krit.club logo

Algebraic Expressions - Terms, Factors and Coefficients of an Expression

Grade 7CBSE

Review the key concepts, formulae, and examples before starting your quiz.

🔑Concepts

Algebraic Expressions are mathematical phrases formed by combining variables (letters like x,yx, y) and constants (fixed numbers like 5,105, -10) using arithmetic operations. Think of an expression as a 'construction' where variables and constants are the building blocks connected by ++, -, ×\times, or ÷\div.

Terms are the individual components of an expression that are separated by plus (++) or minus (-) signs. For example, in the expression 4x23xy+74x^2 - 3xy + 7, there are three terms: 4x24x^2, 3xy-3xy, and 77. Visually, you can imagine an expression as a 'Term Tree' where the expression is the trunk and each term is a major branch.

Factors are the pieces that are multiplied together to create a single term. For the term 5xy5xy, the factors are 55, xx, and yy. In a tree diagram, if a term is a branch, the factors are the smaller twigs or 'leaves' growing out of that branch. Factors cannot be further broken down by multiplication.

The Numerical Coefficient (or simply coefficient) is the number that multiplies the variable part of a term. In the term 7ab-7ab, the coefficient is 7-7. If a term appears as just x2x^2, its coefficient is understood to be 11. If it is x-x, the coefficient is 1-1.

Constants are terms that consist only of a number and do not have any variables attached to them. In the expression x+5x + 5, the number 55 is the constant. Unlike variables, the value of a constant never changes, representing a fixed point on a number line.

Like Terms are terms that share the exact same algebraic (variable) factors. For instance, 2xy2xy and 5xy-5xy are like terms because their variable part xyxy is identical. Visually, like terms are like objects of the same shape and size that can be stacked or grouped together.

Unlike Terms are terms that have different algebraic factors. For example, 3x3x and 3x23x^2 are unlike terms because the power of xx is different. Similarly, 4x4x and 4y4y are unlike terms. These cannot be combined into a single term, much like trying to add apples and oranges.

📐Formulae

Expression=Term1+Term2+Term3+Expression = Term_{1} + Term_{2} + Term_{3} + \dots

Term=(Numerical Coefficient)×(Algebraic Factors)Term = (Numerical\ Coefficient) \times (Algebraic\ Factors)

Coefficient of x in ax=aCoefficient\ of\ x\ in\ ax = a

💡Examples

Problem 1:

Identify the terms and their factors in the algebraic expression 5x2y10xy5x^2y - 10xy.

Solution:

  1. Identify the Terms: The expression is composed of two parts separated by a minus sign. The terms are 5x2y5x^2y and 10xy-10xy.
  2. Identify Factors of the first term (5x2y5x^2y): The components multiplied together are 55, xx, xx, and yy.
  3. Identify Factors of the second term (10xy-10xy): The components multiplied together are 10-10, xx, and yy.

Explanation:

To solve this, we treat the expression as a tree. The expression splits into terms at the operator signs. Each term is then decomposed into every individual number or variable that is being multiplied to form that specific term.

Problem 2:

In the expression 1.2a2.4ab+0.5b1.2a - 2.4ab + 0.5b, identify the numerical coefficient of each term.

Solution:

  1. Term: 1.2a1.2a. The numerical factor is 1.21.2. So, the coefficient is 1.21.2.
  2. Term: 2.4ab-2.4ab. The numerical factor is 2.4-2.4. So, the coefficient is 2.4-2.4.
  3. Term: 0.5b0.5b. The numerical factor is 0.50.5. So, the coefficient is 0.50.5.

Explanation:

The numerical coefficient is simply the number part (including its sign) that is placed before the variables in a term.