Stage 6 · Powers, Roots & Real Numbers

6.5  Square-Root Expressions and Their Operations

Treat √a as a number you can actually compute with — simplify it, combine it, tidy it.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
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Point 6 of 6 in this lesson: 6.5.6 Mixed operations with square-root expressions

6.5.6 Mixed operations with square-root expressions

Roots obey the same order of operations as ordinary numbers: do powers and roots first, then × and ÷, then + and − last. Treat each root as a number and march through in order. Here is a full one worked end to end:

(2)² + 3·128

Step 1 — powers/roots: (2)² = 2 (squaring undoes the root), and 8 = 22. Step 2 — multiply: 3·12 = 36 = 6. Step 3 — add/subtract left to right: 2 + 622 = 8 − 22. The whole-number parts combine; the leftover root rides along.

The same priority ladder as always — powers/roots, then ×÷, then +−. Each rung turns roots into plain numbers until only 8 − 22 remains.
Watch out

(2)² = 2, but don't confuse it with = 4 = 2 — same answer here only because squaring and rooting are inverses. And the final 8 − 22 is done: the 8 and the 22 are unlike (a whole number versus a root) and cannot merge into “6√2” or anything else.

🎮 Try itThe mixed-operations stepper

Step through (2)² + 3·128 one priority level at a time.

eastmath.com · 6.5 Square-Root Expressions and Their Operations · 6.5.6 Mixed operations with square-root expressions