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 2 of 4 in this lesson: 9.4.2 Different bottoms? Build a common one

9.4.2 Different bottoms? Build a common one

If the bottoms don't match, you can't combine yet — exactly like 1⁄2 + 1⁄3. The fix is the LCD from 9.2: factor each bottom, take every distinct factor to its highest power, then use the fundamental property to build each fraction up to that shared bottom. Only then do you combine the tops.

Numeric warm-up → the same move with letters

1⁄2 + 1⁄3: LCD is 6, so 1⁄2 = 3⁄6 and 1⁄3 = 2⁄6, giving 3⁄6 + 2⁄6 = 5⁄6. Notice you multiplied each fraction by a clever form of 1 (3⁄3, then 2⁄2) to reach the common bottom. With letters, that clever 1 is built from the missing factors.

Worked example

Add 1x + 1x+1. The bottoms x and x+1 share no factor, so the LCD is just their product, x(x+1).

1·(x+1)x(x+1) + 1·xx(x+1) = (x+1) + xx(x+1) = 2x+1x(x+1)

The top 2x+1 shares no factor with x(x+1), so this is already in lowest terms. Restrictions: x ≠ 0 and x ≠ −1.

When the bottoms do share factors, factor first so you don't over-build. For example, with bottoms x²−1 = (x−1)(x+1) and x+1, the LCD is just (x−1)(x+1) — you don't need a second copy of (x+1).

🎮 Try itBUILD & COMBINE (DIFFERENT BOTTOMS)
Pick a pair. Step through it: find the LCD, build each fraction up to it (missing factors highlighted), combine the tops, then reduce.
Pair
eastmath.com · 9.4 Adding, Subtracting, and Mixed Operations · 9.4.2 Different bottoms? Build a common one