Stage 7 · Algebraic Expressions & Polynomials

7.3  Adding and Subtracting Expressions: Combining and Clearing Brackets

Combining like terms and clearing brackets so you can add and subtract expressions down to their simplest form.

For ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 5 in this lesson: 7.3.1 Combining like terms

7.3.1 Combining like terms

Start with something you have known since you were small. If you have 3 apples and someone hands you 2 apples, you have 5 apples. You added the counts — 3 and 2 — and the thing being counted, "apples," did not change. Algebra works the very same way, except the thing being counted is a letter.

A term like 3x means "three of the thing called x." The amber number in front is the coefficient — it counts how many. So 3x + 2x is "three x's plus two x's," which is five x's: 3x + 2x = 5x. You added the coefficients and kept the letter part exactly as it was.

x x x 3x + x x 2x = x x x x x 5x
Three x-tiles and two more make five — exactly like 3 apples + 2 apples = 5 apples. Add the counts, keep the letter.

Two terms can be combined only when their letter part is identical — same letter, same exponent. We call such terms like terms. The squared term x2 behaves the same way: 4x2x2 = 3x2, because "four of the x2-things take away one of them leaves three." (Notice a bare x2 means 1x2 — the coefficient 1 is just left unwritten.)

But x and x2 are not like terms. One counts x's, the other counts x2's — different things entirely, the way apples and oranges are different. You can no more turn x + x2 into a single term than you can call "one apple and one orange" a tidy "two of something." It just stays x + x2.

Key idea — combining like terms

To combine like terms, add (or subtract) only the coefficients and keep the letter part unchanged. Terms can combine only if their letter-and-exponent part matches exactly. 3x + 2x = 5x;  4x2x2 = 3x2;  x + x2 stays as it is.

Worked example

Simplify 5x + 3 + 2x1.

  1. Sort into like groups: the x-terms 5x and 2x, and the plain numbers 3 and 1. like with like
  2. Add the coefficients of the x-terms: 5 + 2 = 7, giving 7x. keep the letter
  3. Combine the numbers: 31 = 2. plain arithmetic
  4. Write the result: 7x + 2. simplest form
Watch out

Do not merge unlike terms. 3x + 4 is not 7x — the 4 is not counting x's, so it has to stay separate. And never combine x with x2; the exponent makes them different things.

🎮 Try itDrop terms into their bins and combine

Add tiles to three bins — x2, x, and plain units. Inside a bin the coefficients add; the bins never mix, because they hold different things. Build 3x + 2x = 5x and watch x and x2 stay apart.

eastmath.com · 7.3 Adding and Subtracting Expressions: Combining and Clearing Brackets · 7.3.1 Combining like terms