Stage 10 · Linear Equations & Systems

10.2  Solving Linear Equations in One Unknown

One unknown, first power — and one routine that always works.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 6 in this lesson: 10.2.2 Moving terms across the equals sign

10.2.2 Moving terms across the equals sign

Here is the single move that makes solving fast. Look at 3x + 5 = 11. We want the x-stuff alone, so the + 5 has to go. The honest, Lesson-10.1 way is to subtract 5 from both sides:

3x + 5 = 11the equation
3x + 5 − 5 = 11 − 5−5 both sides
3x = 11 − 5the −5 cancels on the left

Notice the result: the + 5 vanished from the left and reappeared on the right as − 5. That is the whole trick. So we skip the middle line and just say it out loud:

A term may jump across the equals sign — but it flips its sign as it crosses.

This shortcut has a name: transposition, or "moving terms across." A + 5 becomes − 5; a − 8 becomes + 8; a + 2x on the right becomes − 2x on the left. It is never a new rule — it is always "add or subtract the same thing from both sides," just written in one step instead of two.

The + 5 swings over the = and lands as − 5. Crossing the equals sign always flips the sign.
Watch out

The sign flips only when a term crosses the equals sign. Terms that stay on their own side keep their signs. And a term you multiply or divide by (like the 3 in front of x) does not just slide over — moving a coefficient is a different move, coming in the next section.

🎮 Try itSend a term across the equals sign

Pick a term and tap Send it across →. Watch its sign flip, and read the honest "both sides" move it stands for.

Move this term:
eastmath.com · 10.2 Solving Linear Equations in One Unknown · 10.2.2 Moving terms across the equals sign