I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW -6 + 3 = A) -9 B) 9 C) -3 D) 3 Question #1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TWO STEP EQUATIONS 1. SOLVE FOR X 2. DO THE ADDITION STEP FIRST
Advertisements

You have been given a mission and a code. Use the code to complete the mission and you will save the world from obliteration…
Warm Up Problem of the Day Lesson Presentation Lesson Quizzes.
Advanced Piloting Cruise Plot.
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 1 Computer Systems Organization & Architecture Chapters 8-12 John D. Carpinelli.
Chapter 1 The Study of Body Function Image PowerPoint
Author: Julia Richards and R. Scott Hawley
1 Copyright © 2010, Elsevier Inc. All rights Reserved Fig 2.1 Chapter 2.
By D. Fisher Geometric Transformations. Reflection, Rotation, or Translation 1.
Business Transaction Management Software for Application Coordination 1 Business Processes and Coordination.
We need a common denominator to add these fractions.
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 6 Q 11 Q 16 Q 21 Q 2 Q 7 Q 12 Q 17 Q 22 Q 3 Q 8 Q 13
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 6 Q 11 Q 16 Q 21 Q 2 Q 7 Q 12 Q 17 Q 22 Q 3 Q 8 Q 13
Title Subtitle.
My Alphabet Book abcdefghijklm nopqrstuvwxyz.
Multiplication Facts Review. 6 x 4 = 24 5 x 5 = 25.
Multiplying binomials You will have 20 seconds to answer each of the following multiplication problems. If you get hung up, go to the next problem when.
Frigid Fridays On each Friday last January, the temperature was a record low temperature for the date. On Friday, January 30, the mercury dropped to 5°F,
0 - 0.
1 1  1 =.
1  1 =.
ALGEBRAIC EXPRESSIONS
DIVIDING INTEGERS 1. IF THE SIGNS ARE THE SAME THE ANSWER IS POSITIVE 2. IF THE SIGNS ARE DIFFERENT THE ANSWER IS NEGATIVE.
MULTIPLYING MONOMIALS TIMES POLYNOMIALS (DISTRIBUTIVE PROPERTY)
ADDING INTEGERS 1. POS. + POS. = POS. 2. NEG. + NEG. = NEG. 3. POS. + NEG. OR NEG. + POS. SUBTRACT TAKE SIGN OF BIGGER ABSOLUTE VALUE.
SUBTRACTING INTEGERS 1. CHANGE THE SUBTRACTION SIGN TO ADDITION
MULT. INTEGERS 1. IF THE SIGNS ARE THE SAME THE ANSWER IS POSITIVE 2. IF THE SIGNS ARE DIFFERENT THE ANSWER IS NEGATIVE.
FACTORING Think Distributive property backwards Work down, Show all steps ax + ay = a(x + y)
FACTORING ax2 + bx + c Think “unfoil” Work down, Show all steps.
Addition Facts
Year 6 mental test 5 second questions
Year 6 mental test 10 second questions
Around the World AdditionSubtraction MultiplicationDivision AdditionSubtraction MultiplicationDivision.
C1 Sequences and series. Write down the first 4 terms of the sequence u n+1 =u n +6, u 1 =6 6, 12, 18, 24.
SOLVING EQUATIONS AND EXPANDING BRACKETS
ZMQS ZMQS
Richmond House, Liverpool (1) 26 th January 2004.
ABC Technology Project
© S Haughton more than 3?
VOORBLAD.
1 Breadth First Search s s Undiscovered Discovered Finished Queue: s Top of queue 2 1 Shortest path from s.
Factor P 16 8(8-5ab) 4(d² + 4) 3rs(2r – s) 15cd(1 + 2cd) 8(4a² + 3b²)
Squares and Square Root WALK. Solve each problem REVIEW:
Basel-ICU-Journal Challenge18/20/ Basel-ICU-Journal Challenge8/20/2014.
1..
Do you have the Maths Factor?. Maths Can you beat this term’s Maths Challenge?
© 2012 National Heart Foundation of Australia. Slide 2.
Lets play bingo!!. Calculate: MEAN Calculate: MEDIAN
Past Tense Probe. Past Tense Probe Past Tense Probe – Practice 1.
Understanding Generalist Practice, 5e, Kirst-Ashman/Hull
Least Common Multiples and Greatest Common Factors
Chapter 2: Integers and Exponents Regular Math. Section 2.1: Adding Integers Integers are the set of whole numbers, including 0, and their opposites.
Chapter 5 Test Review Sections 5-1 through 5-4.
GG Consulting, LLC I-SUITE. Source: TEA SHARS Frequently asked questions 2.
Addition 1’s to 20.
25 seconds left…...
Test B, 100 Subtraction Facts
Januar MDMDFSSMDMDFSSS
Week 1.
Analyzing Genes and Genomes
We will resume in: 25 Minutes.
©Brooks/Cole, 2001 Chapter 12 Derived Types-- Enumerated, Structure and Union.
A SMALL TRUTH TO MAKE LIFE 100%
1 Unit 1 Kinematics Chapter 1 Day
PSSA Preparation.
Essential Cell Biology
Traktor- og motorlære Kapitel 1 1 Kopiering forbudt.
Presentation transcript:

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW = A) -9 B) 9 C) -3 D) 3 Question #1

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW -4 + (-1) = A) -5 B) 5 C) -3 D) 3 Question #2

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW -5 – 3 = A) -8 B) 8 C) -2 D) 2 Question #3

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW -9 – (-4) = A) -13 B) 13 C) -5 D) 5 Question #4

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW -81 ÷ 9 = A) -72 B) 729 C) -9 D) 9 Question #5

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW -6(-4)= A) -10 B) 10 C) 24 D) -24 Question #6

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW 24 ÷ (-3) = A) -21 B) 21 C) -8 D) 8 Question #7

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW 7(-3) = A) 4 B) -4 C) 21 D) -21 Question #8

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW Find the sum of -9 and -3? A) -12 B) -6 C) 6 D) 12 Question #9

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW The temperature is -25°F. By this evening the temperature is supposed to be 12°F colder than now. What should the temperature be this evening? A) -37°F B) -13°F C) 13°F D) 37°F Question #10

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW Find the difference of -9 and -3? A) -12°F B) -6°F C) 6°F D) 12°F Question #11

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW The sum of an integer and its ___?___ is 0. A) Absolute Value B) Exponential Form C) Power D) Opposite Question #12

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW Evaluate A) -2 B) 2 C) 16 D) -16 Question #13

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW Evaluate: -2 – (-5) A) -7 B) -3 C) 3 D) 7 Question #14

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW Evaluate: |-5|+|3|-|-2| A) -4 B) 0 C) 6 D) 10 Question #15

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW Order the integers 3, –7, 7, –9, 6, and 0 from least to greatest. A) -7, 7, -9, 6, 0, 3 B) -7, -9, 0, 3, 6, 7 C) -9, -7, 0, 3, 6, 7 D) 7, 6, 3, 0, -7, -9 Question #16

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW Solve: 12(-3-9) A) -144 B) -72 C) 72 D) 144 Question #17

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW Solve: -5(-15) – (-5) A) -35 B) -15 C) 70 D) 80 Question #18

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW On Monday, a local dog shelter had six dogs. By Friday they had found homes for three, but took in two more. Then how many dogs were in the shelter? A) 11 B) 7 C) 5 D) 1 Question #19

I NTEGER T EST R EVIEW The roller coaster Desperado has a maximum height of 209 ft and maximum drop of 225 ft. How far underground does the roller coaster go? A) 225 feet underground B) 26 feet underground C) 16 feet underground D) 6 feet underground Question #20