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
Knowledge point page

Point 5 of 5 in this lesson: 7.2.5 The family and like terms

7.2.5 The family and like terms

Step back and look at the whole household. Monomials are the single blocks; polynomials are several blocks joined. Together they make the family of algebraic expressions we will work with for the rest of Stage 7. The monomials are simply the one-term members of the polynomial family.

Now for the idea that powers nearly everything to come. Two terms are called like terms when they have exactly the same letters raised to exactly the same exponents. Only the number out front may differ. Like terms are matching blocks — interchangeable except for how many you have — and matching blocks are the only ones you are ever allowed to add or subtract together (you will do exactly that in Lesson 7.3).

So 3x2 and −5x2 are like terms: both are "x-squared" blocks, differing only in the amber number. But 3x2 and 3x are not like terms — one is an x-squared block and the other is an x block, a different shape entirely, even though the coefficient is the same.

LIKE TERMS ✓ 3x2 −5x2 same letter x, same exponent 2 — only the number differs NOT LIKE ✗ 3x2 3x exponent 2 vs 1 — different blocks, can't combine
Like terms must match in both the letters and their exponents. A bigger or different coefficient is fine; a different exponent makes them a different kind of block.
Key idea — the like-terms test

Cover up the coefficients with your thumb. If the letter parts that remain are identical (same letters, same exponents), the terms are like. If anything about the letter part differs, they are unlike. The constant terms (plain numbers) are all like one another, since each has the same empty letter part.

Worked example — group the like terms

From 2x2, x, 5, 3x2, 4x, −1, sort the like terms into groups.

  1. Cover the coefficients and read the letter parts: x2, x, (none), x2, x, (none). the letter part is what matters
  2. Same letter part = same group. match the shapes
  3. Groups: x²-terms {2x2, 3x2}; x-terms {−x, 4x}; constants {5, −1}. three families
🎮 Try itLike-terms matcher

Click a chip from the pool to drop it into the matching group. Like terms snap together by color; an unlike chip is bounced back. Empty all three groups correctly to win.

Pool — tap a chip
x²-terms x-terms constants
eastmath.com · 7.2 The Polynomial Family: Monomials and Polynomials · 7.2.5 The family and like terms