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Learn to turn stories into math using letters for unknown amounts.
Long ago, people used words to solve math puzzles. They needed a way to write unknown amounts with letters. This idea grew into algebra, which helps turn word problems into expressions.
Before algebra, math was hard for stories like "twice as many apples as friends." Now, you can write 2f. This lesson shows you how!
An algebraic expression is math with numbers and letters, like 3x + 2. A variable like x stands for an unknown number. To translate, match words to math symbols.
See how the story breaks into parts? Words like "twice" become numbers times a variable. You can do this with any problem!
Start with the unknown as a variable like n or x. Then add words step by step. Always read carefully.
This map helps spot clues in problems. Practice with friends or games to get faster. You're getting great at this!
See? Break it into small steps. You just solved it like a pro!
| Mistake | Why Wrong | Fix It |
|---|---|---|
| Switching order like 5 − 2n for "twice minus 5" | Words go left to right. | Read carefully: 2n − 5. |
| Forgetting variable like "3 + 7". | No unknown! | Always use n or x. |
| Using = in expression. | Expressions have no =. | Save = for equations. |
| Expression | Equation (Next Level) |
|---|---|
| 2n + 3 (twice plus 3) | 2n + 3 = 11 (equals 11) |
| n − 4 (less 4) | n − 4 = 7 |
| 3n (three times) | 3n = 21 |
Expressions are half the story. Add "equals" to make equations and solve for n. You'll learn that next!
You now know how to translate word problems into algebraic expressions. Use variables for unknowns and match words to + − × ÷.
Practice spotting phrases like "more than" for +. Break problems into steps. You're ready for SSAT success—keep practicing!