Solutions For All GR 8
Solutions For All GR 8
Mathematics
Grade 8
Learner’s Book
13 15 17 16 14
0 2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1
Published by
Macmillan South Africa (Pty) Ltd
Private Bag X19
Northlands
2116
Gauteng
South Africa
Photographs by:
AAI Fotostock: page 266, 353, 516
African Media Online: page 226
AfriPics: page 13, 30, 280
Gallo Getty: page 429
Gallo Images: page 229
Greatstock Corbis: page 227, 228, 266
INPRA Agency: page 139, 325
Science Photo Library: page 227
VMS Images: page 514
WikiCommons: page 228
ISBN: 9781431014446
WIP: 4520M000
e-ISBN: 9781431025855
e-ISBN: 9781431025855
It is illegal to photocopy any page of this book
without written permission from the publishers.
The publishers have made every effort to trace the copyright holders.
If they have inadvertently overlooked any, they will be pleased to make the
necessary arrangements at the first opportunity.
The publishers would also like to thank those organisations and individuals
we have already approached and from whom we are anticipating permission.
Contents
Term 1
Unit 1 Whole numbers .....................................................................................1
Unit 2 Integers (Part 1) ...................................................................................33
Unit 3 Integers (Part 2) ...................................................................................44
Unit 4 Exponents ...........................................................................................59
Unit 5 Numeric and geometric patterns ........................................................75
Unit 6 Functions and relationships ................................................................92
Unit 7 Algebraic expressions .......................................................................105
Unit 8 Equations (Part 1) ..............................................................................119
Unit 9 Revision.............................................................................................138
Term 2
Unit 10 Algebraic expressions .......................................................................150
Unit 11 Equations (Part 2) ..............................................................................166
Unit 12 Constructions ....................................................................................184
Unit 13 Investigating properties of geometric figures....................................197
Unit 14 Classifying 2-D shapes .....................................................................208
Unit 15 Similar and congruent 2-D shapes ...................................................225
Unit 16 Geometry of straight lines .................................................................244
Unit 17 Revision.............................................................................................269
Term 3
Unit 18 Common fractions ............................................................................276
Unit 19 Decimal fractions ..............................................................................300
Unit 20 Theorem of Pythagoras .....................................................................316
Unit 21 Area and perimeter of 2-D shapes ....................................................326
Unit 22 Surface area and volume ..................................................................350
Unit 23 Collect, organise and summarise data..............................................370
Unit 24 Representing data .............................................................................390
Unit 25 Analysing, interpreting and reporting data ........................................406
Unit 26 Revision.............................................................................................427
Term 4
Unit 27 Functions and relationships ..............................................................436
Unit 28 Equations ..........................................................................................448
Unit 29 Graphs I.............................................................................................458
Unit 30 Graphs II The Cartesian plane ..........................................................469
Unit 31 Transformation geometry ..................................................................482
Unit 32 Geometry of 3-D objects...................................................................505
Unit 33 Probability .........................................................................................521
Unit 34 Revision.............................................................................................533
Glossary .............................................................................................................542
Mental mathematics..........................................................................................546
m
rich e Questions and activities purposed for enrichment are indicated
using this icon. Use these questions and activities to challenge
En
nt
• revise
– multiplication of whole numbers to at least 12 × 12
– ordering and comparing whole numbers
– prime numbers to at least 100
– the commutative; associative; distributive properties of whole numbers
– 0 in terms of its additive property (identity element for addition)
– 0 in terms of its multiplicative property (identify element for multiplication)
– the division property of 0, whereby any number divided by 0 is undefined
– calculations with all four operations on whole numbers, estimating and
using calculators where appropriate
– prime factors of numbers to at least 3-digit whole numbers
– LCM and HCF of numbers to at least 3-digit whole numbers, by
inspection or factorisation.
• solve problems involving whole numbers, including:
– comparing two or more quantities of the same kind (ratio)
– comparing two quantities of different kinds (rate)
– sharing in a given ratio where the whole is given
– increasing or decreasing of a number in a given ratio.
• solve problems that involve whole numbers, percentages and decimal
fractions in financial contexts such as:
– profit, loss, discount and vAT
– budgets
– accounts
– loans
– simple interest
– hire purchase
– exchange rates.
You will also:
• use a range of strategies to perform and check written and mental
calculations with whole numbers including: estimation, adding, subtracting
and multiplying in columns, long division, rounding off and compensating,
using a calculator.
Term 1 • Unit 1 1
Getting started Mental calculations
Complete the activity. Work as quickly as you can on your own. Then check
your answers with a partner. If your answers are different use a calculator to
find the correct answer. Use shortcuts. Do all the problems. Write down the
question and the answer.
1. 3×6 16. 11 × 7 31. 5×7 46. 5 × 12
2. 4×5 17. 3 × 900 32. 12 × 4 47. 11 × 9
3. 9×9 18. 25 × 4 33. 50 × 90 48. 125 × 4
4. 100 × 100 19. 5×5 34. 6×9 49. 5×3
5. 11 × 5 20. 12 × 9 35. 500 × 2 50. 8×7
6. 8×6 21. 111 × 2 36. 4 × 25 51. 8×9
7. 7×3 22. 50 × 60 37. 11 × 3 52. 800 × 90
8. 6×6 23. 6×7 38. 6×5 53. 8×4
9. 63 × 2 24. 222 × 100 39. 7 × 12 54. 66 × 2
10. 11 × 4 25. 12 × 2 40. 9×7 55. 6×8
11. 9×3 26. 5×6 41. 11 × 12 56. 12 × 11
12. 12 × 5 27. 12 × 7 42. 50 × 5 57. 120 × 110
13. 25 × 20 28. 4×8 43. 12 × 12 58. 77 × 2
14. 10 × 100 29. 9×6 44. 9 × 12 59. 55 × 11
15. 6×3 30. 2 115 × 2 45. 99 × 2 60. 250 × 11
2 Term 1 • Unit 1
5. Round off each of the following numbers to the nearest:
i) 5 ii) 10 iii) 100 iv) 1 000
a) 2 378 b) 14 324 c) 962
d) 7 543 e) 4 768 f) 5 555
2. Deepan has 5 + 5 in the hundreds column. He writes 0 as its answer. Why does
Deepan not write 10?
3. Use the column addition method.
a) 6 3 4 8 b) 2 1 4 6 2
+ 1 5 4 9 9 + 5 3 2 1
+ 8 0 0 5 9
Term 1 • Unit 1 3
5. Explain this long division method
we use to divide 5 184 by 9,
as shown:
Key ideas
4 Term 1 • Unit 1
Exercise 1.2 Mixed operations
1. Add 1 234 + 5 678. Use column addition.
2. Multiply 254 by 26. Use the column multiplication method.
3. Divide 2 012 by 6. Use long division.
4. Use the rules for order of operations. Calculate:
a) 15 × 2 + 3 × 10 b) 15 × (2 + 3) × 10
c) 52 × 4 – 3 d) (52 – 3) × 4
e) 185 − 224 ÷ 8 f) (12 ÷ 12 × 4) + (318 × 0)
g) (2 664 ÷ 9) + 3 × (189 + 142 + 533) h) (1 + 9) × (6 × 6)
i) 199 − 255 ÷ 5
5. Telkom delivers new telephone directories in the Cape Town Southern
Suburbs. The delivery team has to cover three suburbs today. The
population of the three suburbs is: 14 789, 4 485, 6 916.
a) You want to ensure that the delivery team loads enough directories
into the van for the day. How would you round off the three population
figures? Write down the three new figures.
b) Estimate how many directories the delivery team would take for the day.
Worked example
1. List all the factors of 56.
2. Write down the multiples of 15 that are smaller than 100.
3. Find the highest common factor (HCF) and lowest common multiple (LCM) of
6 and 9.
4. List all the prime numbers between 10 and 40.
5. Write 20 and 121 as the product of prime factors.
SolUTIonS
1. We find factors in pairs: 1 × 56, 2 × 28, 4 × 14 and 7 × 8 all have the
product 56. The factors of 56 are: 1, 2, 4, 7, 8, 14, 28 and 56.
2. 1 × 15, 2 × 15, 3 × 15, etc. are the multiples of 15. The multiples of 15 that
are smaller than 100 are: 15, 30, 45, 60, 75 and 90.
3. The factors of 6 are; 1, 2, 3, and 6. The factors of 9 are: 1, 3 and 9.
The HCF is 3.
4. The multiples of 6 are; 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, etc. The multiples of 9 are:
9, 18, 27, 36, etc. The LCM is 18.
5. Remember that 2 is the only even number which is a prime number. All
numbers which end in a 5, except 5 or 0, are composite numbers. The
multiples of any number (apart from the number itself, if prime) are not prime
numbers. The prime numbers between 10 and 40 are: 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29,
31 and 37.
6. The factor pairs of 20 are: 1 × 20, 2 × 10, and 4 × 5. 5 is a prime number.
We can write 4 as 2 × 2. So we can write 20 as 2 × 2 × 5.
The factor pairs of 121 are: 1 × 121 and 11 × 11. We can write 121 as 11 × 11.
6 Term 1 • Unit 1
4. Write down five multiples of 18.
5. Write down the multiples of 7 that are between 40 and 100.
6. Find the HCF and LCM of 8 and 12.
7. Is 63 a multiple of 9 or 19 or both? Explain your answer.
8. Find a whole number that is a multiple of both 9 and 21.
9. Group the following numbers into prime numbers and composite numbers:
40, 41, 43, 44, 47, 49, 51, 55, 57, 61, 67, 83, 85, 87, 93, 99.
10. We can divide the number 466 795 by 641 and not get a remainder.
Is 466 795 a prime number? Explain your answer.
11. Can two prime numbers have a common factor? If they can, what is the
common factor?
12. We can write 18 in prime numbers as 2 × 3 × 3. Write 100 using only prime
numbers.
13. Write 209 as the product of its prime factors.
14. The area of a rectangle is 24 cm2. What whole number sizes can the length
and breadth be?
15. How many prime numbers are there between 1 and 100?
First try to work this out. Then use the chart to check your answer.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70
71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80
81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90
91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
Term 1 • Unit 1 7
Activity 1.3 Properties of whole numbers
Work in pairs. Discuss and answer the questions.
1. a) Refer to the section mental calculations on page 2. Look at the answers to
the following pairs of questions. What do you notice?
i) 1 and 15 ii) 20 and 44 iii) 28 and 53
b) Write down the questions and the answers.
c) Now write down a rule/law which describes what you have seen.
Use letters, such as a, b and c in place of the numbers. Hint: use
one letter per number in each question.
d) We call this the commutative property of multiplication. This property
tells us that when we do multiplication on its own the order doesn’t matter.
What other operation is this property true for?
e) Does it work for the other two operations? Use examples to check your
answers.
2. The associative (grouping) property of addition and multiplication can be
written like this (a + b) + c = a + (b + c) and (a × b) × c = a × (b × c).
Grouping parts of an expression can help us to work out the answer
more easily.
a) Look at the expression. Make pairs of numbers which are easy for you to
calculate. Use brackets.
32 + 8 + 17 + 33 + 19 + 11
b) Move brackets or put in brackets if this makes the problem simpler.
Change the expressions below to make them easier to calculate
i) (32 + 17) + 33 ii) (33 × 5) × 2
3. a) Do the following calculations. Use two different ways.
i) 3(2 + 7) ii) 7(11 − 7)
iii) 8(5 + 6) + 3(14 − 4) iv) 5(9 − 4) – 2(3 + 6)
b) Now write down a rule/law which describes what you have seen in
Question 3. Use letters such as a, b and c in place of the numbers.
When you think you have the rule/law, ask your teacher to check
your work.
c) We call this rule/law the distributive property of multiplication over
addition and subtraction. Does the distributive property apply to division
over addition and subtraction? Use examples to check your answer.
d) Use the distributive property to simplify 6 × 325. (If you do not remember
doing this in Grade 7, ask your teacher for a hint.)
8 Term 1 • Unit 1
4. Look up the word identity in your dictionary.
a) What happens to any whole number when it is multiplied or divided by 1?
b) Mathematicians refer to 1 as the identity element for multiplication and
division. What is the identity element for addition and subtraction?
Give three examples to explain your answer.
5. Use a calculator.
a) We call addition and subtraction inverse operations. Take any whole
number between 1 000 and 1 500. Add 621. Subtract 621.
What do you notice?
b) We call multiplication and division inverse operations. Take any
whole number. Multiply it by 256. Divide it by 256. What do you notice?
Key ideas
Term 1 • Unit 1 9
2. Fill in the missing values or operations. Calculate the answers.
a) 7(9 + 21) = (___ × 9) + (___× 21) = ___
b) (3 × 12) − (3 × 11) =___ (___ − ___) = ___
c) (___ ÷ 9) + (___ ÷ 9) = (81 + 63) ÷ 9 = ___
d) (56 ÷ ___) + (14 ___ 7) = (___ + ___) ÷ 7 = ___
e) ___ × (5 +___) − (36 − 18) ÷ ___ = (8 × ___) + (8 × 7) − (___ ÷ 9) − (18 ÷ ___) = ___
3. Make the calculations below easier. Use or change brackets. Work out
the answers.
a) 23 + 5 + 7 + 9 + 11 =___ b) 78 + 81 + 22 + 9 =___
c) 56 + (44 + 98) + 12 =___ d) (5 × 85) × 2 =___
e) 15 × 6 × 5 × 10 =___ f) 422 × 7 =___
g) 685 ÷ 5 =___
4. Use what you know about inverse operations. Complete:
a) If 74 + 86 = 160, then 160 − 74 = ___ and 160 − ___ = 74
b) If 22 × 5 = 110, then 110 ÷ 22 = ___ and 110 ÷ 5 = ___
c) If 4 212 ÷ 78 = 54, then 78 × 54 = ___ and 4 212 ÷ 54 = ___
Worked example
1. Calculate: 7 × 6 + 6 – 12 ÷ 3.
2. Use brackets to show that the answer for 3 × 3 × 3 – 3 × 3 could be 0 or 18.
10 Term 1 • Unit 1
3. Use brackets to show how you can work out 7 + 6 × 5 − 2 so that your
answer is either: 35 or 39.
4. You want an answer of 63. How will you calculate 7 + 6 × 5 – 2?
5. We make up the rule ‘first do the multiplication, then addition, then
subtraction’. What is the answer to 7 + 6 × 5 – 2?
6. What is (36 ÷ 6) + (3 × 5)? Remove the brackets. What other answers
can you get?
7. You want the answer to 28 – 8 ÷ 4 + 3 × 2 to be 32. Where do you put
the brackets?
SolUTIonS
1. Use the BODMAS rule. (7 × 6) + 6 − (12 ÷ 3) = 42 + 6 – 4 = 48 – 4 = 44
2. (3 × 3 × 3) − (3 × 3) = 27 – 9 = 18
3 × 3 × (3 − 3) × 3 = 3 × 3 × 0 × 3 = 0
3. 7 + (6 × 5) – 2 = 35 or (7 + 6) × (5 − 2) = 39
4. ((7 + 6) × 5) – 2 = 63
5. 7 + (6 × 5) – 2 = 7 + 30 – 2 = 37 – 2 = 35
6. 6 + 15 = 21 other answers 36 ÷ (6 + 3) × 5 = 36 ÷ 9 × 5 = 4 × 5 = 20 and
((36 ÷ 6) + 3) × 5 = (6 + 3) × 5 = 9 × 5 = 45
7. 28 − (8 ÷ 4) + (3 × 2) = 32
Term 1 • Unit 1 11
6. a) We ask two learners ‘What is 50 − 30 ÷ 5 equal to?’ the first learner says
‘four’. The second learner says ‘44’. Explain how this happened.
b) You want your answer to be 4. Where will you put brackets?
c) You want your answer to be 44. Where will you put brackets?
d) You use the rule ‘first multiply or divide, then add or subtract’.
Can you get two answers?
7. We work out multiplication and division first. We then do addition
and subtraction.
a) Use this rule to calculate 5 + 7 × 28 − 2. Your answer should be
slightly smaller than 200. Is it?
b) If your answer to Question 7.a) is 334, where did you put the brackets?
c) If your answer to Question 7.a) is 312, where did you put the brackets?
8. Challenge yourself. Look at this set of numbers: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2.
Fill in +, −, ×, or ÷ and brackets (if you need to) to get an answer o 1.
Key ideas
• The order of numbers in an expression does not matter when we work with
addition and multiplication only. So, a + b = b + a and a × b = b × a.
For example, 7 + 8 = 8 + 7 and 5 × 6 = 6 × 5.
• a(a + b) = (a × a) + (a × b); example: 2(5 + 6) = (2 × 5) + (2 × 6)
• (a – b) ÷ c = (a ÷ c) – (b ÷ c); example: (9 – 6) ÷ 3 = (9 ÷ 3) – (6 ÷ 3)
12 Term 1 • Unit 1
2. Use repeated multiplication and subtraction or long division.
Complete the calculations.
a) 2 604 ÷ 21
b) 55 048 ÷ 56
c) Check your answers. Use inverse operations.
3. When you do calculations with large numbers, check your answers.
Use methods such as rounding off (up or down, whichever is more appropriate)
and estimation to make sure that your answers are not way off. The Stormers
played the Cheetahs at Newlands. 23 996 people watched. Each person paid
R48 to enter and half of them bought a programme for R11.
a) Estimate how much money was collected from ticket sales. Estimate
how much money
was spent on
programmes. Show
all your working.
b) Use your calculator.
Work out the exact
amounts.
c) Were your estimates
accurate?
d) How much money
did people pay all
together?
Term 1 • Unit 1 13
8. 314 368 ÷ 32
9. Check your answers to questions 4 and 8. Use inverse operations
(you may use a calculator).
10. Thandi needs R1 580 to go on holiday. She sells hamburgers for R11.
She sells hotdogs for R6.
a) If Thandi makes 100 hamburgers, how many hotdogs must Thandi
make to reach her target? Show all your working out.
b) If Thandi sells 143 hamburgers and she sells the number of hotdogs
you calculated in Question 10.a), calculate how much Thandi earns.
Use your calculator.
c) How much extra money will Thandi earn?
14 Term 1 • Unit 1
2. Ashraf collects R65 from each of seven family members for a fund-raising
event. He also receives a donation of R300 from a local business. Before
receiving the donation, he lost R130. How much money does he hand over to
the fund-raising committee? (Hint: use a number sentence).
3. A group of learners wants to start a vegetable garden at their school.
A rectangular area would be the easiest to enclose. They want to enclose the
BIGGEST possible area, but have only 120 m of wire fence. What must the
lengths of the sides of the garden be? (Try different combinations of lengths
and breadths.)
Worked example
We must transport 175 Grade 8 learners to the movies. A transport company
has 50-seater and 60-seater buses, and 15-seater taxis. The 50-seater bus
costs R400 to hire. The 60-seater costs R500 to hire. The taxi costs R150 to hire.
a) With only the above choices available, work out the cheapest way of
transporting the learners to the movie. Do not overload a bus or a taxi −
it is a traffic offense and it is dangerous!
b) On the day of the trip,
the number of learners
going to the movies
has dropped to 75.
What is the cheapest
transport solution?
SolUTIonS
a) First we work out
which form of
transport is the cheapest per person.
400 ÷ 50 = R8 per person
500 ÷ 60 = R8,33 per person
150 ÷ 15 = R10 per person
Possible solution 1:
Use as many 50-seater buses as possible.
Three 50-seater buses = 150 learners at R1 200
Two 15-seater taxis = 30 learners at R300 (there will be five empty seats)
Total R1 500
Term 1 • Unit 1 15
Possible solution 2:
Two 50-seater buses = 100 learners at R800
One 60-seater bus = 60 learners at R500
One 15-seater taxi = 15 learners at R150 (no empty seats)
Total R1 450, the cheaper option
b) That would mean only 75 learners need to be bussed. It would make sense
then to use a 60-seater bus and a 15-seater taxi. This would mean no empty
seats. Total costs: R650
nt
16 Term 1 • Unit 1
and 20 packets of sweets. How much will it cost them to replace the
items they sold?
c) They sell the chips for R3 a packet, the chocolates for R5 each, the
juice for R6 and the sweets for R4 a packet. How much money did they
take in last week and how much of that was profit?
d) If a learner comes to their shop with R20 and wants to spend it all,
what can he buy? Give as many different options as you can (he wants
as little change as possible).
m
rich e 5. The spider and the fly.
En
nt
nt
tow truck
480 km
Term 1 • Unit 1 17
Key ideas
18 Term 1 • Unit 1
Look at the picture alongside. It shows that the
ratio of 3 : 2 : 1 means that three parts of the
1 250 g mixture will be nitrogen (N), two parts of
the 1 250 g will be phosphorus (P) and one part
of the 1 250 g will be potassium (K).
2. Compare and discuss answers in class.
Worked example
There are 40 learners in a class. The girl to boy ratio (girl : boy) is 3 : 2.
1. Work out the number of boys and girls in the class.
2. Check your answers. Add the boys and girls. Do you get 40?
3. The ratio also compares the numbers of boys and girls by giving the number
of times that the girls are more than the boys: 3 ÷ 2 is 1,5. Is the number of
girls that you worked out 1,5 times more than the number of boys?
Term 1 • Unit 1 19
SolUTIonS
1. There are 5 in each part; i.e. 2 + 3 = 5. So 40 ÷ 5 is 8 equal parts. So boys will
be 8 × 2 or 16; girls will be 8 × 3 or 24.
2. 16 + 24 = 40
3. 24 ÷ 16 = 1,5; as you can see, this is correct.
20 Term 1 • Unit 1
Activity 1.8 Rate: litres petrol per km, speed, time
and distance
1. A car travels on an even, straight road at 80 km/h. The petrol used (in litres, l ) is
proportional to the distance (in km) covered. The table shows the petrol used
as the journey continues.
A 120 km distance must be covered and 12 l of petrol is left in the tank.
Petrol Distance
used covered
4,5 l 40 km
9l 80 km
? 120 km
a) From the table you can see that the total distance that the car must cover
is 120 km. If the car has 12 l of petrol in the tank for the 120 km trip, will it
be enough? Explain.
b) How many litres of petrol will be needed if the trip is 200 km?
c) The graph shows the petrol used when 40 km is covered.
Copy the grid and complete the missing 200 km
information on the horizontal axis.
160 km
Distance covered
Term 1 • Unit 1 21
Key ideas
• If quantities are proportional, their ratios remain the same or are equivalent.
In the activity you will notice that when petrol used doubles from 4,5 litres to
9 litres, the distance covered also doubles from 40 km to 80 km.
• The graph formed from such a proportional relationship is a straight line graph.
• The ratio of corresponding quantities is the same (equal) in a proportional
9l 80 km __ 2
relationship: ____ = _____ =
4,5 l 40 km 1
• When we compare related quantities, such as 4,5 litres used for
40 km, we write 4,5 km per 40 km, or we write 9 litres per 80 km. We
9
simplify, ___ = 0,1125 l per km. We say that the rate of petrol consumption is
80
0,1125 litres per km.
• There is another way of expressing the petrol consumption. Calculate the
80 km
distance the car covers per litre of petrol: _____ = 8,89 km/l. The car will use
9l
about 1 litre for each 9 km of distance it covers.
• We usually measure the petrol consumption of a car in litres of petrol the car
uses per 100 km. Check that this car will use 11,25 litres per 100 km.
• Remember that distance = speed × time. A car travels at a speed
of 100 km/h. It travels for three hours. The car covers a distance of
100 km/h × 3 hours = 300 km.
m
rich e
En
1. You begin a journey. You have a full tank of petrol. The petrol you use is
proportional to the distance you cover. You notice that you have half a tank
of petrol left after you have covered a quarter of your journey or distance.
1 of whole distance
4 1 tank of petrol left
2
whole distance
Pictures of distance covered and petrol left in tank
a) How much petrol will you have left after having covered half of the journey?
b) How much petrol will you need to complete the journey?
c) Do you agree that the ratio, petrol used : distance covered, is 2 : 1?
Explain your answer.
d) How much petrol is needed for three-quarters of the journey? Explain,
using drawings.
22 Term 1 • Unit 1
e) The grid below shows shows the petrol used (half a tank) for quarter of
the journey.
2
13
4
1 1
2
Petrol used
11
4
1
3
4
1
2
1
4 1 1 3 1 11
4 2 4 4
Journey covered
Use the grid to draw in the other points that show the petrol you used
for half of the journey, three-quarters of the journey and the whole (1)
journey.
2. A car travels at 60 km/h for 1__1 hours. What distance does the car cover?
2
Remember that: distance = speed (in km/h) × time (hours)
Term 1 • Unit 1 23
Key ideas
From the calculations, you can see how we add the interest of 10% each year.
We calculate the interest on the amount of the previous year.
24 Term 1 • Unit 1
Activity 1.10 Hire purchase
When we buy expensive items, we cannot always pay the full amount in cash.
There are other payment options. In these options, we usually pay a deposit and
then pay off the remainder of the amount with equal instalments (usually every
month). This is known as hire purchase. Study the advertisement below and
answer the questions.
SAVE
R500
Key ideas
• When you buy an item on hire purchase, you borrow the money to pay for
the item. Because you are borrowing money you can expect to pay more
for the item.
• Be careful about buying items on hire purchase. You pay a lot more for an
item than you would have if you had paid cash.
Term 1 • Unit 1 25
Summary
• The order of operations we use to perform calculations are:
1. brackets first
2. then multiplication and division operations working from left to right
3. then addition and subtraction, working from left to right.
• The order of numbers in an expression does not matter when we work
with addition and multiplication only. When we work with subtraction and
division, or with different operations in an expression, the order of numbers
does matter.
• The commutative property of addition and multiplication tells us that when
we do addition or multiplication on their own, the order does not matter.
• We can write the associative (grouping) property of addition and
multiplication like this (a + b) + c = a + (b + c) and (a × b) × c = a × (b × c).
• 1 is the identity element for multiplication and division.
• 0 as the identity element for addition and subtraction.
• Addition and subtraction are inverse operations.
• Multiplication and division are also inverse operations.
• We cannot divide by zero. The answer is undefined.
• If quantities are proportional, their ratios remain the same or equivalent.
• The graph formed from such a proportional relationship is a straight line graph.
• Percentage refers to ‘part of a 100’ of some quantity:
A quick calculation of simple interest of 10% per year on R5 000
for 10 years is:
10
____ × R5 000 × 10 = R5 000
100
• Investments that use compound interest benefit you, the investor. If you make
a loan, the interest is also compounded and the moneylender benefits.
• When you buy an item on hire purchase, you borrow the money to pay for
the item. So you pay more for the item.
26 Term 1 • Unit 1
Check what you know
1. Multiply 786 by 19. Use column multiplication.
2. a) Divide 2 013 by 13 and give the remainder.
b) Write your answer as a mixed number. Write the whole number and the
fraction.
c) Write your answer in decimal form (up to 2 places after comma) – that
is, write the fraction part as a decimal after the comma.
3. Consider the expression 50 – 30 ÷ 5.
a) If you want your answer to be 4, where will you place brackets?
b) If you want the answer to be 44, where will you place brackets?
c) If you use the rule which says ‘First multiply or divide, then add or
subtract’, will you still have the possibility of two answers?
d) Use the rule to work out 348 + 15 × 20. Does your answer work out as:
(348 + 15) × 20 or 348 + (15 × 20)?
4. Which statements are wrong?
a) 10 + 20 + 50 = 50 + 20 + 10 b) 13 × 14 × 15 = 14 × 15 × 13
c) 52 + 32 – 11 = 52 + 11 – 32 d) 80 ÷ 8 × 4 = 80 ÷ 4 × 8
e) 40 × (8 + 4) = 40 × 8 + 40 × 4 f) (14 + 8) × 4 = 14 + 8 × 14 + 4
g) 12 × (13 – 5) = 12 × 13 – 12 × 5
5. Are the following statements true or false? If the statement is false, give
the correct answer.
a) 12 × 1 = 1 b) 14 × 1 = 14
c) 11 × 0 = 0 d) 0 × 7 = 7
e) 24 × 0 = 24 f) 1 × 9 = 0
6. a) We can represent the number 36 as a product of prime numbers
as follows:
36 = 2 × 2 × 3 × 3. Write 360 as a product of prime numbers.
b) Is 2 013 a prime number? Explain your answer.
7. Find the HCF of 900 and 256.
8. Write the following expressions differently. Do not change the answer.
a) 36 × 2 × 10 b) 34 × (7 – 4) c) (2 × 3) + (2 × 4)
Term 1 • Unit 1 27
9. Calculate:
a) 126 678 + 454 437 b) 878 632 + 213 367
c) 344 856 – 121 008 d) 745 563 – 674 333
10. Calculate:
a) 364 × 56 b) 1 256 × 74
c) 2 347 × 74 d) 435 × 59
e) 243 × 243 f) 8 346 × 24
11. Calculate:
a) 5 002 ÷ 61 b) 12 888 ÷ 24
c) 10 902 ÷ 46 d) 1 272 ÷ 24
e) 1 363 ÷ 29 f) 2 666 ÷ 31
12. Lynn sells socks. She is raising funds for a holiday. Lynn sells 11 pairs at
R17 per pair. She estimates that she has made R150.
a) What estimated figures did Lynn use?
b) What figures are more appropriate?
c) Calculate her actual takings on your calculator.
d) Now compare your estimate with Lynn’s estimate. Whose estimate
was closer to the actual total?
13. Use doubling and halving. Rewrite these multiplication sums as simpler
sums. Then work out the answers.
a) 5 × 66 b) 5 × 14
c) 20 × 24 d) 33 × 4
e) 50 × 48 f) 38 × 5
g) 14 × 17 h) 36 × 15
14. Sibongi is angry. She signed up for a self-defence course for three months.
The course costs R148 per month. The registration fee is R40,00.
Sibongi made her first payment. She paid the registration fee and the first
month’s payment. Then Sibongi received an account for R376,00.
She argued that she only owed them R296,00.
a) Write out the expression that shows how Sibongi calculated
her outstanding balance.
b) Write out the expression that shows how the self-defence company
calculated her outstanding balance.
c) Who is correct? Explain why.
28 Term 1 • Unit 1
15. Look at the table. It shows the weekly budget for the running of a
preschool.
Weekly budget Costs Income
Pre-school fees R48 per child per week
Food R1 200
Materials R200
Two assistants R1 500
TOTAL
a) What is the total cost involved to run the pre-school for one week?
b) Each of the 60 children at the pre-school pay R48 per week to attend.
What is the profit Mrs Khumalo makes running the pre-school?
c) Mrs Khumalo needs to earn a salary from the pre-school as well.
How much does she need to charge in fees per child per week to
cover all her expenses and pay herself a salary of R1 000 per week?
3
m
rich e 16. A car covers a third of a journey with __
8
of a tank. The fraction
En
nt
12
8
11
8
1
3 of whole tank used
8 7
8
6
8
5
whole tank
Petrol used
8
petrol left 4
8
3
8
2
8
1
whole distance 8
1 2 1
1 of whole distance 3 3
3 Journey
Term 1 • Unit 1 29
a) What fraction of the petrol will the car need for two-thirds of the
journey? Explain your answer using the pictures then the graph.
b) How much petrol does the car need for the whole journey? Explain
again.
17. A class of 56 learners is having an outdoor lesson. The girl to boy ratio
is 4 : 3. How many girls and how many boys are there in the class?
18. An old man died. He left 95 cows for his three daughters. The cows
must be divided according to the ratio given below:
Divide 95 cows in the ratio 10 : 5 : 4
Eldest daughter : second eldest : youngest daughter is 10 : 5 : 4.
What will the number of
cows be that each
daughter receives?
19. Your friend is now 13 years old and his father’s age is 43. When your
friend’s age doubles, will his father’s age also be doubled? Explain.
20. Mandy is a 20-year-old student. She wants to attend a short Graphics
Design course. The fees are R600 for the course. She does not have the
cash. So, Mandy takes out a loan of R600 at 25% per year. Mandy can
afford repayment of the loan at R200 per month.
a) The monthly interest will be 2,08%. Do you agree? Explain.
2,08
b) At the end of the first month, the interest on R600 is ____
100
or R12,48.
Mandy also repays R200 of the loan. This means
R600 + R12,48 – R200 or R412,48 remains for her to pay (that is, her
loan balance).
At the end of the second month the 2,08% interest is charged on
R412,48. Work out the interest.
c) What will Mandy’s loan balance be at the end of the second month?
d) Work out Mandy’s loan balance at the end of the third month.
30 Term 1 • Unit 1
e) By the fourth month, Mandy still owes a small sum of money, as well
as the interest on it. Work out what her final repayment should be.
21. Here’s Jane Racoon’s cell phone invoice for March 2012.
a) Check the second line (subscription amount) of the invoice. The cost
is R245,61. Is vAT of 14%, R34,39?
Show your calculation.
b) We worked out the vAT on airtime,
subscription fees and insurance fees
separately and then added to give
R42,27. What happens if you work out
the vAT on the total of R301,89? Will you
get the same vAT of R42, 27? Check this
with a calculation. Explain your answer.
22. Look at the DvD player. It has a cash price
of R899. However you can also pay it off by
giving a deposit of R180. You would then
make 18 monthly payments of R49 per month.
a) You pay the DvD player off over 18 months. Work out the total cost.
b) Which option for buying this video machine will suit you? Explain why.
23. A storekeeper buys a pair of sunglasses for R150 from his suppliers.
How much must he sell the sunglasses for if he wants to make a profit of
200%?
24. An artist sells a painting for R2 000 inclusive of vAT. How much money
will the artist actually get? How much money will go towards vAT?
25. Grace buys a pair of shoes on sale for R120. The original price of the
shoes was R160. What percentage discount did she receive on the
purchase?
Term 1 • Unit 1 31
26. Thandi needs R3 000 to complete a course at a university. Her aunt lends
her the amount, but says that she will charge her 10% simple interest
every year until the loan is repaid. How much will Thandi owe if she has
not paid her aunt back any money in four years’ time?
27. Jake buys a radio on hire purchase. He pays a deposit of R100 and then
pays back R45 each month for 18 months.
a) What is the total amount that Jake paid for the radio?
b) If the cash price of the radio was R600, what percentage extra did
Jake pay?
28. John’s cousin in America buys him a pair of shoes for $99.
a) If the Rand/Dollar exchange rate is 6,4, how many Rand will it cost to
pay her back?
b) John buys his American cousin jewellery worth R450. How many
dollars will it cost his cousin to pay him back?
32 Term 1 • Unit 1
Term
90
1. Water freezes at 0 °C. Look at the thermometer. Point to 80
this temperature on the thermometer. 70
40
thermometer.
30
3. Some South African winter temperatures can be 5 °C 20
below zero. 10
–10
b) What number will you write for ‘5 °C below zero’?
4. What is the difference in temperature between a warm
25 °C day and a cold winter day, 5 °C below zero?
5. A cup of warm milk is 60 °C. We cool the milk. Its
temperature drops by 70 °C. What is its new temperature?
Term 1 • Unit 2 33
Key ideas
90
• We give temperatures that are ‘below zero’ 80
or ‘less than zero’ a negative (minus) sign. 8C 70
Instead of saying the temperature is ‘5 °C 100
90
60
below zero’, just say ‘–5 °C’ (minus 5 °C). 80
70
50
• A temperature that drops by 70 °C from 60
50
40
60 °C takes you 10 °C below zero. This is a 40
30
30
temperature of –10 °C. 20
10
20
• We can write a number sentence for the drop 0
60 °C – 70 °C = –10 °C 0
210 8C below zero
–10
ea
Key ideas
34 Term 1 • Unit 2
Activity 2.2 Revising subtraction of integers
Here is an explanation of how to subtract 7 from 5; that is, to work out 5 – 7.
• When we work with whole numbers and subtract 7 from 10, we write 10 – 7.
• We know that 10 – 7 = 3 because we check by saying 3 + 7 = 10
• In the same way when we work out 5 – 7 we ask: what must be added to 7 to
get 5? The answer is –2; that is, add –2 to 7 and get 5, or –2 + 7 = 5.
• We have changed the calculation involving subtraction of 7 from 5 to a
calculation involving addition.
• So 5 – 7 can be thought of as subtracting 7 from 5 or as a question of what
must be added to 7 to get 5.
Think of the operation given below as subtraction and then use the method above
to work out:
1. 7 – 5 2. 31 – 45
Key ideas
Worked example
These are examples of calculations with integers. You have done calculations with
integers in Grade 7.
1. Calculate the following:
a) 1–2–3 b) 1+2–3 c) 2(5 + (−3)) – 1
2. Subtract 5 from 3. Add the answer to –10.
SolUTIonS
1. a) 1 – 2 – 3 = (1 – 2) – 3 = (–1) – 3 = –4
or, you could say: 1 + (–2 – 3) = 1 + (–5) = –4.
Term 1 • Unit 2 35
We could also think of these calculations as follows:
1 – 2 – 3 = 1 + (–1 – 1) + (–1 –1 –1) = (1 + – 1) + (–1 –1 –1 –1) = 0 – 4 = –4
b) In the same way, we could either calculate (1 + 2), then add –3, so have:
(1 + 2) + (−3) = 3 + (−3) = 0, or
1 + (2 – 3) = 1 + (–1) = 0
c) 2(5 + (–3)) – 1 = 2(2) – 1 = 4 – 1 = 3.
2. Subtract 5 from 3 means: 3 – 5. This is –2. Now to add –10.
We have: –2 + (–10) = –12.
27 26 25 24 23 22 21 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
23 1 7 5 4
Use the number line in the same way to work out:
a) –3 + 3 b) –6 + 11 c) –4 + 3
d) –3 + 0 e) –3 + (–1)
3. Look at the drawing. It shows (–6) + (–2) = –8. What must be added now to
(–8) to make the sum equal zero?
28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 0
277
36 Term 1 • Unit 2
Use the number line to work out:
a) 25 + 30 + (–35)
b) 45 + (–65) + (–30) + (+75) + (–15)
c) (–50) + (–10) + (+70) + 15 + (–28)
7. Work out: –7 +97 + (–63) + (–103) + (+13) + 84. Use any method.
8. What is 20 000 273 + (–20 000 273) equal to?
9. Work out the differences:
a) subtract 3 from 4; that is, 4 – 3 b) subtract 10 from 14; that is, 14 – 10
c) subtract 3 from 2; that is, 2 – 3 d) subtract 3 from (–2); that is, –2 – 3
10. Read through the working out of 5 – (–8):
–8 + =5
–8 –7 –6 –5 –4 –3 –2 –1 0 1 2 3 4 5
Term 1 • Unit 2 37
13. a) Subtract 2 from 1. What is your answer?
b) Subtract (–3) from 5. What is your answer?
c) Work out:
i) 5 – (–6) ii) –5 – (+6) iii) –4 – (+2)
iv) –4 – (–2) v) –4 – (–5)
d) Work out:
i) 5 + 6 ii) –5 – 6 iii) –4 – 2
iv) –4 + 2 v) –4 + 5
e) Compare your answers for numbers c) and d) above.
Key ideas
You can think of 3 × (–4) as a 3-times repeated addition: (–4) + (–4) + (–4). This
equals (–12)
You can see this by continuing the pattern one step further or by using directed
number addition.
38 Term 1 • Unit 2
Table 1: Table 2:
Column A Column B Column A Column B
3×3 9 3×3 9
3×2 6 2×3 6
3×1 1×3
3×0 0×3
3 × (−1) (−1) × 3
3 × (−2) (−2) × 3
3 × (−3) (−3) × 3
Table 3:
Column A Column B
3 × (−3) −9
2 × (−3) −6
1 × (−3) −3
0 × (−3)
(−1) × (−3)
(−2) × (−3)
(−3) × (−3)
Term 1 • Unit 2 39
3. Look at your answers in tables 1, 2 and 3 again. Discuss the following:
a) When you multiply two positive numbers, is your answer positive or
negative?
b) When you multiply two negative numbers, is your answer positive or
negative?
c) When you multiply a negative and a positive number, is your answer
negative or positive?
Key ideas
40 Term 1 • Unit 2
5. Consider two numbers, m and n. We multiply them to get an answer of
−36. m × n = −36.
a) If m is 9, what must n be?
b) What other integer values can m and n have?
c) If m is 0, will there be a value for n that can still work? Explain your answer.
6. Compare answers to the following calculations:
a) –3 × (–5 + 4) and [–3 × (–5)] + [–3 × 4]
b) –3 × (–5 × 4) and (–3 × –5) × 4
__
7. You know that √9 is equal to 3. This is because 32 = 9, or 3 × 3 = 9.
The___
square root of a number is a positive number. The square root of 16
√
is 16 . This has a value 4 and NOT –4. We also know that 42 = 16 and
(–4)2 = 16. When the question is: If you square a number and get 16, what
is the number?
___ The number is +4 or –4. If the question is: ‘What is the
value of √ 16 ?’, the answer is only +4.
___
a) What is the value of √ 25 ?
___
3
b) Find √−8 .
c) If x2 = 49, what is the value of x?
8. Work out:
a) –15 × 5 × (–2) b) (–3)2
+ (–4)2
_______
3
c) (–2)5 – (–3)3 d) √ –1 000
Summary
• When we write 1 – 2, we mean 1 + (–2).
• The addition of integers is commutative.
• 3 × (–4) may be thought of as a 3-times repeated addition.
When we multiply two integers of the same sign the answer is positive.
When we multiply two integers of opposite signs the answer is negative.
Term 1 • Unit 2 41
Check what you know
210 28 27 26 25 24 22 21 0 1 2 3 4 5 7 8 10
42 Term 1 • Unit 2
Work out the missing charges or number of protons and electrons of the
atoms, (unless they are neutral).
number of number of
Atom Charge
protons (+) electrons (–)
Hydrogen (H) 1 1
Aluminium (Al) 13 10
Sulphur (S) 16 –2
Calcium (Ca) 20 +2
Chlorine (Cl) 18 –1
7. Fill in the missing numbers in to make the sentence true.
a) 67 – = 70 b) 67 – = 64
c) 67 – = –70 d) 67 + = –70
8. Work out (–5) × (–7). Add it to (–5) × (+7). What is your answer?
9. Is [(–3) × (–3)] + [(–4) × (–4)] equal to (–5) × (–5)? Show your working out.
10. Fill in the missing numbers in to make the sentences true.
a) 4× + 20 = 4 b) –5 × + (–2 × 13) = 4
11. From Exercise 2.2 on page 40, you can see that 25 means 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 × 2
and equals 32. Complete the table below by following the number pattern
that you see:
25 24 23 22 21 20 2–1 2–2 2–3
32 16 8
12. Which number is greater, –99 or –100? Draw a number line to explain
your answer.
13. Calculate:
___ _____
3
a) −√64 − √−125 b) 12 × (5 – 10) + (–4)2
14. Read the joke. Answer the question.
‘If something good happens to someone good, it is good.
If something bad happens to someone good, it is bad.
If something good happens to someone bad, it is bad.
If something bad happens to someone bad, it is good.’
Consider multiplication of negative and positive numbers. What does this
joke mean?
Term 1 • Unit 2 43
Term
1
Unit 3 Integers (Part 2)
In this unit you will:
• multiply and divide with integers
• perform calculations involving all four operations with integers
• perform calculations involving all four operations with numbers that involve
the squares, cubes, square roots and cube roots of integers
• recognise and use commutative, associative and distributive properties of
integers
• recognise and use additive inverses for integers
• solve problems in contexts involving multiple operations with integers.
44 Term 1 • Unit 3
5. In Unit 2 (Integers), you have also seen that when we add a string of
integers, two or more, we can add them two at a time until we have added
all of them; for example:
1 + (−3) + (−10) + 7 + (−6)
= −2 + (−10) + 7 + (−6)
= −12 + 7 + (−6)
= −5 + (−6)
= −11
So we ‘group’ or associate pairs of numbers.
a) Show how you will add 1 + (–2) + 3 + (–4) + 5 + (–6), as above.
b) Show that you could do the same with multiplication in the example:
1 × (–2) × 3 × (–4) × 5 × (–6).
Key ideas
• When we add integers, the answer (sum) is always an integer. We say the
integers are closed under addition.
• When adding integers (as with whole numbers), we may group or associate
any two or more, and then add them first, and thereafter add on the rest. We
say that the integers are associative with respect to addition.
• (–1 + 2) + (–3) can be calculated as –1 + (2 + –3) as the values will be the
same; both are –2.
• Subtraction is not associative as this example shows:
Think about the subtraction of (2 – 3) from 1. We write:
1 – (2 – 3) = 1 – (–1) = 1 + 1 = 2, but when we group (1 – 2), we get:
(1 – 2) – 3 = –1 – 3 = –4, so 1 – (2 – 3) ≠ (1 – 2) – 3.
• When we multiply integers, the answer (product) is always an integer. We
say the integers are closed under multiplication.
• When multiplying integers (as with whole numbers), we may group or
associate any two or more, and then multiply them first, and thereafter
multiply with the rest. We say that the integers are associative with respect
to multiplication;
(–1 × 2) × (–3) can be calculated as –1 × (2 × –3) as the values will be the
same; both are 6.
Term 1 • Unit 3 45
• Division is not associative as this example shows:
8 ÷ (4 ÷ 2) = 8 ÷ 2 = 4,
but when we group (8 ÷ 4), we get:
(8 ÷ 4) ÷ 2 = 2 ÷ 2 = 1, so
8 ÷ (4 ÷ 2) ≠ (8 ÷ 4) ÷ 2.
Key ideas
• We say that for the operation of addition, the whole numbers and integers
are commutative. This means that you can swop around the numbers when
adding them, without changing the value of the sum; for example:
15 + 9 = 24 = 9 + 15
–21 + 35 = 14 = 35 + (–21)
–3 + (–7) = –10 = –7 + (–3)
• We say that for the operation of multiplication, the whole numbers and
integers are also commutative. This means that you can swop around
the numbers when you multiply them, without changing the value of the
product; for example:
15 × 9 = 135 = 9 × 15
–21 × 35 = –735 = 35 × (–21)
–3 × (–7) = +21 = –7 × (–3)
• The whole numbers and integers are NOT commutative with respect to the
operation subtraction; for example, in the case of integers:
5 – 3 ≠ 3 – 5 because 5 – 3 is 2 and 3 – 5 is –2.
46 Term 1 • Unit 3
• There are many more examples.
• The whole numbers and integers are NOT commutative when it comes
to the operation division (as you will see later in the chapter as well); for
example, in the case of whole numbers:
1
• 8 ÷ 2 ≠ 2 ÷ 8 because 8 ÷ 2 = 4 but, 2 ÷ 8 = _
4
= −34 – 29 – 11 + 56 + 23 Line 1
= −34 – 40 + 79 Line 2
= −74 + 79 Line 3
=5
a) Do you agree that we can write –34 + 56 – 29 – 11 – (–23)
as –34 + 56 + (–29) + (–11) + 23?
b) Why can we write,
–34 + 56 + (–29) + (–11) + 23 as –34 + (–29) + (–11) + 56 + 23?
What property of integers allows us to do this?
c) Do you agree that –34 + (–29) + (–11) + 56 + 23 is the same as Line 1?
d) What property allows us to get from Line 1 to Line 2 and then Line 3?
3. Using the associative property of integers, we can perform the following
calculation:
(–2)5 = –2 × –2 × –2 × –2 × –2 = (–2 × –2) × (–2 × –2) × –2
From here we can see that each pair is a positive integer, +4. So we will
have a product made up of positive numbers which is then multiplied by a
negative integer, –2. The answer must therefore be negative:
i.e. (–2 × –2) × (–2 × –2) × –2 = 4 × 4 × –2 = 16 × –2 = –32
Term 1 • Unit 3 47
a) Decide whether (–2)1 000 is greater or less than (–2)1 999
Explain your answer.
b) Use the commutative and associative properties of integers to solve:
1 – 2 + 3 – 4 + 5 – … + 97 – 98 + 99 – 100; that is, the sum of alternating
positive and negative integers from 1 to –100.
(Hint: you may first wish to experiment with:
1 – 2 + 3 – 4 + 5 – 6 + 7 – 8 + 9 – 10).
Key ideas
• The additive identity for integers is 0; this means any integer added to 0
does not alter the value of the integer.
• The additive inverse of any integer is an integer that yields 0 when the two
are added: e.g. the inverse of –3 is + 3 because –3 + 3 = 0.
• We use properties of inverses and identities, along with the associative and
commutative properties of addition and multiplication to perform various
calculations and even solve equations.
48 Term 1 • Unit 3
Activity 3.3 Distributive rule
In many calculations we combine addition and multiplication. The distributive rule
tells us how to deal with working out, for example, 3 × (2 + 5). You have already
seen such expressions, but let's examine it a bit more.
1. What is the value of this expression? Explain how you did it.
2. One approach is: 3 × (2 + 5) = 3 × 7 = 21.
But, we could check that:
3 × (2 + 5) = (2 + 5) + (2 + 5) + (2 + 5) = 2 + 2 + 2 + 5 + 5 + 5; and this can be
written as 3 × 2 + 3 × 5.
So 3 × (2 + 5) = 3 × 2 + 3 × 5 = 6 + 15 = 21.
a) Use this explanation to show that 2 × (4 + 6) = 2 × 4 + 2 × 6.
b) We know that –5 × (–2 + 3) = –5 × 1 = –5; check that (–5 × –2) + (–5 × 3) is
also equal to –5.
3. A more visual way of seeing this rule for calculating 4 × (3 + 2)
is shown on here:
Explain how the diagram below shows that 4 × (3 + 2) = 4 × 3 + 4 × 2.
4 × (3 + 2)
3 2
4×3+4×2
Key ideas
Term 1 • Unit 3 49
Worked example
1. Show that –9 × [2 + (−5) – 3 + 4] is equal to (–9 × 2) + (–9 × –5) + (–9 × –3) + (–9 × 4)
SolUTIon
–9 × [2 + (–5) – 3 + 4] = –9 × (–2) = 18
(–9 × 2) + (–9 × –5) + (–9 × –3) + (–9 × 4) = –18 + 45 + 27 – 36 = 18
We know that the two expressions are equal by the distributive rule.
c) (3 – 5) (5 – 3)
SolUTIon
a) 25[3____
– (–7)___
2
] + [5 – (–2)2]3 = 25(3 – 49) + (5 – 4)3 = 25(–46) + 13 = –1 149
b) 2( √ −8 + √ 64 ) + (−2)7 = 2(−2 + 8) + (−128)
3
= 2(6) – 128
= 12 – 128
= −116
c) (3 – 5) (5 – 3) = (–2)(2) = –4
SolUTIon
–12(–11 + 23 – 2) – 6(1 – 32 + 7) + (–4)(52 – (–3)2)
= –12(–11 + 8 – 2) – 6(1 – 9 + 7) + (–4)(25 – 9)
= –12(–5) – 6(–1) + (–4)(16)
= 60 + 6 – 64
=2
Using the distributive rule we get:
–12(–11 + 23 – 2) – 6(1 – 32 + 7) + (–4) (52 – (–3)2)
= –12(–11) + (−12) (23) + (–12) (–2) + (–6) (1) + (–6) (–32) + (–6) (7) + (–4) (52) + (–4) (–3)2
= 132 – 96 + 24 – 6 + 54 – 42 –100 + 36
=2
Both expressions produce the same numerical value, confirming that the
distributive rule gives an equivalent expression.
50 Term 1 • Unit 3
Exercise 3.2 Distributive rule for integers
1. Fill in the missing integer to make the number sentence true (correct):
a) ___ + (–15) = –73 b) –6 × ___ + 21 = 63
c) –9 × (–7 + ___ – 8) = (–6) 2
d) (–5)2 – (–3)2 = ___
____ 3
___
e) −√144 − √27 = ___
2. What values of x will make the equations below true?
a) x + (–13) = (–4)3
b) 5x + 20 = –55
c) x2 = 625, where x is a negative integer.
__
d) −√x = −10
e) –3(x + 5) = 18
____ ______
3
3. Work out √225 + √−512 .
4. Check if the following statements are true or false:
a) –54 + 35 = –382; by –54 we mean – (54)
b) –33 × (–2)5 = 864
Term 1 • Unit 3 51
Activity 3.5 Dividing integers using patterns
1. a) Complete the division table:
Table 1:
Column A Column B
9÷3 3
6÷3 2
3÷3 1
0÷3 0
(−3) ÷ 3 −1
(−6) ÷ 3
(−9) ÷ 3
b) What is (−9) ÷ 3 equal to?
c) Work out:
i) (−12) ÷ 3 ii) (−30) ÷ 3 iii) (−20) ÷ 5
Give reasons for your answers.
2. Look at Table 2, and then copy and complete Table 3.
Table 2: Table 3:
Column A Column B Column A Column B
3 × (−3) −9 −9 ÷ (−3) 3
2 × (−3) −6 −6 ÷ (−3) 2
1 × (−3) −3 −3 ÷ (−3)
0 × (−3) 0 0 ÷ (−3)
−1 × (−3) 3 3 ÷ (−3)
−2 × (−3) 6 6 ÷ (−3)
−3 × (−3) 9 9 ÷ (−3)
3. Work out the following and give reasons for your answers:
a) 30 ÷ (−3) b) (−30) ÷ (−3)
4. Now discuss the following:
a) When you divide two numbers with different signs, is the answer positive
or negative?
b) Will the answer be positive or negative if you divide two numbers with the
same sign?
52 Term 1 • Unit 3
Key ideas
• When dividing numbers with opposite signs, the answer is negative (–).
For example 8 ÷ (–2) = –4 and –8 ÷ 2 = –4
• When you divide numbers with the same sign, the answer is positive (+).
For example, (–8) ÷ (–2) = 4 or 8 ÷ 2 = 4
• Comparing the signs of integers in multiplication and division:
• Integers are NOT closed under division, which means that when two
integers are divided, the answer is not necessarily an integer; for example,
1 , does not result in an integer
8 ÷ 2 = 4, results in an integer, but 2 ÷ 8 = __
4
but a fraction (a rational number).
This is also why in the table above, for division, we wrote 'number' instead
of integer as is the case in the multiplication table.
Worked example
Work out the numerical value of the following number expressions:
1. –21 + 14 ÷ 7 2. (–21 +14) ÷ 7 3. –2[3 – (–5)] + [9 – (–11)] ÷ (–5)
SolUTIonS
1. We try to avoid this type of question statement in mathematics because it is
not very clear. Does the expression mean add –21 and 14, and then divide
the result by 7, or does it mean first divide14 by 7 and then add the result
to –21?
To deal with such a situation we use the following convention:
• first perform operations inside brackets
• then, multiplication
• then division
• then addition
• then subtraction.
Term 1 • Unit 3 53
So when working with integers, we either use brackets to remove confusion
or follow a sequence: bracket, multiplication, division, then addition and
subtraction.
Back to the Question 1:
Here we divide first (because there are no brackets or multiplication):
–21 + 14 ÷ 7 = –21 + 2 = –19
2. Here we work out the bracketed part first:
(–21 + 14) ÷ 7 = –7 ÷ 7 = –1
3. Here we follow the sequence or order of operations: first brackets,
then multiplication, then division and then addition:
–2[3 – (–5)] + [9 – (–11)] ÷ (–5)
= –2[8] + [20] ÷ (–5)
= –16 + (–4)
= –20
54 Term 1 • Unit 3
Activity 3.6 Some problems involving positive and
negative numbers
1. The City bank – Autobank slip shown indicates that there is R760,00 remaining
after a withdrawal of R500. What was the amount in the bank before the
withdrawal?
Key ideas
çideas
Term 1 • Unit 3 55
Summary
We have the following properties and rules for working with integers with
respect to addition and multiplication:
For addition:
• Integers are closed under addition; addition is associative and
commutative.
• The integers have 0 as identity for addition.
• Each integer has an additive inverse.
For multiplication:
• Integers are closed under multiplication; multiplication is associative and
commutative.
• The multiplicative identity is 1.
• Each integer does NOT have an inverse integer where multiplication is the
operation.
• We use the distributive rule to write a × (b + c) as a × b + a × c.
• When you divide numbers having opposite signs, the answer is negative (–).
• When you divide numbers having the same sign, the answer is positive (+).
56 Term 1 • Unit 3
b) 161 °F for 15 seconds the pasteurisation temperature for milk
c) 21 °F
d) −4 °F
6. Fill in the missing integers that make the statements true:
a) –14 × (___ + 3) = –168 b) –14 × (___ + 3) = 168
__________ _____
c) √172 − (152) + (–8) = (–10)3 + ___
3
d) √ −216 + 2 (−7) = 4 × ___
y
7. A graph of a relationship between
two numbers, x and y, is given 5
4
alongside: 3
The relationship is: 2
1
y = 2x – 3 x
−7 −6 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 1 2 3 4 5 6
The table below contains some of −1
−2
the x-values, but the y-values must −3
be calculated; for example, if the −4
x-value is –2, the y-value will be: −5
−6
y = 2x – 3 = 2(–2) – 3 = –7. −7
−8
−9
−10
−11
Term 1 • Unit 3 57
The statement shows a previous balance of R380,50 and ends with a
new balance of R674,15
a) Why do you think the credit notes or payments are written with
negative signs, for example, 24,50–?
b) Which items did Miss Nxawe buy, and pay for, on the same day?
c) Explain, by using calculations, how Miss Nxawe’s account changed
from the previous balance to the new balance.
d) If the next payment of R140,00 is due on 31st December (31/12),
what will Miss Nxawe’s balance be after the payment?
e) Write down the way this payment would be written on the statement.
9. Mercury is a metal in liquid form at room temperature, say 15 °C to
25 °C; however, it has a melting point at –39 °C. This is the point at
which the mercury melts (becomes liquid). Alcohol is also a liquid at room
temperature and freezes at –114 °C.
a) What is the difference between the freezing point of alcohol and the
melting point of mercury?
b) How much warmer is a room temperature of 25 °C than the freezing
point of alcohol?
c) Convert the above temperatures of –39 °C and –114 °C to
temperature readings in °F (Fahrenheit), using the formula that
follows, where °C stands for the temperature in degrees Celsius.
°F = (18 ×°C + 320°) ÷ 10
10. Substitute x and y with the given values in order to work out the numerical
values of the given expressions:
a) –4x2 + 3(x + y), if x = –8 and y = 2
__ __
b) 3
√ x √y6 , if x = –8 and y = 2
+
11. Find the value of x in each of the following equations:
a) 2x – 3 = –29
b) –5(x + 6) = 65; the x-value is an integer between –20 and 20.
c) x2 + x = 6; there are two possible values of x that will work; the
x-values are integers between –5 and 5.
d) x(x – 4) = 12; there are two possible x-values that work and the
x-values are integers between –10 and 10.
58 Term 1 • Unit 3
Term
1 Unit 4 Exponents
started
Term 1 • Unit 4 59
• When we write a number in exponential form, we write it in a shorter way:
23 = 2 × 2 × 2 and a3 = a × a × a exponent
• We can write 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 as 25.
25 base
exponent or index
• Using letters we can say that
a b
base
b tells us how many times we must multiply the base by itself. So:
75 = 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 and a3 = a × a × a
Worked example
Write the following in exponential form:
a) 5 × 5 × 5 × 5
b) −2 × −2 × −2 × −2 × −2 × −2 × −2
c) a × a × a × a × a × a
d) d × d × d
1 × __
e) __ 1 × __
1 × __
1
3 3 3 3
f) 8
SolUTIonS
a) 5 × 5 × 5 × 5 = 54. We multiply 5 by itself 4 times.
b) −2 × −2 × −2 × −2 × −2 × −2 × −2 = (−2)7. We multiply −2 is by itself 7 times.
We multiply both the minus and the 2, 7 times. So, we put both of them in a
bracket. (−2)7 = (−2) × (−2) × (−2) × (−2) × (−2) × (−2) × (−2)
c) a × a × a × a × a × a = a6. We multiply a by itself 6 times.
d) d × d × d = d 3. We multiply d by itself 3 times.
1 × __
e) __ 1 × __
3
1 × __
1 = __
3 3 3 (3)
1 4. We multiply __
1 by itself 4 times. Notice how we put the
3
1 into brackets.
whole of the __
3
f) 8 = 81. We do not normally write the exponent of 1. If there is no exponent,
then the exponent 1 is implied.
60 Term 1 • Unit 4
Activity 4.1 Expanded forms
1. Write the following in expanded form.
a) 54 b) 19 c) (−a)5 d) x 2 e) ( __25 )
3
Worked example
a) Show that 92 = 81. ___
b) If 92 = 81, work out √ 81 .
___
3
c) Show that 4 = √64 .
3
SolUTIonS
a) 92 = 9 × 9 and 9 × 9 = 81. Therefore 92 = 81.
___
b) 9 × 9 = 81. √ 81 means the square root of 81. This___means: What number must
we multiply by itself to get 81? 9 × 9 = 81. So, √81 = 9.
c) 43___
= 4 × 4 × 4 = 64.
3
√ 64 means the cube root of 64. This means: What number must we multiply by
itself three times to get 64? The answer is 4 because 4 × 4 × 4 = 64.
d) (−13)4 = −13 × −13 × −13 × −13 is positive. This is because a minus (−)
multiplied by itself four times is positive.
–1 × −1 = +1 +1 × −1 = −1 and −1 × −1 = +1.
Worked example
Write down whether the following statements are true or false:
a) 15___
2
= 15 × 2
b) √___
36 = 6
3
√
c) 27 = 9
Term 1 • Unit 4 61
SolUTIonS
a) 152 = 15 × 2 LHS = 152 = 15 × 15 = 225
RHS = 15 × 2 = 30
False LHS ≠ RHS
___ ___
b) Is √36 = 6? LHS = √36 = 6 because 6 × 6 = 36
RHS = 6
True LHS = RHS
3
___ 3
___
c) Is √27 = 9? LHS = √27 = 3
RHS = 9
False LHS ≠ RHS
62 Term 1 • Unit 4
6. Work out the following square roots or cube roots. Use a calculator.
____ ____ ______
3 3
a) √121 b) √ 343 c) √ 1 728
____ ______ _____
d) √400 e) √ 2 500 f) √ 6 400
___ ___ ___
g) √ 4
___
25
h) √
3 1
___
27
3
i) √ −1
Key ideas
Term 1 • Unit 4 63
Activity 4.2 Squares and cubic numbers
1. Look at some whole numbers shown in Set X Set Y
1X Set 1Y
Set X and their square numbers in Set Y. Set
3 9 1
1
a) Find the values of A, B, C and D. 3 5 259
56 A25
b) Explain how you worked out the B
6 A64
missing square numbers in Set Y. 9B 64 C
D 9 C 169
c) Explain how you worked out the some matching
D 169
missing whole numbers in Set X. whole numbers
some
square numbers
matching
whole numbers square numbers
Set W Set Z
2. Look at some whole numbers shown in Set1 W Set 1Z
3 271
Set W and their cubic numbers in Set Z. 1
3 5 125
27
a) Find the values of E, F, G and H. 56 E
125
F6 E512
b) Explain how you worked out the 9F 512G
missing cubic numbers in Set Z. H 9 G 2 197
SolUTIon
1. a) 73 = 7 × 7 × 7
b) 74 = 7 × 7 × 7 × 7
c) 73 = 7 × 7 × 7 and 74 = 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 so 73 × 74 = 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 × 7
64 Term 1 • Unit 4
d) 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 = 77. This is because we multiply 7 by itself seven
times.
e) 73 × 74 = 77
f) We can say 73 × 74 = 73 + 4 = 77
When we multiply powers of the same base together we add their exponents.
2. Write the following as a single exponent if you can:
a) 45 × 48 b) (−1)4 × (−1)5
c) ( __13 ) × ( __13 )
2 6
d) x6 × x12
SolUTIon
2. a) 45 × 48 = 413 because 45 + 8 = 413
b) (−1)4 × (−1)5 = (−1)9 because (−1)4 + 5 = (−1)9
SolUTIon
3. a) 24 × 22 = 26 = 64
Key ideas
When you multiply numbers with the same base, you add the exponents.
For example: 22 × 23 = (2 × 2) × (2 × 2 × 2) = 22 + 3 = 25
We can prove that this is true. We can also say that:
(2 × 2) × (2 × 2 × 2) = 4 × 8
= 32
2 =2×2×2×2×2
5
= 32
Term 1 • Unit 4 65
Exercise 4.2 Multiplying like bases
1. Write the following as a single exponent if you can:
a) 33 × 35 b) (−2)2 × (−2)4 c) ( __45 ) × ( __45 )
4 4
d) a7 × a3 e) a5 × b4
2. Calculate:
a) 3 × 33 b) 110 × 121 c) 82 × 82
d) (−2)3 × (−2)4 e) ( __15 ) × ( __15 )
2 3
f) (0,2)2 × (0,2)
g) 2 × 22 × 23 h) a7 × a17 i) d 6 × d 8 × d 10
j) s2 × s2 × s2
c) 7×7×7×7×7×7×7
Show that 77 ÷ 75 = __________________
7×7×7×7×7
7×7×7×7×7×7×7
d) Simplify __________________
7×7×7×7×7
e) Using your workings. Simplify 77 ÷ 75.
f) Give a short way to work out 77 ÷ 75 without expanding everything.
2. Write the following as a single exponent if you can:
a) 38 ÷ 32 b) (−2)10 ÷ (−2)5 c) ( __35 ) ÷ ( __35 )
6 5
d) a24 ÷ a9
3. Calculate the following:
a) 28 ÷ 25 b) w18 ÷ w11 c) (0,2)10 ÷ (0,2)7
Key ideas
• When you divide numbers with the same base, you subtract the exponents.
3×3×3×3×3
For example, 35 ÷ 33 = ____________ = 35 − 3 = 32
3×3×3
• The general law for dividing when the bases are the same is:
am ÷ an = am – n, if m > n.
66 Term 1 • Unit 4
Exercise 4.3 Dividing when the bases are the same
1. Write the following as single exponents:
a) 1515 ÷ 1511 b) (−3)7 ÷ (−3)2 c) (0,1)21 ÷ (0,1)12
d) ( __29 ) ÷ ( __29 )
9 8
e) e8 ÷ e7 f) x25 ÷ x5
2. Simplify:
a) 27 ÷ 24 b) (−3)9 ÷ (−3)6 c) ( __15 ) ÷ ( __15 )
10 7
d) (0,1)9 ÷ (0,1)2
e) a10 ÷ a3 f) c6 ÷ c6 g) f 12 ÷ f 3 ÷ f 4
3. The general rule for dividing when the bases are the same is am ÷ an = am – n,
if m > n. Show the result of this rule if n > m.
SolUTIon
a) (22)4 = 22 x 4 = 28
b) (y3)4 = y3 x 4 = y12
c) (4x3)3 = 41 x 3x3 x 3 = 43x9 = 64x9
Key ideas
When you raise a power to another power, you multiply the powers together:
For example:
(32)4 = (32) × (32) × (32) × (32) = 32 + 2 + 2 + 2 = 32 × 4 = 38
38 = 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 = 6 561
32 = 3 × 3 = 9
94 = 9 × 9 × 9 × 9 = 6 561
We can say that (32)4 = 6 561 and 38 = 6 561 so (32)4 = 38.
Term 1 • Unit 4 67
Exercise 4.4 Raising to another exponent
Simplify:
1. (32)2 2. (110)10 3. (22)4
4. (r 8)4 5. (d 3)7 6. 4(f 9)3
7. [ 0,13 ]2 8. (2y 4)2 9. (52y3)4
10. (0,1d 5)3
Key ideas
68 Term 1 • Unit 4
2. Are the following statements true or false?
a) 23 × 24 = 23 + 24 b) 4 × 23 = 43 ÷ 2 c) 32 × 33 = 35
d) 32 × 44 = 126 e) (7 − 4)3 = 27 f) 54 × 53 = 257
______ ___
g) 83______
× 84 = 87 h) 35 + 32 = 310 i) √ 16 + 9 = √ 25
j) √16 + 9 = 4 + 3 k) (6 + 3)4 = 64 + 34
3. Simplify fully:
a) (8 – 5)3 b) 33 + 33 c) 25___
× 24 ÷ 27
_____ ___
d) √0,49 e) ( √3 64 )3 f) √___
3 1
27
g) (3x2 × 2x4)2 h) 2x3 × 3x4 i) (−5x7)2
Term 1 • Unit 4 69
Activity 4.8 Scientific notation
We use scientific notation to write very big or very small numbers with many
zeroes. For example, 300 000 000 meters/second is the speed of light. We read
this as: ‘three hundred million metres per second’. Writing the speed of light means
writing many zeros. It is quicker if we use scientific notation.
We want to write 300 000 000 in scientific notation. We take the first digit, which
is 3 and place a decimal comma behind it: 3, .
3 is not equal to 300 000 000. In order to make it equal, multiply 3 by 100 000 000
because:
3 × 100 000 000 = 300 000 000
100 000 000 = 108. There are 8 zeroes in 100 000 000.
Instead of writing 100 000 000, we write it as 108.
300 000 000 = 3 × 108. This is how we write it in scientific notation.
SolUTIon
1. a) 200 = 2 × 102
b) 45 000 000 = 4,5 × 107. In scientific notation there is always one digit in
front of the decimal comma. We then multiply the digit by 10 to the power
of how many places from the decimal to the end of the number.
450 000 000
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
4,5 × 108
70 Term 1 • Unit 4
3. Write the following in scientific notation:
a) 5 000
b) 5 500
c) 23 000 000
d) 5 215 200 000 000 000
e) 190 000 000 000
4. Look at the table. See how long it takes to count some numbers. The
information comes from Billions and Billions, written by Carl Sagan. He was
an astronomer and astrophysicist.
Check your own counting to a thousand against the table. Think about the best
way to do it!
a) Fill in the missing numbers in place of A, B, C, D and E.
b) We can work out a thousand times a million from 103 × 106. We can then
write this as 10a. What number does the letter a stand for?
c) You multiply a million by a billion. Do you get a quadrillion? Show your
calculations or explain your answer.
d) A million times a billion times a trillion is an octillion. We write this as
106 × 109 × 1012. Write this with only one exponent; that is, as 10b,
b stands for the exponent you must work out.
5. The mass of the earth is about 6 × 1027 grams.
a) Write out this number without the scientific notation. What is the advantage
of scientific notation?
b) A thousand grams make 1 kilogram. 1 000 g = 1 kg. If we write 6 × 1027
grams in kilograms, do we write 6 × 1024 kg or 6 × 1030 kg? Explain how
you worked out your answer.
Term 1 • Unit 4 71
Key ideas
as
Exercise 4.6 Billions and billions
In science, astronomy and the history of our world, quantities and
measurements can involve big numbers, like ‘billions and billions’. Look at these
examples of very big measurements and quantities:
Measurements of: Size in numbers Scientific notation
About 4,6 billion years
Age of the earth 4,6 × 109 years
4 600 000 000 years
About 6 billion people
Human population 6 × 109 people
6 000 000 000 people
South African education R207 billion
budget 2012 R207 000 000 000
People killed in World About 60 million.
War II (1939 to 1945) 60 000 000 people
Almost 3,2 × 107
Seconds in a year
seconds
Distance from the Earth to 150 million km
1,5 × km
the Sun 150 000 000 km
Distance from the Earth to
Almost 40 million million km
the nearest star (other than 4 × 1013 km
40 000 000 000 000 km
the sun), Alpha Centauri
Grains of sand on the Maybe 1 000 000 000 000
beaches of Earth 000 000 000 grains
Number of living things on
1029 things
Earth
72 Term 1 • Unit 4
Power of a light bulb About 60 watts or 100 watts 6 × 10W or 102W
Summary
• We read 37 as ‘3 to the power of 7’.
• We call 3 the base. We call 7 the exponent or index.
• The exponent tells us how many times we must multiply the base by itself.
37 means 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 × 3.
• laws of exponents:
– When we multiply like (equal; the same) bases, we add their
exponents.
– When we divide like bases, we subtract their exponents.
– When we raise a power to another power, we multiply the powers.
– Any base we raise to the power of 0 is 1.
• We use scientific notation to write very large numbers simply.
Term 1 • Unit 4 73
2. Expand:
a) 58 b) 34 c) a9 d) x5y3
e) (2s3t2)3 f) (−4a3)5 g) ( )
2
__
7
2
h) (0,1)6
3. Fill in :
a) 24 × 25 = 2 b) 23 × 24 = 25 × 2
c) 5 × 52 = 57 d) 1015 × 10 = 1040
e) 1026 × 10 = 109 f) 610 ÷ 62 = 611 ÷ 6
g) (s3)8 = s h) (x6y9)4 = x y36
i) (−4)7 = j) (42)0 =
4. Simplify fully:
a) 35 ÷ 3 b) 25 ÷ 42 c) 105 × 104 ÷ 102
d) 40 × 23 × 32 e) 52 −51 × 50 f) (−216x3)0
______
g) √ 3
0,125
______
h) (0,1)9 ÷ (0,1)5
_______
i) ( ) ( )
1 5 ÷ __
__
2
13
4
j) √3 0,001 × 104 k) √ 36 + 64 l) (3x3y4)2
m) (−4a7bc3)3 n) (2x4y6)3 + (3x2y3)6 o) (3x2)3 ÷ 3x4
5. Write down whether the following are true or false:
a) 23 × 24 = 23 + 24 b) 72______
× 73 = 75 __
c) 22____+ 32 = 52 __ d) √______
32 + 42 = √ 72
e) √169 = 16 − √9 f) √ 1 296 = 12 × (9 − 6)
6. Much of what we know about the solar system involves very big numbers.
a) The sun is about 4,5 billion years old. Write this number in scientific
notation.
b) The sun is 330 000 times heavier than the Earth. Write this in
scientific notation.
c) The temperature at the core of the sun is about 15 × 106 °C. Write
this as an ordinary number (not in exponent form).
d) Look at the approximate diameters of some planets:
Earth 1,2 × 104
Jupiter 1,4 × 105
Saturn 1,2 × 105
i) Which is the biggest planet?
ii) Which planet is bigger, Earth or Saturn? How many times
bigger is one planet compared to the other planet?
74 Term 1 • Unit 4
Term
ting started
Term 1 • Unit 5 75
4. Look at the pattern that follows:
a) A number sequence represents this pattern. Write down the first five
numbers in the sequence.
b) Work out a rule to find the 22nd term.
c) Complete the table:
Drawing number 1 2 3 4 5 8 10 12 22
number of dots
d) Use your rule to work out the number dots in drawing number 30.
e) Which drawing number has 231 dots?
5. Animals eat different amounts of food. A cheetah eats 3 kg of meat a day.
An elephant eats 150 kg of grass and leaves. Look at the table below. It
shows the total amount of the food the cheetah and the elephant eat for a
given number of days.
number of days 1 2 3 31
Cheetah (kg) 3 21
Elephant (kg) 150 3 300
a) Use the information above to complete the table.
b) Write down a rule to work out the total amount of food a cheetah eats in
relation to the total number of days.
c) If we know the total amount of food a cheetah eats, write down a rule to
work out the total amount of food an elephant eats.
d) Prove that the total amount of food an elephant eats in 90 days is
13 500 kg. Show all your working.
6. a) Use counters or matches to design your own pattern.
b) Draw up a table to represent your pattern.
c) Write down the rule to work out the number of counters/matches there
will be in 50 steps of your pattern.
d) Swop patterns with a friend. Check each other’s tables and rules.
76 Term 1 • Unit 5
Key ideas
Term 1 • Unit 5 77
SolUTIon
1. a) 40; 48; 56 b) −45; −54; −63 c) 36; 43; 50
d) 243; −729; 2 187 e) 124; 215; 342
2. a) Add 8 to the previous term.
b) Subtract 9 from the previous term.
c) Add 7 to the previous term.
d) Multiply the previous term by −3.
e) Cube the term number. Subtract 1 from the answer.
3. a) Position in the sequence 4 5 6 7 8 9 11 13
Term 29 36 43 50 57 64 78 92
Working for the above table:
A rule could be: add 7 to the previous term.
Seventh term = 43 + 7 = 50
Eighth term = 50 + 7 = 57
Ninth term = 57 + 7 = 64
Eleventh term = 64 + 2 × 7 = 78
Thirteen term = 78 + 2 × 7 = 92
b) y = 7n + 1
c) y = 7 × 72 + 1 = 504 + 1 = 505
d) y = 7n + 1
106 = 7n + 1
105 = 7n
n = 15 106 is the 15th term.
Key ideas
• You can find any term in a sequence of numbers by finding the rule of
the pattern.
• We can describe the relationship between two values in terms of a rule
or table.
• Put a number sequence in a table. This makes it easier for you to see the
relationship between the position of the term in the sequence and the
term itself.
• The value of the independent variable does not depend on any other value.
In number sequences, we call the position of the term the independent
variable.
78 Term 1 • Unit 5
• The dependent variable depends on the value of the independent variable.
In number sequences, the dependent variable is the term. This is because
the value of the term depends on its position in the sequence.
• Tips for writing a rule or a formula:
– Look carefully at how the pattern is made. Is there a constant
difference? Is there a constant ratio?
– How we can use the first number to get the second number or
picture?
– How can we work from the position of the term in the sequence to the
actual term?
10 +
n +
Term 1 • Unit 5 79