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 5 of 5 in this lesson: 7.3.5 Putting it to work

7.3.5 Putting it to work

These two moves earn their keep the moment a real measurement is unknown. Suppose a rectangle is 2x + 1 units wide and x units tall. You do not know x yet, but you can still write its perimeter — the distance all the way around — as one tidy expression. A rectangle has two widths and two heights, so add them up and combine like terms.

2x + 1 2x + 1 x x P = (2x+1) + x + (2x+1) + x = 6x + 2
Perimeter is the sum of all four sides: two widths (2x + 1) and two heights x. Adding them and combining gives 6x + 2.
Worked example — perimeter

Find the perimeter of a rectangle with width 2x + 1 and height x.

  1. Add all four sides: (2x + 1) + x + (2x + 1) + x. two widths, two heights
  2. The brackets have + in front, so just drop them: 2x + 1 + x + 2x + 1 + x. friendly doors
  3. Combine x-terms: 2x + x + 2x + x = 6x. 2+1+2+1 = 6
  4. Combine numbers: 1 + 1 = 2. Perimeter = 6x + 2. one clean expression

Subtraction shows up just as naturally in a price difference. Say a hardcover book costs 3p + 5 dollars and the paperback costs p + 2 dollars. How much more is the hardcover? Subtract: (3p + 5) − (p + 2). The minus flips the second bracket: 3p + 5p2 = 2p + 3. The hardcover costs 2p + 3 dollars more, whatever p turns out to be.

Key idea — the real-world recipe

Whenever a quantity is built from parts you do not have numbers for yet, write each part as an expression, then add or subtract the parts and simplify into one clean expression. Perimeters, totals, and differences all follow the same clear-then-combine routine.

🎮 Try itPerimeter builder

Choose a shape and slide its side expressions. The widget adds the sides and simplifies the perimeter live — and it is always algebraically correct.

eastmath.com · 7.3 Adding and Subtracting Expressions: Combining and Clearing Brackets · 7.3.5 Putting it to work