All SAT Math Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #11 : Order Of Operations
Evaluate (√4 + √4)2
4
8
40
16
6
16
The square root of 4 is 2. 2 + 2 = 4. Four squared is 16.
Example Question #891 : Sat Mathematics
(11)(4 – 3)2 – (22 + 6) = ?
1
24
111
–53
2
1
The answer is 1.
The correct order of operations is parenthesis, exponents, multiplication and division, then addition and subraction.
(11) * (4 – 3)2 – (22 + 6)
(11) * (1)2 – (4 + 6)
(11) * (1) – (10)
(11) – (10) = 1
Example Question #12 : Order Of Operations
If (x – 7)2 = 64, what is x?
15
1
–15
–1
15
Solving for x yields 15.
√64 = 8, so we want x – 7 = 8; add 7 to both sides of the equation, so that x = 15
Example Question #13 : Order Of Operations
7 more than a number squared is 71. What is the number?
7
64
8
9
8
Subtracting the 7 yields 64, and the square root of 64 is equal to 8.
Example Question #891 : Sat Mathematics
Evaluate if .
Example Question #892 : Sat Mathematics
Consider the function:
What is the value of ?
–33
–49
It is impossible to square a negative number.
17
–17
–17
Example Question #891 : Sat Mathematics
Solve:
To solve the above expression we must follow PEMDAS.
So the parentheses are first. .
Then we need to divide 4 by 2 before subtracting because division comes before subtraction.
Example Question #892 : Sat Mathematics
Order of operations: "PEMDAS”, or "Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication and Division, and Addition and Subtraction".
Example Question #11 : Order Of Operations
Evaluate when and .
None of the other answer choices are correct.
We can evaluate when and by plugging in and substituting:
Example Question #902 : Sat Mathematics
When doing operations of subtraction and addition, there is no priority but we must work from left to right. The sum on the left is and we do the subtraction. The answer is .