ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Pre-Algebra Videos 34 videos
ACT Math: Pre-Algebra Drill 5, Problem 2. If a and b are prime numbers, how many factors does ab have?
ACT Math Pre-Algebra Drill 2, Problem 5. Given the chart in the video, what is the mode?
ACT Math 7.2 Pre-Algebra 408 Views
Share It!
Description:
ACT Math: Pre-Algebra Drill 7, Problem 2. Solve for x.
Transcript
- 00:03
Here's an unshmoopy question you may find on an exam somewhere in life...
- 00:07
Solve for x: 2 times the quantity 3x minus 6 equals negative the quantity 12 minus 6x.
- 00:13
And here are the potential answers...
- 00:17
OK so what is this question asking?
- 00:19
Well it's just a messy "distribution and basic solve for x" equation.
Full Transcript
- 00:24
Lots of simplifyin' to be done here. As we say down on the farm.
- 00:30
Let's start with the distribution part and multiply this 2 here out of the equation.
- 00:35
2 times 3x is 6x, and 2 times negative 6 is negative 12. So now we have 6x minus 12.
- 00:42
Do the same with the negative sign to get rid of the parentheses on the right side,
- 00:47
and we get negative 12 plus 6x... or 6x minus 12.
- 00:53
Both sides of the equation suddenly look uh... strikingly similar.
- 00:58
We have 6x minus 12 on both sides.
- 01:02
If we add 12 to both sides...
- 01:04
...then divide both sides by 6...
- 01:05
...we get "x equals x." What does that mean? Isn't that like the ultimate "duh?"
- 01:16
What it means is that to solve this equation, x can be... literally anything.
- 01:21
Anything real, anyway. Like... it can't be a number divided by zero or the square
- 01:25
root of a negative number or an honest politician...
- 01:30
But we digress. The answer is D.
- 01:32
As in, "Down on the farm."
Related Videos
ACT Math: Coordinate Geometry Drill 1, Problem 1. Which inequality is expressed by the number line?
ACT Math: Intermediate Algebra: Drill 3, Problem 1. Find the fifth number in the series.
ACT Math: Plane Geometry Drill 3, Problem 1. What is the area of the trapezoid shape in the video?
We don't like knocking people down to size, but we do like simplifying radicals. Join us?
If fleeing criminals always fled the scene of the crime at perfect right angles, it would be much easier to determine their whereabouts. Fortunatel...