Stage 12 · Inequalities

12.2  The Properties of Inequalities

What you may do to both sides — and the one move that flips the whole thing around.

For ages 12–15 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 4 of 4 in this lesson: 12.2.4 Chaining and adding inequalities

12.2.4 Chaining and adding inequalities

The last two properties are about combining whole inequalities, not just operating on one. The first is so natural you already use it without thinking. It's called transitivity.

Suppose you are taller than your friend, and your friend is taller than her little brother. Without measuring anyone, you know you are taller than the little brother. In symbols: if a > b and b > c, then a > c. The middle value b hands off the comparison like a relay baton.

Three heights, tallest to shortest: a > b and b > c. Reading past the middle person, a > c for free.

The second combining move lets you add two inequalities that point the same way. If a > b and another comparison says c > d, you may add them straight down:

a + c > b + d.

It makes sense: a bigger thing plus a bigger thing is a bigger total. For instance, 5 > 2 and 4 > 1, so 5 + 4 > 2 + 1, that is 9 > 3 ✓.

Watch — two things you may NOT do

Adding same-direction inequalities is safe, but two close cousins are not:

• You may not subtract them. From 5 > 2 and 4 > 1 you cannot conclude 5 − 4 > 2 − 1 (that says 1 > 1, false). Subtracting can break the direction.

• You may not multiply them unless every side is positive. Multiplying two same-direction inequalities is only guaranteed safe when all four numbers are positive.

When in doubt, add — never subtract — same-direction inequalities, and check signs before you multiply.

Putting it together

Transitivity and the addition rule are the bricks behind nearly every inequality proof you'll meet, including the famous one in 12.6. They let you build a long chain of true comparisons, link by link, each one justified by a property you've now seen.

🎮 Try it CHAIN IT UP

Two modes. Chain: set three heights a > b > c and read off a > c. Add: pick two same-direction inequalities and add them down the columns to get a + c > b + d.

Mode:
a =9
b =5
c =1
eastmath.com · 12.2 The Properties of Inequalities · 12.2.4 Chaining and adding inequalities