How do you express the phrase "Five more than the product of 7 and a" as an algebraic expression?
2 Answers
Explanation:
The word product refers to multiplication, so the product of 7 and a is
Five more would mean addition of 5 to the value.
Explanation:
We need to break down the phrase into its math parts.
We start with:
#"Five more than the product of 7 and "a#
"Five" means the number 5.
So "Five more than" means "5 added to something".
That something must be what's left: "the product of 7 and
So, we are taking the product of 7 and
Our phrase is now:
#["the product of 7 and "a]" " + 5 #
In math, the word "product" means "the result of multiplying." To get a product, we need (at least) two things to multiply together.
The remaining part of our phrase tells us what to multiply together: 7 and
In math, "the product of 7 and
Our phrase is now:
#[7 xx a] + 5 #
We can clean this up a bit by using
#7a+5#
Let's double check. This math phrase should mean the same as "five more than the product of 7 and
So yes,