Stage 7 · Algebraic Expressions & Polynomials

7.2  The Polynomial Family: Monomials and Polynomials

Sorting and naming algebraic expressions: monomials, polynomials, coefficients, degree, and like terms.

For ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
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Point 4 of 5 in this lesson: 7.2.4 A polynomial's terms, degree, and constant term

7.2.4 A polynomial's terms, degree, and constant term

Once you can see the terms, three useful facts pop out. They all come from looking at the terms one at a time.

Number of terms. Simply count the links in the chain. 3x2 − 5x + 4 has three terms; x4 + 1 has two.

Degree of the polynomial. Each term has its own degree (the sum of its exponents, from Section 7.2.2). The polynomial's degree is the biggest of those term-degrees — the tallest block in the stack. In 3x2 − 5x + 4, the term degrees are 2, 1, and 0, so the polynomial has degree 2.

Constant term. The term with no letters at all — just a plain number — is the constant term. In 3x2 − 5x + 4 the constant term is 4. (If there is no bare number, the constant term is 0.)

It is good manners — and it makes the degree obvious — to write a polynomial in standard form: terms in order of descending degree, highest power first, the constant last. So you would tidy 4 − 5x + 3x2 into 3x2 − 5x + 4.

3x2 −5x + 4 degree 2 degree 1 degree 0 tallest → polynomial degree 2 constant term = 4 Standard form: descending degree, constant last.
Line the terms up by degree, tallest first. The tallest term sets the polynomial's degree (here 2), and the plain-number term is the constant term (here 4).
Worked example — describe 7x − 2x3 + 5

How many terms does 7x − 2x3 + 5 have? What is its degree, its constant term, and its standard form?

  1. Break at the signs: terms are 7x, −2x3, 53 terms. count the links
  2. Term degrees are 1, 3, and 0; the biggest is 3 → degree 3. tallest block wins
  3. The bare number is 5 → constant term 5. no letters at all
  4. Reorder by descending degree: −2x3 + 7x + 5. highest power first, constant last
Watch out — degree is the biggest, not the sum

A polynomial's degree is the largest term-degree, never the total. In x2 + x + 1 the degree is 2 (the biggest), not 2 + 1 + 0 = 3. And a degree of 3 needs an actual term of degree 3 — it does not come from adding up smaller terms.

🎮 Try itDegree & terms detector

A polynomial appears. Set your guesses for its degree and its number of terms, then check. Cycle through several and try to get them all right.

Degree 0
# terms 1
eastmath.com · 7.2 The Polynomial Family: Monomials and Polynomials · 7.2.4 A polynomial's terms, degree, and constant term