Stage 9 · Rational Expressions & Equations

9.4  Adding, Subtracting, and Mixed Operations

Match the bottoms first — then combine the tops, and mind the minus sign.

For ages 13–15 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 4 in this lesson: 9.4.1 Same bottom? Combine the tops

9.4.1 Same bottom? Combine the tops

When two fractions already share a denominator, addition is almost no work. Adding three eighths and two eighths gives five eighths — the eighths don't change, only how many you have. In symbols:

A C ± B C = A ± B C keep the bottom · combine the tops · then reduce
Same bottom: the denominator is the unit of counting. Combine the tops; never touch the bottom.
Watch the minus sign — the #1 trap

For subtraction, the minus belongs to the whole second top, not just its first term. Put parentheses around it, then distribute:

2x+1x−1x+3x−1 = (2x+1) − (x+3)x−1 = x−2x−1

Because (2x+1) − (x+3) = 2x+1 − x − 3 = x − 2. The wrong move forgets the parentheses: 2x+1 − x + 3 = x + 4 — that flips the sign of the +3 and lands on the wrong answer.

Worked example

3xx+2 + 6x+2 = 3x + 6x+2 = 3(x+2)x+2 = 3  (with x ≠ −2).

Always check whether the combined top shares a factor with the bottom — here (x+2) cancels and the whole thing collapses to a plain 3. The restriction x ≠ −2 stays, because it came from the original bottom.

🎮 Try itCOMBINE OVER A SHARED BOTTOM
Same denominator. Flip between + and −. On −, watch the parentheses appear and the minus distribute — the naive (wrong) top is shown struck out in red.
Operation
eastmath.com · 9.4 Adding, Subtracting, and Mixed Operations · 9.4.1 Same bottom? Combine the tops