Stage 7 · Algebraic Expressions & Polynomials

7.5  Multiplying Expressions

From the power rules to multiplying monomials and polynomials — understood through an area model.

For ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 3 of 4 in this lesson: 7.5.3 Polynomial times polynomial

7.5.3 Polynomial times polynomial

Now both factors have several terms. The rule grows naturally out of the distributive law: every term of the first factor multiplies every term of the second, and then you add up all the products. For two two-term factors that is four products:

(a+b)(c+d)  =  ac  +  ad  +  bc  +  bd

Why four? Because a reaches both c and d, and so does b — two terms times two terms makes 2 × 2 = 4 products. Once you have all of them, the final step is to combine like terms, exactly as in Lesson 7.3. Watch it happen with real numbers:

(x+2)(x+3)  =  x·x + x·3 + 2·x + 2·3
 =  x2 + 3x + 2x + 6  =  x2 + 5x + 6

The two middle products, 3x and 2x, are like terms — both are a number of x's — so they merge into 5x. The x2 term and the constant 6 have no partners, so they stay as they are. Many people remember the four products by the nickname FOIL — First, Outer, Inner, Last — but FOIL is just a memory aid for "every term times every term," and it only covers the two-by-two case. The real rule never changes: multiply all the pairs, then collect.

Key idea

To multiply two polynomials, multiply each term of one by each term of the other, keep every product (with its sign), then combine like terms. A factor with m terms times one with n terms gives m × n products before collecting.

Worked example — a subtraction inside

Expand (x+5)(x2).

  1. First: x·x = x2. x¹·x¹=x²
  2. Outer: x·(2) = 2x. keep the minus
  3. Inner: 5·x = 5x.
  4. Last: 5·(2) = 10. number times number
  5. Collect like terms −2x and 5x3x. Answer: x2+3x−10.
Watch out — combine like terms only at the end

Don't stop at x2+3x+2x+6 — that's the expansion, not the simplified answer. And only the genuine like terms merge: 3x and 2x combine, but x2 and x never do, because x² and x are different powers.

🎮 Try itEvery term times every term

Choose a product of two binomials (x+p)(x+q). The four products are listed, the two like terms are highlighted, and they combine into the final trinomial.

p 2
q 3
eastmath.com · 7.5 Multiplying Expressions · 7.5.3 Polynomial times polynomial