t

he o

nes

digi

t is

0.

Exam

ple

Exam

pleS

tudy G

uid

e a

nd I

nte

rven

tion

Fact

ors

an

d M

on

om

ials

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-1

4-1

©G

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ill16

5G

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Exer

cises

Exer

cises

Lesson 4-1

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A2 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-1)

Page 72: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

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8G

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Readin

g t

o L

earn

Math

em

ati

csFa

cto

rs a

nd

Mo

no

mia

ls

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-1

4-1

Ho

w a

re s

ide

len

gth

s o

f re

ctan

gle

s re

late

d t

o f

acto

rs?

Do

the

acti

vity

at

the

top

of

pag

e 14

8 in

you

r te

xtb

ook

.Wri

teyo

ur

answ

ers

bel

ow.

a.U

se g

rid

pape

r to

dra

w a

s m

any

oth

er r

ecta

ngl

es a

s po

ssib

le w

ith

an

ar

ea o

f 36

squ

are

un

its.

Lab

el t

he

len

gth

an

d w

idth

of

each

rec

tan

gle.

Stu

den

ts s

ho

uld

dra

w r

ecta

ng

les

wit

h d

imen

sio

ns

1 �

36,

2 �

18,3

�12

,an

d 6

�6.

b.D

id y

ou d

raw

a r

ecta

ngl

e w

ith

a l

engt

h o

f 5

un

its?

Wh

y or

wh

y n

ot?

No

,if

the

len

gth

wer

e 5,

ther

e is

no

wh

ole

nu

mb

er w

idth

th

at w

ou

ld g

ive

an a

rea

of

36.

c.L

ist

all

of t

he

pair

s of

wh

ole

nu

mbe

rs w

hos

e pr

odu

ct i

s 36

.Com

pare

th

is l

ist

to t

he

len

gth

s an

d w

idth

s of

all

th

e re

ctan

gles

th

at h

ave

an

area

of

36 s

quar

e u

nit

s.W

hat

do

you

obs

erve

?1

and

36,

2 an

d 1

8,3

and

12,

4 an

d 9

,6 a

nd

6;

they

are

th

e sa

me.

d.P

redi

ct t

he

nu

mbe

r of

rec

tan

gles

th

at c

an b

e dr

awn

wit

h a

n a

rea

of

64 s

quar

e u

nit

s.E

xpla

in h

ow y

ou c

an p

redi

ct w

ith

out

actu

ally

dra

win

gth

em.

4 re

ctan

gle

s;fi

nd

th

e fa

cto

r p

airs

wh

ose

pro

du

ct is

64

:1

�64

,2 �

32,4

�16

,8 �

8.

Wri

te a

def

init

ion

an

d g

ive

an e

xam

ple

of

each

new

voc

abu

lary

wor

d.

4.Is

th

e ex

pres

sion

2x

�1

a m

onom

ial?

Exp

lain

.2x

�1

is n

ot

a m

on

om

ial

bec

ause

it is

th

e d

iffe

ren

ce o

f tw

o t

erm

s.

Hel

pin

g Y

ou

Rem

emb

er5.

Exp

lain

in

you

r ow

n w

ords

how

to

dete

rmin

e w

het

her

an

exp

ress

ion

is

a m

onom

ial.

Sam

ple

an

swer

:A

mo

no

mia

l is

a n

um

ber

,a v

aria

ble

,or

the

pro

du

ct o

fn

um

ber

s an

d/o

r va

riab

les.

Pre-

Act

ivit

y

Rea

din

g t

he

Less

on

1–3.

See

stu

den

ts’w

ork

.

Voca

bula

ryD

efin

itio

nE

xam

ple

1.fa

ctor

s

2.di

visi

ble

3.m

onom

ial

Pra

ctic

eFa

cto

rs a

nd

Mo

no

mia

ls

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-1

4-1

©G

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7G

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Use

div

isib

ilit

y ru

les

to d

eter

min

e w

het

her

eac

h n

um

ber

is

div

isib

le b

y 2,

3,5,

6,or

10.

1.47

62

2.11

73

3.42

62,

3,6

4.29

no

ne

5.73

53,

56.

276

2,3,

6

7.12

002,

3,5,

6,10

8.23

702,

3,5,

6,10

9.70

02,

5,10

10.

4200

2,3,

5,6,

10

Lis

t al

l th

e fa

ctor

s of

eac

h n

um

ber

.

11.

481,

2,3,

4,6,

8,12

,16,

24,4

812

.24

1,2,

3,4,

6,8,

12,2

4

13.

121

1,11

,121

14.

821,

2,41

,82

15.

371,

3716

.19

61,

2,4,

7,14

,28,

49,9

8,19

6

17.

951,

5,19

,95

18.

110

1,2,

5,10

,11,

22,5

5,11

0

19.

961,

2,3,

4,6,

8,12

,16,

24,

20.

200

1,2,

4,5,

8,10

,20,

25,

32,4

8,96

40,5

0,10

0,20

0

Det

erm

ine

wh

eth

er e

ach

exp

ress

ion

is

a m

onom

ial.

Exp

lain

wh

y or

wh

y n

ot.

21.

82ye

s;a

nu

mb

er22

.4(

�m

)ye

s;p

rod

uct

of

a n

um

ber

an

d a

var

iab

lle23

.m

yes;

a va

riab

le24

.rv

yes;

pro

du

ct o

f va

riab

les

25.

6(x

�6)

no;d

iffer

ence

of t

wo

term

s26

.8n

�8

no

;d

iffe

ren

ce o

f tw

o t

erm

s

27.

(�12

)(�

8)x

yes;

pro

du

ct o

f 28

.w

��

yes;

pro

du

ct o

f va

riab

les

nu

mb

ers

and

a v

aria

ble

29.

2��

2wn

o;

sum

of

two

ter

ms

30.

2s�

tn

o;

dif

fere

nce

of

two

ter

ms

NEW

SPA

PER

SF

or E

xerc

ises

31

and

32,

refe

r to

th

e fo

llow

ing

info

rmat

ion

.

Bra

ndo

n d

eliv

ers

new

spap

ers

in h

is n

eigh

borh

ood.

On

Su

nda

y,h

e m

ust

del

iver

112

pap

ers.

Sin

ce h

e ri

des

his

bik

e,h

e se

para

tes

the

pape

rs i

nto

sm

alle

r st

acks

an

d de

live

rs o

ne

stac

kat

a t

ime.

31.

Wh

at s

ize

stac

ks c

an h

e m

ake?

2 st

acks

of

56 (

or

56 s

tack

s o

f 2)

,4 s

tack

s o

f28

(o

r 28

sta

cks

of

4),7

sta

cks

of

16 (

or

16 s

tack

s o

f 7)

,8 s

tack

s o

f 14

(or

14 s

tack

s o

f 8)

32.

If B

ran

don

can

car

ry n

o m

ore

than

30

pape

rs a

t a

tim

e an

d ca

n r

etu

rn h

ome

to r

esto

ckn

o m

ore

than

5 t

imes

,how

can

he

orga

niz

e th

e 11

2 pa

pers

?4

stac

ks o

f 28

pap

ers

Lesson 4-1

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A3 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-1)

An

swer

s

Page 73: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Wri

te e

ach

exp

ress

ion

usi

ng

exp

onen

ts.

a.10

�10

�10

�10

�10

Th

e ba

se i

s 10

.It

is a

fac

tor

5 ti

mes

,so

the

expo

nen

t is

5.

10�10

�10

�10

�10

�10

5

b.(

p�

2)(p

�2)

(p�

2)

Th

e ba

se i

s p

�2.

It i

s a

fact

or 3

tim

es,s

o th

e ex

pon

ent

is 3

.

(p�

2)(p

�2)

(p�

2) �

(p�

2)3

©G

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oe/M

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ill17

0G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

A n

umbe

r th

at is

exp

ress

ed u

sing

an

expo

nent

is c

alle

d a

pow

er.T

he b

ase

is th

e nu

mbe

r th

at is

m

ultip

lied.

The

exp

on

ent

tells

how

man

y tim

es th

e ba

se is

use

d as

a fa

ctor

.So,

43

has

a ba

se o

f 4

and

an e

xpon

ent o

f 3, a

nd 4

3 �

4�

4�

4 �

64.

Eva

luat

e x2

�4

if x

��

6.

x2�

4 =

(�6)

2 �

4R

epla

ce x

with

�6.

= (�

6)(�

6) �

4�

6 is

a fa

ctor

2 t

imes

.

= 36

�4

Mul

tiply

.

= 32

Sub

trac

t.

Stu

dy G

uid

e a

nd I

nte

rven

tion

Pow

ers

and

Exp

on

ents

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

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ATE

____

____

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ER

IOD

____

_

Exam

ple1

Exam

ple1

4-2

4-2

Exam

ple2

Exam

ple2

Wri

te e

ach

exp

ress

ion

usi

ng

exp

onen

ts.

1.5

�5

�5

�5

�5

�5

�5

572.

(–7)

(–7)

(–7)

(�7)

3

3.d

�d

�d

�d

d4

4.x

�x

�y

�y

x2 y

2

5.(z

– 4)

(z–

4)(z

�4)

26.

3(–t

)(–t

)(–t

)3(

�t)

3

Eva

luat

e ea

ch e

xpre

ssio

n i

f g

�3,

h�

�1,

and

m�

9.

7.g

524

38.

5g2

45

9.g2

�m

010

.h

m2

�81

11.

g3�

2h25

12.

m�

hg3

�18

Exer

cises

Exer

cises

Exp

ress

ions

invo

lvin

g po

wer

s ar

e ev

alua

ted

usin

g or

der

of o

pera

tions

.Pow

ers

are

repe

ated

m

ultip

licat

ions

.The

y ar

e ev

alua

ted

afte

r an

y gr

oupi

ng s

ymbo

ls a

nd b

efor

e ot

her

mul

tiplic

atio

n or

di

visi

on o

pera

tions

.

En

rich

men

t

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

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ATE

____

____

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ER

IOD

____

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4-1

4-1

©G

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Det

erm

ine

wh

eth

er 4

032

is d

ivis

ible

by

7.

4032

Cro

ss o

ut

the

ones

dig

it.

�4

Su

btr

act

twic

e th

e va

lue

of t

he

ones

dig

it f

rom

th

e re

st o

f th

e n

um

ber

.

399

If t

he

dif

fere

nce

is

a n

um

ber

that

you

kn

ow i

s d

ivis

ible

by

7,st

op.I

f n

ot,

�18 21

Sin

ce 2

1 is

div

isib

le b

y 7,

4032

is

divi

sibl

e by

7.

1.26

67

4.93

6n

eith

er

7.29

57n

eith

er

2.43

127

and

11

5.13

,293

7

8.31

2411

3.89

7611

6.70

85n

eith

er

9.65

457

and

11

Div

isib

ilit

y ru

le f

or 7

Div

isib

ilit

y ru

le f

or 1

1

Det

erm

ine

wh

eth

er 5

159

is d

ivis

ible

by

11.

Met

hod

1

5159

Cro

ss o

ut

the

ones

dig

it.

�9

Su

btr

act

the

valu

e of

th

e on

es d

igit

fro

m t

he

rest

of

the

nu

mb

er.

506

If t

he

dif

fere

nce

is

a n

um

ber

that

you

kn

ow i

s d

ivis

ible

by

11,s

top

.If

not

,

�6

44S

ince

44

is d

ivis

ible

by

11,5

159

is d

ivis

ible

by

11.

Met

hod

2

5159

5�

5�

10A

dd

th

e od

d-n

um

ber

ed d

igit

s (f

irst

an

d t

hir

d).

1�

9�

10A

dd

th

e ev

en-n

um

ber

ed d

igit

s (s

econ

d a

nd

fou

rth

).

0S

ub

trac

t th

e su

ms.

If t

he

dif

fere

nce

is

div

isib

le b

y 11

,th

e n

um

ber

is

Sin

ce 0

is

divi

sibl

e by

11,

5159

is

divi

sibl

e by

11.

Det

erm

ine

wh

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er 6

2,38

2 is

div

isib

le b

y 11

.

6�

3�

2 �

11A

dd

th

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d-n

um

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igit

s.

2�

8�

10A

dd

th

e ev

en-n

um

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ed d

igit

s.

1S

ub

trac

t th

e su

ms.

Sin

ce 1

is

not

div

isib

le b

y 11

,62,

382

is n

ot d

ivis

ible

by

11.

Det

erm

ine

wh

eth

er e

ach

nu

mb

er i

s d

ivis

ible

by

7 or

11.

Div

isib

ility

XX X

Lesson 4-1

rep

eat.

div

isib

le b

y 11

.

rep

eat.

X

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A4 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lessons 4-1 and 4-2)

Page 74: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

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Pra

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ME

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____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

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ATE

____

____

____

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ER

IOD

____

_

4-2

4-2

Wri

te e

ach

exp

ress

ion

usi

ng

exp

onen

ts.

1.11

�11

�11

113

2.2

�2

�2

�2

�2

�2

�2

�2

28

3.5

514.

(�4)

(�4)

(�4)

2

5.a

�a

�a

�a

a4

6.n

�n

�n

�n

�n

n5

7.4

�4

�4

438.

(b �

b)(b

�b)

(b �

b)b

6

9.(�

v)(�

v)(�

v)(�

v)(�

v)4

10.

x �

x �

z �

z �

zx

2z

3

11.

2 �

2 �

2 �

2 �

2 �

t �

t2

5 t2

12.

m �

m �

m �

n �

p �

pm

3 np

2

Exp

ress

eac

h n

um

ber

in

exp

and

ed f

orm

.

13.

13

14.

1006

(1�

101)

�(3

�10

0)

(1 �

103)

�(0

�10

2)

�(0

�10

1 ) �

(6 �

100 )

15.

17,6

29(1

�10

4)

�(7

�10

3)

�16

.89

7(8

�10

2)

�(9

�10

1 ) �

(6 �

102)

�(2

�10

1)

�(9

�10

0)

(7 �

100)

Eva

luat

e ea

ch e

xpre

ssio

n i

f x

�3,

y�

�2,

and

z�

4.

17.

yx�

818

.51

01

19.

z216

20.

x29

21.

9x72

922

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�22

64

23.

y5�

3224

.z2

�y4

0

25.

x2�

y2�

z229

26.

z2�

x27

FAM

ILY

TR

EEF

or E

xerc

ises

27

and

28,

refe

r to

th

e fo

llow

ing

info

rmat

ion

.

Whe

n ex

amin

ing

a fa

mily

tre

e,th

e br

anch

es a

re m

any.

You

are

gene

rati

on “

now

.”O

ne g

ener

atio

nag

o,yo

ur 2

par

ents

wer

e bo

rn.T

wo

gene

rati

ons

ago

your

4 g

rand

pare

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27.

How

man

y gr

eat-

gran

dpar

ents

wer

e bo

rn t

hre

e ge

ner

atio

ns

ago?

23

or

8

28.

How

man

y “g

reat

”gr

andp

aren

ts w

ere

born

ten

gen

erat

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s ag

o?21

0o

r 10

24

Skil

ls P

ract

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Pow

ers

and

Exp

on

ents

NA

ME

____

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____

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ATE

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ER

IOD

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4-2

4-2

©G

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Wri

te e

ach

exp

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ion

usi

ng

exp

onen

ts.

1.7

�7

722.

(�3)

(�3)

(�3)

(�3)

(�3)

(–3)

5

3.4

414.

(k �

k)(k

�k)

(k �

k)k

6

5.p

�p

�p

�p

�p

�p

p6

6.3

�3

32

7.(�

a)(�

a)(�

a)(�

a)(–

a)4

8.6

�6

�6

�6

64

9.9

�9

�9

9310

.4

�y

�z

�z

�z

4yz

3

11.

s �

s �

s �

s �

t �

u �

us

4 tu

212

.5

�5

�5

�q

�q

53q

2

Exp

ress

eac

h n

um

ber

in

exp

and

ed f

orm

.

13.

135

14.

8732

(1 �

102)

�(3

�10

1)

�(5

�10

0)

(8 �

103)

�(7

�10

2)

(3 �

101)

�(2

�10

0)

15.

1005

16.

989

(1 �

103)�

(0 �

102

) �

(9 �

102

) �

(8 �

101 )

�(9

�10

0)

(0 �

101 )

�(5

�10

0)

Eva

luat

e ea

ch e

xpre

ssio

n i

f b

�8,

c�

2,an

d d

��

3.

17.

4c16

18.

c01

19.

b351

220

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72

21.

3c9

22.

c416

23.

c2�

d1

24.

2b2

128

25.

b2�

c372

26.

d2

9

27.

d3

–27

28.

b2�

d3

37

29.

b2d

–192

30.

(b�

c)2

36

Lesson 4-2

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A5 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-2)

An

swer

s

Page 75: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

lenc

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cGra

w-H

ill17

4G

lenc

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re-A

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ra

En

rich

men

t

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-2

4-2

Exp

on

ents

Num

bers

can

be

expr

esse

d in

sev

eral

way

s.S

ome

num

bers

are

exp

ress

ed a

s su

ms.

Som

enu

mbe

rs a

re e

xpre

ssed

as

prod

ucts

of

fact

ors,

whi

le o

ther

num

bers

are

exp

ress

ed a

s po

wer

s.

Tw

o w

ays

to e

xpre

ss 2

7 ar

e 3

�3

�3

and

33.

Th

e n

um

ber

1 m

illi

on c

an b

e ex

pres

sed

in t

he

foll

owin

g w

ays.

1,00

0,00

010

00�

1000

100

�10

0�

100

102

�10

2�

102

1,00

0,00

0110

002

1003

106

Wri

te n

ames

for

eac

h n

um

ber

bel

ow u

sin

g th

e gi

ven

exp

onen

ts.

1.16

;exp

onen

ts:2

an

d 4

42,2

42.

81;e

xpon

ents

:2 a

nd

492

,34

3.64

;exp

onen

ts:2

an

d 6

82,2

64.

256;

expo

nen

ts:2

an

d 8

162 ,

28

5.62

5;ex

pon

ents

:2 a

nd

4 25

2 ,54

6.72

9;ex

pon

ents

:2 a

nd

627

2 ,36

7.24

01;e

xpon

ents

:2 a

nd

449

2 ,74

8.40

96;e

xpon

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:2 a

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1264

2 ,21

2

9.65

61;e

xpon

ents

:2 a

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881

2 ,38

10.

390,

625;

expo

nen

ts:2

an

d 8

6252

,58

Nu

mbe

rs t

hat

can

be

nam

ed a

s po

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s w

ith

lik

e ba

ses

can

be

mu

ltip

lied

by

addi

ng

the

expo

nen

ts.

8�

8�

23 �

23

�23

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�26

Wri

te t

he

pro

du

ct o

f ea

ch p

air

of f

acto

rs i

n e

xpon

enti

al f

orm

.

11.

9�

932

�32

�34

12.

4�

42

2�

22�

24

13.

16�

824

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14.

125

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53�

52�

55

15.

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933

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16.

81�

2734

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17.

49�

4972

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18.

121

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111

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4

Readin

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Math

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ati

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ts

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ME

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4-2

4-2

©G

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Why

are

exp

onen

ts im

port

ant

in c

ompa

ring

com

pute

r da

ta?

Do

the

acti

vity

at

the

top

of

pag

e 15

3 in

you

r te

xtb

ook

.Wri

te y

our

answ

ers

bel

ow.

a.W

rite

16

as a

pro

duct

of

fact

ors

of 2

.How

man

y fa

ctor

s ar

e th

ere?

2 �

2 �

2 �

2;4

fact

ors

b.

How

man

y fa

ctor

s of

2 f

orm

th

e pr

odu

ct 1

28?

7 fa

cto

rs

c.O

ne

meg

abyt

e is

102

4 ki

loby

tes.

How

man

y fa

ctor

s of

2 f

orm

th

e pr

odu

ct 1

024?

10 f

acto

rs

Wri

te a

def

init

ion

an

d g

ive

an e

xam

ple

of

each

new

voc

abu

lary

wor

d o

r p

hra

se.

6.W

rite

eac

h e

xpre

ssio

n u

sin

g ex

pon

ents

.

a.4

�4

�4

�4

44b

.x

�x

�x

�y

�y

x3 y

2

c.(�

2)(�

2)(�

2)(�

2)3

d.

5�

r�

r�

m�

m�

m5r

2 m3

7.T

he n

umbe

r (3

�10

3 ) �

(5 �

102 )

�(0

�10

1 ) �

(2 �

100 )

is w

ritt

en i

n

ex

pan

ded

form

,wh

ile

3502

is

wri

tten

in

st

and

ard

form

.

Hel

pin

g Y

ou

Rem

emb

er8.

Exp

lain

how

th

e te

rms

base

,pow

er,a

nd

expo

nen

tar

e re

late

d.P

rovi

de a

n e

xam

ple.

Sam

ple

an

swer

:A p

ower

is a

n e

xpre

ssio

n w

ith t

wo

par

ts—

a b

ase

and

an

exp

on

ent.

Fo

r ex

amp

le,t

he

pow

er 2

3h

as a

bas

e o

f 2

and

an

exp

on

ent

of

3.

Pre-

Act

ivit

y

Rea

din

g t

he

Less

on

1–5.

See

stu

den

ts’w

ork

.

Lesson 4-2

Voca

bula

ryD

efin

itio

nE

xam

ple

1.ba

se

2.ex

pon

ent

3.po

wer

4.st

anda

rdfo

rm

5.ex

pan

ded

form

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A6 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-2)

Page 76: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

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____

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ER

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____

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4-3

4-3

Det

erm

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wh

eth

er e

ach

nu

mb

er i

s p

rim

e or

com

pos

ite.

1.41

pri

me

2.29

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me

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me

7.71

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me

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pri

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Wri

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pri

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fact

oriz

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f ea

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um

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exp

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ts f

or r

epea

ted

fac

tors

.

13.

2022

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14.

402

3�

5

15.

322

516

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22

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17.

902

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2�

518

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111

2

19.

462

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20.

302

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21.

655

�13

22.

802

4�

5

Fac

tor

each

mon

omia

l.

23.

15t

3 �

5 �

t24

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r22

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�r

25.

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26.

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1 �

7 �

7 �

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3 �

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b28

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42xy

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1 �

2 �

3 �

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x�

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17u

2 v2

17 �

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27d

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d t

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wh

eth

er e

ach

nu

mb

er i

s p

rim

eor

com

pos

ite.

1.27

com

po

site

2.15

1p

rim

e

3.77

com

po

site

4.25

com

po

site

Wri

te t

he

pri

me

fact

oriz

atio

n f

or e

ach

nu

mb

er.U

se e

xpon

ents

for

rep

eate

d f

acto

rs.

5.16

246.

4532

�5

7.78

2 �

3 �

138.

702

�5

�7

Fac

tor

each

mon

omia

l.

9.6m

32

�3

�m

�m

�m

10.

–20x

y2�

1 �

2 �

2 �

5 �

x�

y�

y

11.

a2b2

c3a

�a

�b

�b

�c

�c

�c

12.

25h

5 �

5 �

h

Exam

ple2

Exam

ple2

A p

rim

e n

um

ber

is a

who

le n

umbe

r th

at h

as e

xact

ly t

wo

fact

ors,

1 a

nd it

self.

A c

om

po

site

nu

mb

eris

a

who

le n

umbe

r th

at h

as m

ore

than

tw

o fa

ctor

s.Z

ero

and

1 ar

e ne

ither

prim

e no

r co

mpo

site

.

Det

erm

ine

wh

eth

er 2

9 is

pri

me

or c

omp

osit

e.

Fin

d th

e fa

ctor

s of

29.

29 �

1�

29

Th

e on

ly f

acto

rs o

f 29

are

1 a

nd

29,t

her

efor

e 29

is

a pr

ime

nu

mbe

r.

Any

com

posi

te n

umbe

r ca

n be

writ

ten

as a

pro

duct

of

prim

e nu

mbe

rs.A

fact

or t

ree

can

be u

sed

to f

ind

the

prim

e fa

ctor

izat

ion.

Exam

ple1

Exam

ple1S

tudy G

uid

e a

nd I

nte

rven

tion

Pri

me

Fact

ori

zati

on

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-3

4-3

©G

lenc

oe/M

cGra

w-H

ill17

5G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

Th

e pr

ime

fact

oriz

atio

n o

f 48

is

2�

2 �

2 �

2 �

3 or

24

�3.

In a

lgeb

ra,

mon

omia

ls c

an b

e fa

ctor

ed a

s a

prod

uct

of p

rime

num

bers

and

var

iabl

es w

ith n

o ex

pone

ntgr

eate

r th

an 1

.So,

8x

2fa

ctor

s as

2 �

2 �

2 �

x�

x.

48 is

the

num

ber

to b

e fa

ctor

ed.

Fin

d an

y pa

ir of

who

le n

umbe

r fa

ctor

s of

48.

Con

tinue

to

fact

or a

ny n

umbe

r th

at is

not

prim

e.

The

fact

or t

ree

is c

ompl

ete

whe

n th

ere

is a

row

of

prim

e nu

mbe

rs.

2 �

22

32

48 6 �

8

2 �

32

� 4

Exer

cises

Exer

cises

Lesson 4-3

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A7 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-3)

An

swer

s

Page 77: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

lenc

oe/M

cGra

w-H

ill17

8G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

Readin

g t

o L

earn

Math

em

ati

csP

rim

e Fa

cto

riza

tio

n

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-3

4-3

Ho

w c

an m

od

els

be

use

d t

o d

eter

min

e w

het

her

nu

mb

ers

are

pri

me?

Do

the

acti

vity

at

the

top

of

pag

e 15

9 in

you

r te

xtb

ook

.Wri

te y

our

answ

ers

bel

ow.

a.U

se g

rid

pape

r to

dra

w a

s m

any

diff

eren

t re

ctan

gula

r ar

ran

gem

ents

of

2,3,

4,5,

6,7,

8,an

d 9

squ

ares

as

poss

ible

. See

stu

den

ts’a

nsw

ers.

b.W

hic

h n

um

bers

of

squ

ares

can

be

arra

nge

d in

mor

e th

an o

ne

way

? 4,

6,8,

9

c.W

hic

h n

um

bers

of

squ

ares

can

on

ly b

e ar

ran

ged

one

way

?2,

3,5,

7

d.W

hat

do

all

rect

angl

es t

hat

you

lis

ted

in p

art

ch

ave

in c

omm

on?

Exp

lain

.T

hey

all

hav

e a

wid

th o

f 1

bec

ause

no

oth

er p

air

of

fact

ors

can

be

fou

nd

.

Pre-

Act

ivit

y

Rea

din

g t

he

Less

on

1–

5.S

ee s

tud

ents

’wo

rk.

Wri

te a

def

init

ion

an

d g

ive

an e

xam

ple

of

each

new

voc

abu

lary

wor

d o

r p

hra

se.

Hel

pin

g Y

ou

Rem

emb

er

6.C

ompo

site

is

a w

ord

use

d in

eve

ryda

y E

ngl

ish

.

a.F

ind

the

defi

nit

ion

of

com

posi

tein

th

e di

ctio

nar

y.W

rite

th

e de

fin

itio

n.

mad

e u

p o

f d

isti

nct

par

ts

b.

Exp

lain

how

th

e E

ngl

ish

def

init

ion

can

hel

p yo

u r

emem

ber

how

com

posi

te i

s u

sed

in m

ath

emat

ics.

Sam

ple

an

swer

:C

om

po

site

nu

mb

ers

are

mad

e u

p o

f m

any

dis

tin

ct p

arts

,or

fact

ors

.

Voca

bula

ryD

efin

itio

nE

xam

ple

1.co

mpo

site

nu

mbe

r

2.fa

ctor

3.fa

ctor

tre

e

4.pr

ime

fact

oriz

atio

n

5.pr

ime

nu

mbe

r

Pra

ctic

eP

rim

e Fa

cto

riza

tio

n

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-3

4-3

©G

lenc

oe/M

cGra

w-H

ill17

7G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

Det

erm

ine

wh

eth

er e

ach

nu

mb

er i

s p

rim

e or

com

pos

ite.

1.11

pri

me

2.63

com

po

site

3.73

pri

me

4.75

com

po

site

5.49

com

po

site

6.69

com

po

site

7.53

pri

me

8.83

pri

me

Wri

te t

he

pri

me

fact

oriz

atio

n o

f ea

ch n

um

ber

.Use

exp

onen

ts f

or r

epea

ted

fac

tors

.

9.33

3 �

1110

.24

23�

3

11.

7223

�32

12.

276

22�

3 �

23

13.

855

�17

14.

1024

210

15.

955

�19

16.

200

23

�5

2

17.

243

35

18.

735

3 �

5 �

72

Fac

tor

each

mon

omia

l.

19.

35v

5 �

7 �

v20

.49

c27

�7

�c

�c

21.

�14

b3�

1 �

2 �

7 �

b�

b�

b22

.�

81h

2�

1 �

3 �

3 �

3 �

3 �

h�

h

23.

33w

z3

�11

�w

�z

24.

�56

ghj

�1

�2

�2

�2

�7

�g

�h

�j

25.

NU

MB

ERTH

EORY

Tw

in p

rim

esar

e a

pair

of

con

secu

tive

odd

pri

mes

,wh

ich

dif

fer

by 2

.For

exa

mpl

e,3

and

5 ar

e tw

in p

rim

es.F

ind

the

twin

pri

mes

les

s th

an 1

00.

(Hin

t:T

her

e ar

e 8

pair

s of

tw

ins

less

th

an 1

00.)

3,5;

5,7;

11,1

3;17

,19;

29,3

1;41

,43;

59,6

1;71

,73

Lesson 4-3

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A8 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-3)

Page 78: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

lenc

oe/M

cGra

w-H

ill18

0G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

The

gre

ates

t nu

mbe

r th

at is

a fa

ctor

of

two

or m

ore

num

bers

is t

he g

reat

est

com

mo

n f

acto

r (G

CF

).Tw

o w

ays

to f

ind

the

GC

F a

re s

how

n be

low

.

Fin

d t

he

GC

F o

f 24

an

d 3

2.

Met

ho

d 1

Lis

t th

e fa

ctor

s.

fact

ors

of 2

4:1,

2,3,

4,6,

8,12

,24

Look

for

fact

ors

com

mon

to

both

list

s, 1

, 2,

4,

and

8.

fact

ors

of 3

2:1,

2,4,

8,16

,32

Th

e gr

eate

st c

omm

on f

acto

r of

24

and

32 i

s 8.

Met

ho

d 2

U

se p

rim

e fa

ctor

izat

ion

.

24 �

2 �

2 �

2 �

3F

ind

the

com

mon

prim

e fa

ctor

s of

24

and

32.

32 �

2 �

2 �

2 �

2 �

2

Mul

tipl

y th

e co

mm

on p

rim

e fa

ctor

s.T

he g

reat

est

com

mon

fac

tor

of 2

4 an

d 32

is

2 �

2 �

2or

8.

In a

lgeb

ra,

grea

test

com

mon

fact

ors

are

used

to

fact

or e

xpre

ssio

ns.

Fac

tor

5x�

10.

Fir

st,f

ind

the

GC

F o

f 5x

and

10.

5x�

5�

x

10 �

2 �

5T

he G

CF

is 5

.

Now

wri

te e

ach

ter

m a

s a

prod

uct

of

the

GC

F a

nd

its

rem

ain

ing

fact

ors.

5x�

10 �

5(x)

�5(

2)

�5(

x�

2)

Dis

trib

utiv

e P

rope

rty

So,

5x �

10 �

5(x

�2)

.

Stu

dy G

uid

e a

nd I

nte

rven

tion

Gre

ates

t C

om

mo

n F

acto

r (G

CF

)

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

Exam

ple1

Exam

ple1

4-4

4-4

Exam

ple2

Exam

ple2

Fin

d t

he

GC

F o

f ea

ch s

et o

f n

um

ber

s.

1.30

,42

62.

15,3

33

3.44

,110

224.

16,4

816

Fac

tor

each

exp

ress

ion

.

5.4g

�16

4(g

�4)

6.2d

�6

2(d

�3)

7.8a

�24

8(a

�3)

8.f2

�2f

f(f

�2)

9.6

�3j

3(2

�j)

10.

16n2

�40

n8n

(2n

�5)

Exer

cises

Exer

cises

En

rich

men

t

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-3

4-3

©G

lenc

oe/M

cGra

w-H

ill17

9G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

Pri

me

Pyr

amid

A p

rim

e n

um

ber

is a

who

le n

umbe

r th

at h

as e

xact

ly t

wo

fact

ors—

itse

lf a

nd 1

.The

py

ram

id b

elow

is c

alle

d a

prim

e py

ram

id.E

ach

row

beg

ins

wit

h 1

and

ends

wit

h th

e nu

mbe

rof

tha

t ro

w.S

o,ro

w 2

beg

ins

wit

h 1

and

ends

wit

h 2,

row

3 b

egin

s w

ith

1 an

d en

ds w

ith

3,an

dso

on.

In e

ach

row

,the

num

bers

from

1 t

o th

e ro

w n

umbe

r ar

e ar

rang

ed s

uch

that

the

sum

of

any

two

adja

cent

num

bers

is a

pri

me

num

ber.

For

exa

mpl

e,lo

ok a

t ro

w 4

:

• It

mu

st c

onta

in t

he

nu

mbe

rs 1

,2,3

,an

d 4.

• It

mu

st b

egin

wit

h 1

an

d en

d w

ith

4.

• T

he

sum

of

adja

cen

t pa

irs

mu

st b

e a

prim

e n

um

ber:

1�

2�

3,2

�3

�5,

3�

4�

7

1.C

ompl

ete

the

pyra

mid

by

fill

ing

in t

he

mis

sin

g n

um

bers

.

2.E

xten

d th

e py

ram

id t

o ro

w 1

3.

1,4,

3,2,

5,6,

7,10

,9,8

,11,

12,1

3

3.E

xpla

in t

he

patt

ern

s yo

u s

ee i

n t

he

com

plet

ed p

yram

id.

Sam

ple

an

swer

:E

ach

ro

w a

lter

nat

es o

dd

an

d e

ven

nu

mb

ers.

Mu

ltip

les

of

3 fo

rm d

iag

on

als

that

are

co

nst

ant.

112

43

25

67

109

811

111

43

25

67

109

8

110

23

47

65

89

19

85

67

43

2

18

23

47

65

17

54

32

6

14

32

56

14

32

5

12

34

12

3

1

*

2

Lesson 4-3

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A9 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lessons 4-3 and 4-4)

An

swer

s

Page 79: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

lenc

oe/M

cGra

w-H

ill18

2G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

Pra

ctic

eG

reat

est

Co

mm

on

Fac

tor

(GC

F)

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-4

4-4

Fin

d t

he

GC

F o

f ea

ch s

et o

f n

um

ber

s or

mon

omia

ls.

1.9,

369

2.42

,60

6

3.16

,60

44.

29,5

829

5.18

,35

16.

90,4

8030

7.80

,45

58.

700,

200

100

9.17

,85

1710

.24

,84,

168

12

11.

55,1

055

12.

252,

126

126

13.

5p,2

0p2

5p14

.28

a,49

ab7a

15.

8b,5

c1

16.

6a2 ,

18b2

6

17.

88s2

t,40

st2

8st

18.

42a2

b,60

ab2

6ab

Fac

tor

each

exp

ress

ion

.

19.

10x

�40

10(x

�4)

20.

8v�

568(

v�

7)

21.

9t�

99

(t�

1)22

.13

m�

3913

(m�

3)

23.

90 �

45n

45(2

�n

)24

.15

p�

6015

(p�

4)

25.

48 �

8r8

(6 �

r)26

.11

z�

5511

(z�

5)

27.

18q

�54

18(q

�3)

28.

125

�25

h25

(5 �

h)

29.

42a

�77

7(6a

�11

)30

.30

�45

s15

(2 �

3s)

31.

50n

�30

10(5

n�

3)32

.18

�12

d6(

3 �

2d

)

33.

27m

�10

53(

9m�

35)

34.

65 �

39b

13(5

�3b

)

35.

21d

�63

7(3d

�9)

36.

48 �

84m

12(4

�7m

)

37.

SCH

OO

L TR

IPT

hir

ty-t

wo

seve

nth

gra

ders

,48

eigh

th g

rade

rs,a

nd

60 n

inth

gra

ders

are

taki

ng

a sk

i tr

ip.I

n o

rder

to

hel

p st

ude

nts

get

bet

ter

acqu

ain

ted,

stu

den

ts f

rom

eac

hgr

ade

leve

l ar

e to

rid

e ea

ch b

us.

Wh

at i

s th

e gr

eate

st n

um

ber

of b

use

s th

at c

an b

e u

sed

if s

tude

nts

fro

m e

ach

gra

de l

evel

are

div

ided

equ

ally

am

ong

the

buse

s?4

buse

s

Skil

ls P

ract

ice

Gre

ates

t C

om

mo

n F

acto

r (G

CF

)

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-4

4-4

©G

lenc

oe/M

cGra

w-H

ill18

1G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

Fin

d t

he

GC

F o

f ea

ch s

et o

f n

um

ber

s or

mon

omia

ls.

1.15

,50

52.

24,8

13

3.18

,27

94.

36,6

44

5.88

,40

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.

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Lesson 4-4

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A10 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-4)

Page 80: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

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4-4

4-4

GC

Fs

by S

ucc

essi

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ivis

ion

An

oth

er w

ay t

o fi

nd

the

grea

test

com

mon

fac

tor

(GC

F)

of t

wo

nu

mbe

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s to

use

su

cces

sive

div

isio

n.T

his

met

hod

wor

ks w

ell

for

larg

e n

um

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.

Fin

d th

e G

CF

of

848

and

1325

.

Ste

p 1

Div

ide

the

smal

ler

nu

mbe

r in

to t

he

grea

ter

nu

mbe

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1 R

477

848

�1 �3�2�5� 848

477

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p 2

Div

ide

the

rem

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to t

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ivis

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t th

is s

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l you

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a r

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of 0

.

1 R

371

1 R

106

3 R

532

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477

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371

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131

810

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the

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o th

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848

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53.

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e m

eth

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e to

fin

d t

he

GC

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f ea

ch p

air

of n

um

ber

s.

1.18

7;57

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3

Readin

g t

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em

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reat

est

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mm

on

Fac

tor

(GC

F)

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

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ATE

____

____

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ER

IOD

____

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4-4

4-4

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Ho

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m b

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to

fin

d t

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ates

t co

mm

on

fac

tor?

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the

acti

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at

the

top

of

pag

e 16

4 in

you

r te

xtb

ook

.Wri

teyo

ur

answ

ers

bel

ow.

a.W

hic

h n

um

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are

in

bot

h c

ircl

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2,2

b.F

ind

the

prod

uct

of

the

nu

mbe

rs t

hat

are

in

bot

h c

ircl

es.

4

c.Is

th

e pr

odu

ct a

lso

a fa

ctor

of

12 a

nd

20?

yes

d.M

ake

a V

enn

dia

gram

sh

owin

g th

e pr

ime

fact

ors

of 1

6 an

d 28

.Th

enu

se i

t to

fin

d th

e co

mm

on f

acto

rs o

f th

e n

um

bers

.2,

2

Pre-

Act

ivit

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Rea

din

g t

he

Less

on

1–2.

See

stu

den

ts’w

ork

.W

rite

a d

efin

itio

n a

nd

giv

e an

exa

mp

le o

f ea

ch n

ew v

ocab

ula

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ord

or

ph

rase

.

Prim

e Fa

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f 28

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2 22 2

16 �

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2 •

2 •

228

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• 7

7

Hel

pin

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ou

Rem

emb

er3.

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mar

ize

in y

our

own

wor

ds h

ow t

o fi

nd t

he g

reat

est

com

mon

fact

or o

f tw

o nu

mbe

rs u

sing

each

met

hod.

a.pr

ime

fact

oriz

atio

nW

rite

th

e p

rim

e fa

cto

riza

tio

n o

f ea

ch n

um

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,th

enlo

ok

for

the

pri

me

fact

ors

co

mm

on

to

bo

th n

um

ber

s.T

he

gre

ates

t co

mm

on

fac

tor

is t

he

pro

du

ct o

f th

e co

mm

on

fac

tors

.

b.

list

s of

fac

tors

Mak

e a

list

of

all f

acto

rs o

f b

oth

nu

mb

ers.

Th

e la

rges

t fa

cto

r th

at is

in b

oth

list

s is

th

e g

reat

est

com

mo

n f

acto

r.

c.a

Ven

n d

iagr

amM

ake

a V

enn

dia

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m w

ith

th

e p

rim

e fa

cto

rs o

f ea

ch n

um

ber

in a

cir

cle.

Th

e G

CF

is t

he

pro

du

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f th

e fa

cto

rs in

th

e ov

erla

pp

ing

sec

tio

n o

f th

e d

iag

ram

.

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bula

ryD

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itio

nE

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ple

1.V

enn

diag

ram

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eate

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on f

acto

r

Lesson 4-4

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A11 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-4)

An

swer

s

Page 81: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

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4-5

4-5

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ivid

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ify.

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2 �

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�r r4 2�r2

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ple2

Exam

ple2

A f

ract

ion

is in

sim

ple

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orm

whe

n th

e G

CF

of

the

num

erat

or a

nd t

he d

enom

inat

or is

1.O

ne w

ay t

ow

rite

a fr

actio

n in

sim

ples

t fo

rm is

to

writ

e th

e pr

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fact

oriz

atio

n of

the

num

erat

or a

nd t

he d

enom

inat

or.

The

n di

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the

num

erat

or a

nd d

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y th

e G

CF.

Wri

te �1 28 4�

in s

imp

lest

for

m.

Wri

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prim

e fa

ctor

izat

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the

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d th

e de

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inat

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2 �2�

3 �2�

3 �3

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ivid

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plify

.

Alg

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ract

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in s

impl

est

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.Aga

in,

you

can

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e pr

ime

fact

oriz

atio

nof

the

num

erat

or a

nd t

he d

enom

inat

or,

then

div

ide

by t

he G

CF.

Exam

ple1

Exam

ple1S

tudy G

uid

e a

nd I

nte

rven

tion

Sim

plif

yin

g A

lgeb

raic

Fra

ctio

ns

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

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ATE

____

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ER

IOD

____

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4-5

4-5

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Exer

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Exer

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Lesson 4-5

11

11

//

//

11

1

1

11

1

1

/ /

/ /

/ /

//

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A12 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-5)

Page 82: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

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Readin

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Math

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imp

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Alg

ebra

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ract

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s

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

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ER

IOD

____

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4-5

4-5

Ho

w a

re s

imp

lifie

d f

ract

ion

s u

sefu

l in

rep

rese

nti

ng

m

easu

rem

ents

?D

o th

e ac

tivi

ty a

t th

e to

p o

f p

age

169

in y

our

text

boo

k.W

rite

you

r an

swer

s b

elow

.

a.A

re t

he

thre

e fr

acti

ons

equ

ival

ent?

Exp

lain

you

r re

ason

ing.

Yes;

the

sam

e p

ort

ion

of

each

cir

cle

is s

had

ed.

b.W

hic

h f

igu

re i

s di

vide

d in

to t

he

leas

t n

um

ber

of p

arts

? th

e th

ird

fig

ure

c.W

hic

h f

ract

ion

wou

ld y

ou s

ay i

s w

ritt

en i

n s

impl

est

form

? W

hy?

�1 4� ;T

he

shad

ed p

art

is n

ot

div

ided

into

sm

alle

r p

arts

.

Pre-

Act

ivit

y

Rea

din

g t

he

Less

on

1–2.

See

stu

den

ts’w

ork

.

Wri

te a

def

init

ion

an

d g

ive

an e

xam

ple

of

each

new

voc

abu

lary

ph

rase

.

3.U

se a

Ven

n d

iagr

am t

o ex

plai

n h

ow t

o si

mpl

ify

�1 48 5�.

Th

e p

rim

e fa

cto

rs o

f th

e

nu

mer

ato

r ar

e 3,

3,an

d 2

.Th

e p

rim

e fa

cto

rs o

f th

e d

eno

min

ato

r ar

e 3,

3,an

d 5

.Th

e G

CF

of

the

nu

mb

ers,

9,is

sh

ow

n b

y th

e in

ters

ecti

on

.So

,th

esi

mp

lifie

d f

ract

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is �2 5� .

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est

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Hel

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Rem

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4.E

xpla

in t

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itie

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d di

ffer

ence

s be

twee

n s

impl

ifyi

ng

a n

um

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al f

ract

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an

dsi

mpl

ifyi

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an a

lgeb

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fra

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n.

Bo

th f

ract

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s ar

e si

mp

lifie

d b

y d

ivid

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th

en

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and

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ly d

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th

at a

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geb

raic

fra

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as v

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1845

332

5

3�3

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ract

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____

____

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____

____

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____

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ER

IOD

____

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4-5

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SKI R

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sin

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13 w

eeks

in

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inte

r.W

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a

frac

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in

sim

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rm t

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acti

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year

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e re

sort

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.�1 4�

Lesson 4-5

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A13 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-5)

An

swer

s

Page 83: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

Fin

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you

r an

swer

usi

ng

exp

onen

ts.

�( (� �

8 8) )4 2�

�(�

8)4

�2

The

com

mon

bas

e is

�8.

�(�

8)2

Sub

trac

t th

e ex

pone

nts.

©G

lenc

oe/M

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w-H

ill19

0G

lenc

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ra

Whe

n m

ultip

lyin

g po

wer

s w

ith t

he s

ame

base

, ad

d th

e ex

pone

nts.

Sym

bo

lsE

xam

ple

am�

an�

am+

n42

�45

�42

+5

or 4

7

Whe

n di

vidi

ng p

ower

s w

ith t

he s

ame

base

, su

btra

ct t

he e

xpon

ents

.

Sym

bo

lsE

xam

ple

�a am n��

am �

n,

whe

re a

�0

�5 56 2��

56�

2 or

54

Fin

d 2

a2 (

3a).

Exp

ress

you

r an

swer

usi

ng

exp

onen

ts.

2a2 (

3a)

�(2

�3)

(a2

�a)

Use

the

Com

mut

ativ

e an

d A

ssoc

iativ

e P

rope

rtie

s.

� (

6)(a

2 �

1)

The

com

mon

bas

e is

a.

�6a

3A

dd t

he e

xpon

ents

.

Fin

d e

ach

pro

du

ct o

r q

uot

ien

t.E

xpre

ss y

our

answ

er u

sin

g ex

pon

ents

.

1.47

�46

413

2.v5

�v4

v9

3.(f

3 )(f

9 )f1

2

4.22

5 �

225

2210

5.7h

(5h

3 )35

h4

6.�

10x2

(7x3

)�

70x

5

7.�7 75 2�

738.

�1 18 6�12

9.�( (� �

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(�12

)0o

r 1

10.

38�

3331

111

.�c c2 10 3�

c7

12.

�( (� �

p p) )1 18 2�

(�p

)6

13.

�7u

6 (�

6u5 )

42u

1114

.�2 2w w3 �

w2

15.

�5m

3 (4m

6 )�

20m

9

16.

the

prod

uct

of

two

cube

d an

d tw

o sq

uar

ed25

17.

the

quot

ien

t of

six

to

the

eigh

th p

ower

an

d si

x sq

uar

ed66

Stu

dy G

uid

e a

nd I

nte

rven

tion

Mu

ltip

lyin

g a

nd

Div

idin

g M

on

om

ials

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

Exam

ple1

Exam

ple1

4-6

4-6

Exam

ple2

Exam

ple2

Exer

cises

Exer

cises

En

rich

men

t

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-5

4-5

©G

lenc

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cGra

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ill18

9G

lenc

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re-A

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ra

Mat

chin

g E

qu

ival

ent

Fra

ctio

ns

Cu

t ou

t th

e p

iece

s b

elow

an

d m

atch

th

e ed

ges

so t

hat

eq

uiv

alen

t fr

acti

ons

mee

t.T

he

pie

ces

form

a 4

�6

rect

angl

e.T

he

oute

r ed

ges

of t

he

rect

angl

e fo

rmed

wil

lh

ave

no

frac

tion

s.

17

3 812 42

210

5 915 35

324

910

5 816 28

4550

1112

4 78 20

4045

1213

89

3 75 15

321

1 2

5256

310

911

15 21

4044

19

35 777 13

18

4 918 48

218

8 10

2733

49 91

110

24 54

220

112

4 56 8

2133

78

1 3

318

5 79 15

4448

711

15

14 565 11

3 44 6

933

14

2 8

16

28

2 72 5

3540

1314

67

25 45

336

2 3

620

3 53 6

4852

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20 32

3035

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1815

1110

14

58

2319

4

2420

313

7

222

2117

9

161

12

34

56

78

910

1112

1314

1516

1718

1920

2122

2324

612

Lesson 4-5

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A14 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lessons 4-5 and 4-6)

Page 84: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

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Pra

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eM

ult

iply

ing

an

d D

ivid

ing

Mo

no

mia

ls

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-6

4-6

Fin

d e

ach

pro

du

ct o

r q

uot

ien

t.E

xpre

ss y

our

answ

er u

sin

g ex

pon

ents

.

1.42

�43

45

2.98

�96

914

3.74

�72

764.

132

�13

413

6

5.(�

8)5 (

�8)

3(�

8)8

6.(�

21)9

(�21

)5(�

21)1

4

7.t9

�t3

t12

8.h

4�

h13

h17

9.(m

6 )(m

6 )m

1210

.(u

11)(

u10

)u

21

11.

(�r)

7 (�

r)20

(�r)

2712

.(�

w)(

�w

)9(�

w)1

0

13.

4d5

�8d

632

d11

14.

7j50

�6j

5042

j100

15.

�5b

9�

6b2

�30

b11

16.

121

�12

212

3

17.

�6 61 31 �68

18.

�1 15 53 2�15

1o

r 15

19.

�9 99 7�92

20.

�1 18 84 4�18

0o

r 1

21.

�( (� �

7 7) )6 5�

(�7)

1o

r �

722

.�9 95 52 11 8

�95

3

23.

�v v3 20 0�v1

024

.�n n

1 19 1�n

8

25.t

he

prod

uct

of

five

cu

bed

and

five

to

the

fou

rth

pow

er57

26.t

he

quot

ien

t of

eig

hte

en t

o th

e n

inth

pow

er a

nd

eigh

teen

squ

ared

187

27.t

he

prod

uct

of

zcu

bed

and

zcu

bed

z6

28.t

he

quot

ien

t of

xto

th

e fi

fth

pow

er a

nd

xcu

bed

x2

29.

SOU

ND

Dec

ibel

s ar

e u

nit

s u

sed

to m

easu

re s

oun

d.T

he

soft

est

sou

nd

that

can

be

hea

rdis

rat

ed a

s 0

deci

bels

(or

a r

elat

ive

lou

dnes

s of

1).

Ord

inar

y co

nve

rsat

ion

is

rate

d at

abou

t 60

dec

ibel

s (o

r a

rela

tive

lou

dnes

s of

106

).A

roc

k co

nce

rt i

s ra

ted

at a

bou

t 12

0de

cibe

ls (

or a

rel

ativ

e lo

udn

ess

of

1012

).H

ow m

any

tim

es g

reat

er i

s th

e re

lati

ve

lou

dnes

s of

a r

ock

con

cert

th

an t

he

rela

tive

lou

dnes

s of

ord

inar

y co

nve

rsat

ion

?10

6o

r1,

000,

000

tim

es

Skil

ls P

ract

ice

Mu

ltip

lyin

g a

nd

Div

idin

g M

on

om

ials

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-6

4-6

©G

lenc

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ill19

1G

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oe P

re-A

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ra

Fin

d e

ach

pro

du

ct o

r q

uot

ien

t.E

xpre

ss y

our

answ

er u

sin

g ex

pon

ents

.

1.23

�25

282.

102

�10

710

9

3.14

�1

154.

63�

6366

5.(�

3)2(�

3)3

(�3)

56.

(�9)

2 (�

9)2

(�9)

4

7.a2

�a3

a5

8.n

8�

n3

n11

9.(p

4 )(p

4 )p

810

.(z

6 )(z

7 )z1

3

11.

(6b3

)(3b

4 )18

b7

12.

(�v)

3 (�

v)7

(�v)

10

13.

11a2

�3a

633

a8

14.

10t2

�4t

1040

t12

15.

(8c2

)(9c

)72

c3

16.

(4f8

)(5

f6 )

20f1

4

17.

�5 51 20 �58

18.

�1 10 06 2�10

4

19.

�7 79 6�73

20.

�1 12 28 3�12

5

21.

�1 10 00 09 8�

1001

or

100

22.

�(� �

2 2)3�

(�2)

2

23.

�r r8 7�r1

or

r24

.�z z1 80 �

z2

25.

�q q8 4�q

426

.�g g1 82 �

g4

27.

�( (� �

y y) )7 2�

(�y

)528

.�( (� �

z z) )1 52�

(�z)

7

29.t

he

prod

uct

of

two

squ

ared

an

d tw

o to

th

e si

xth

pow

er28

30.t

he

quot

ien

t of

ten

to

the

seve

nth

pow

er a

nd

ten

cu

bed

104

31.t

he

prod

uct

of

ysq

uar

ed a

nd

ycu

bed

y5

32.t

he

quot

ien

t of

ato

th

e tw

enti

eth

pow

er a

nd

ato

th

e te

nth

pow

era1

0

Lesson 4-6

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A15 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-6)

An

swer

s

Page 85: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

lenc

oe/M

cGra

w-H

ill19

4G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

En

rich

men

t

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-6

4-6

Div

idin

g P

ower

s w

ith

Dif

fere

nt

Bas

esS

ome

pow

ers

wit

h d

iffe

ren

t ba

ses

can

be

divi

ded.

Fir

st,y

ou m

ust

be

able

to

wri

te b

oth

as

pow

ers

of t

he

sam

e ba

se.A

n e

xam

ple

is s

how

n b

elow

.

�2 85 2��

� (22 35 )2�

To f

ind

the

pow

er o

f a

pow

er,

mul

tiply

the

exp

onen

ts.

��2 25 6�

�2�

1 or

�1 2�

Th

is m

eth

od c

ould

not

hav

e be

en u

sed

to d

ivid

e �2 95 2�

,sin

ce 9

can

not

be

wri

tten

as

a po

wer

of

2 u

sin

g in

tege

rs.

Sim

pli

fy e

ach

fra

ctio

n u

sin

g th

e m

eth

od s

how

n a

bov

e.E

xpre

ss t

he

solu

tion

w

ith

out

exp

onen

ts.

1.�8 22 2�

162.

�1 86 34 �12

83.

�9 33 3�27

4.�8 31 44 �

531,

441

5.� 83 19 2�

36.

�3 12 64 4�16

7.�1 22 55 32

�1

8.� 26 16 62

�1

9.� 11 00 06 03

�0.

001

10.

�6 84 53 �8

11.

�2 97 45 �21

8712

.�34 73 5

3�

2401

Readin

g t

o L

earn

Math

em

ati

csM

ult

iply

ing

an

d D

ivid

ing

Mo

no

mia

ls

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-6

4-6

©G

lenc

oe/M

cGra

w-H

ill19

3G

lenc

oe P

re-A

lgeb

ra

Ho

w a

re p

ow

ers

of

mo

no

mia

ls u

sefu

l in

co

mp

arin

g

eart

hq

uak

e m

agn

itu

des

?D

o th

e ac

tivi

ty a

t th

e to

p o

f p

age

175

in y

our

text

boo

k.W

rite

you

r an

swer

s b

elow

.

a.E

xam

ine

the

expo

nent

s of

the

fac

tors

and

the

exp

onen

ts o

f th

e pr

oduc

tsin

the

last

col

umn.

Wha

t do

you

obs

erve

? T

he

exp

on

ents

of

the

fact

ors

are

add

ed t

o g

et t

he

exp

on

ent

of

the

pro

du

ct.

b.M

ake

a co

nje

ctu

reab

out

a ru

le f

or d

eter

min

ing

the

expo

nen

t of

th

epr

odu

ct w

hen

you

mu

ltip

ly p

ower

s w

ith

th

e sa

me

base

.Tes

t yo

ur

rule

by m

ult

iply

ing

22�

24u

sin

g a

calc

ula

tor.

Sam

ple

an

swer

:A

dd

th

eex

po

nen

ts.

Pre-

Act

ivit

y

Rea

din

g t

he

Less

on

1.W

hen

mu

ltip

lyin

g po

wer

s w

ith

lik

e ba

ses,

add

the

expo

nen

ts.

2.W

hen

div

idin

g po

wer

s w

ith

lik

e ba

ses,

sub

trac

tth

e ex

pon

ents

.

3.W

rite

a d

ivis

ion

exp

ress

ion

wh

ose

quot

ien

t is

72 .

Sam

ple

an

swer

:�7 73 �

4.W

rite

a m

ult

ipli

cati

on e

xpre

ssio

n w

hos

e pr

odu

ct i

s v5

.S

amp

le a

nsw

er:

v2

�v

3

5.F

ind

each

pro

duct

.

a.4

�43

44b

.y7

�y5

y12

c.(�

2x2)(

5x2)

�10

x4

d.

�3r

2�

r�

3r3

6.F

ind

each

qu

otie

nt.

a.�7 74 2�

72b

.�v v9 3�

v6

c.�6 67 6�

61

or

6d

.�a b2 b 2

2�

a2

Hel

pin

g Y

ou

Rem

emb

er

7.E

xpla

in h

ow d

ivid

ing

pow

ers

is r

elat

ed t

o si

mpl

ifyi

ng

frac

tion

s.P

rovi

de a

n e

xam

ple

aspa

rt o

f yo

ur

expl

anat

ion

.S

amp

le a

nsw

er:W

hen

div

idin

g p

ow

ers

wit

h li

keb

ases

,su

btr

acti

ng

th

e ex

po

nen

ts is

eq

uiv

alen

t to

sim

plif

yin

g f

ract

ion

s.F

or

exam

ple

,34

�32

�34

�2

or

32by

th

e Q

uo

tien

t o

f P

ow

ers

rule

.

Wh

en s

imp

lifyi

ng

�3 34 2�,d

ivid

e th

e n

um

erat

or

and

den

om

inat

or

by t

he

GC

F,32

,to

get

�3 12 � o

r 32

.

Lesson 4-6

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A16 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-6)

Page 86: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

©G

lenc

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w-H

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ls P

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Neg

ativ

e E

xpo

nen

ts

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

AT

E__

____

____

____

PE

RIO

D__

___

4-7

4-7

Wri

te e

ach

exp

ress

ion

usi

ng

a p

osit

ive

exp

onen

t.

1.3�

4� 31 4�

2.8�

7� 81 7�

3.10

�4

� 11 04�

4.(�

2)�

6� (�

1 2)6

�5.

(�40

)�3

� (�41 0)

3�

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17)�

12� (�

11 7)12

7.n

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b�8

� b1 8�9.

q�5

� q1 5�

10.

m�

4� m1 4�

11.

v�11

� v1 11�12

.p�

2� p1 2�

Wri

te e

ach

fra

ctio

n a

s an

exp

ress

ion

usi

ng

a n

egat

ive

exp

onen

t ot

her

th

an �

1.

13.

� 81 2�8�

214

.� 11 05�

10�

515

.� 21 3�

2�3

16.

� 61 7�6�

717

.� 11 74�

17�

418

.� 21 12�

21�

2

19.

� 31 7�3�

720

.� 91 2�

9�2

21.

� 31 2�3�

2

22.

� 11 21�11

�2

23.

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224

.� 31 6�

6�2

Eva

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ch e

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n i

f x

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y�

2,an

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��

3.

25.

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�1 8�26

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2�1 9�

27.

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1

28.

y�5

� 31 2�29

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3�

� 21 7�30

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1�1 2�

31.

z�4

� 81 1�32

.5

z� 11 25�

33.

x�99

1

34.

1z1

35.

4z� 61 4�

36.

yz�1 8�

Stu

dy G

uid

e a

nd I

nte

rven

tion

Neg

ativ

e E

xpo

nen

ts

NA

ME

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

____

__D

ATE

____

____

____

__P

ER

IOD

____

_

4-7

4-7

©G

lenc

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cGra

w-H

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5G

lenc

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re-A

lgeb

ra

Ext

endi

ng t

he p

atte

rn b

elow

sho

ws

that

4–1

= �1 4�

or � 41 1�

.

42�

16�

441

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Thi

s su

gges

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he fo

llow

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defin

ition

.

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= � a1 n�

, fo

r a

�0

and

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ger

n.

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ach

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usi

ng

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ive

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t.

a.3�

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.y�

2

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�� 31 4�

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We

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alg

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ic e

xpre

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ns w

ith n

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ive

expo

nent

s us

ing

the

defin

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tive

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s.

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usi

ng

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1.6�

4� 61 4�

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Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A17 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-7)

An

swer

s

Page 87: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

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4-7

4-7

Ho

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exp

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rep

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?

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acti

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at

the

top

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pag

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1 in

you

r te

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ook

.Wri

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answ

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bel

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the

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th

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1;

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–1.

b.

Des

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c.V

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4-7

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Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A18 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lesson 4-7)

Page 88: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

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Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A19 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Answers (Lessons 4-7 and 4-8)

An

swer

s

Page 89: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

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Page 90: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

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An

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Page 91: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A22 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

17.

18.

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9.

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Chapter 4 Assessment Answer Key Form 1 Form 2APage 205 Page 206 Page 207

(continued on the next page)

Tables that seat 8 people

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A23 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

12.

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4.

5.

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7.

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9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

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15.

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Chapter 4 Assessment Answer Key Form 2A (continued) Form 2BPage 208 Page 209 Page 210

An

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sVenus, Earth,Neptune, Uranus Neptune, Uranus,

Saturn, Jupiter

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A24 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

1.

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5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

17.

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Chapter 4 Assessment Answer Key Form 2CPage 211 Page 212

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A25 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

17.

18.

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Chapter 4 Assessment Answer Key Form 2DPage 213 Page 214

An

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Page 95: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A26 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

17.

18.

19.

20.

21.

22.

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24.

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Chapter 4 Assessment Answer Key Form 3Page 215 Page 216

No; it has two termsinvolving addition.

Yes; it is the product ofnumbers and variables.

No; it has two terms involving subtraction.

Yes; it is the product of numbers and variables.

�1 � 3 � 3 � 5 � q � r �r � s � s � s

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2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19,23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43,and 47

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Chapter 4 Assessment Answer KeyPage 217, Open-Ended Assessment

Scoring Rubric

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A27 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

An

swer

s

Chapter 4 Assessment Answer KeyPage 217, Open-Ended Assessment

Scoring Rubric

An

swer

s

Score General Description Specific Criteria

• Shows thorough understanding of the concepts factors,fractions, exponent, coefficient, prime, and composite.

• Uses appropriate strategies to compare fractions.• Computations are correct.• Written explanations are exemplary.• Diagram is accurate.• Goes beyond requirements of some or all problems.

• Shows an understanding of the concepts factors, fractions,exponent, coefficient, prime, and composite.

• Uses appropriate strategies to compare fractions.• Computations to compare fractions and identify prime

numbers are mostly correct.• Written explanations are effective.• Diagram is mostly accurate.• Satisfies all requirements of problems.

• Shows an understanding of most of the concepts factors,fractions, exponent, coefficient, prime, and composite.

• May not use appropriate strategies to compare fractions.• Computations to compare fractions and identify prime

numbers are mostly correct.• Written explanations are satisfactory.• Diagram is mostly accurate.• Satisfies most requirements of the problems.

• Final computation is correct.• No written explanations or work is shown to substantiate

the final computation.• Diagrams may be accurate but lack detail or explanation.• Satisfies minimal requirements of some of the problems.

• Shows little or no understanding of most of the conceptsfactors, fractions, exponent, coefficient, prime, andcomposite.

• May not use appropriate strategies to compare fractions.• Computations to compare fractions and identify prime

numbers are incorrect.• Written explanations are not satisfactory.• Diagram is not accurate.• Does not satisfy requirements of problems.

0 UnsatisfactoryAn incorrect solutionindicating no mathematicalunderstanding of theconcept or task, or nosolution is given

1 Nearly Unsatisfactory A correct solution with nosupporting evidence orexplanation

2 Nearly SatisfactoryA partially correctinterpretation and/orsolution to the problem

3 SatisfactoryA generally correct solution,but may contain minor flawsin reasoning or computation

4 SuperiorA correct solution that is supported by well-developed, accurateexplanations

Page 97: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A28 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

Chapter 4 Assessment Answer Key Page 217, Open-Ended Assessment

Sample Answers

1. Sample answer: 50 � 3 � 47,74 � 13 � 61, 98 � 37 � 61

2a. Yes. If a number is divisible by 9, thismeans you can separate that manyobjects into nine equal groups, withnone remaining. You can then separateeach of these nine groups into threeequal groups. Thus, the original number is divisible by 3. Following isan example of 18 objects.

2b. No. Consider 12. It is divisible by 3,but not by 9.

3a. No, because 210 is not divisible by 8.Students should give pairs of numbers that are factors of 210,such as 2 by 105, 105 by 2, 3 by 70, 70by 3, 5 by 42, 42 by 5, 6 by 35,35 by 6, 7 by 30, 30 by 7, 10 by 21,21 by 10, 14 by 15, or 15 by 14.

3b. Find a common denominator to compare fractions.

�2460�

� �247230�

and �124100�

� �248200�

A greater part of the band turned in their slips.

4a. 3a means 3 � a or a � a � a.a3 means a � a � a.

4b. �3b means �3 � b or �(b � b � b).

b�3 means �b13� or �b �

1b � b�.

xx

xx

xx

xx

xx

xx

xx

xx

xx

In addition to the scoring rubric found on page A27, the following sample answers may be used as guidance in evaluating open-ended assessment items.

Page 98: Chapter 4 Resource Masters - HenkelsMath.comhenkelsmath.com/homework/HW90A.pdf · 5 6 7 8 9 10 047 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 Pre-Algebra Chapter 4 Resource Masters ... Lesson 4-7

© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A29 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

1. d

2. i

3. c

4. h

5. g

6. b

7. e

8. f

9. a

10. Sample answer: Anumber expressedin scientific notationis written as theproduct of a factorand a power of 10.The factor must begreater than orequal to 1 and lessthan 10.

11. Sample answer: In apower, the base isthe number that ismultiplied.

12. Sample answer: Analgebraic fraction isa fraction withvariables in thenumerator ordenominator.

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

Quiz (Lessons 4-3 and 4-4)

Page 219

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

Quiz (Lessons 4-7 and 4-8)

Page 220

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

3.60 � 10�5

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32 � 7

33

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3

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2

Chapter 4 Assessment Answer Key Vocabulary Test/Review Quiz (Lessons 4-1 and 4-2) Quiz (Lessons 4-5 and 4-6)

Page 218 Page 219 Page 220

An

swer

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Yes; it is the product of two variables.

No; two variables are added.

electron, proton,neutron

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A30 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

17. 6(3 � 7y)

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2 � 3 � 13

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1296

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Chapter 4 Assessment Answer Key Mid-Chapter Test Cumulative ReviewPage 221 Page 222

No; 12 is not a factor of 70.

2 � 2 � 2 � 3 � x �x � x � y � y

domain � {2.3, 4.6, 5}range � {3.2, 3.3, 4}

Positive; as the outside temperatureincreases, so does theair conditioning bill.

2 � 3 � 3 � 3 � 3 � 5 �a � b � c � c � c

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© Glencoe/McGraw-Hill A31 Glencoe Pre-Algebra

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

17. 18.

19.

20. 7.998 � 108

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Page 223 Page 224

An

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