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Answers Cambridge Checkpoint Mathematics Practicebook 8 PDF Mean Rectangle

This document is a 44-page practice book containing exercises and answers related to integers, powers, roots, factors, primes and other topics in mathematics. It includes multiple choice questions, short answer questions and explanations of steps to solve problems involving topics like determining if a number is prime, finding common factors, evaluating expressions with integers and exponents, and more. The document provides fully worked out solutions to practice problems to help students learn.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
187 views1 page

Answers Cambridge Checkpoint Mathematics Practicebook 8 PDF Mean Rectangle

This document is a 44-page practice book containing exercises and answers related to integers, powers, roots, factors, primes and other topics in mathematics. It includes multiple choice questions, short answer questions and explanations of steps to solve problems involving topics like determining if a number is prime, finding common factors, evaluating expressions with integers and exponents, and more. The document provides fully worked out solutions to practice problems to help students learn.

Uploaded by

farisamin779900
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Checkpoint Mathematics
Practicebook 8
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Answers to Practice Book exercises
Share this1 Integers,
document powers and roots

1 a 3

F Exercise 1.1
Facebook
b −10
Arithmetic with integers
c −10 d 5

Twitter
e −6
2 a −3 b −10 c 6 d 4 e −13
3 a −4 b −10 c −50 d −10 e −13


4 a 10 b 13 c −5 d 6 e 25
5 a −3 b −1 c 1
6 × −3 −1 2 5
−3 Email
9 3 −6 −15
−1 3 1 −2 −5
2 −6 −2 4 10
5 −15 −5 10 25
Did 7you find this
a −10 b −8 document
c 11 useful?
d −7 e 2
8 −30 ÷ 6 = −5 and −30 ÷ −5 = 6
9 −5 times −5 is 25.
10 They could be: 1 and −16; −1 and 16; 2 and −8; −2 and 8; −4 and 4.
11 a −10 b −3 c −5 d 7

F Exercise 1.2 Multiples, factors and primes


1 a 12, 24, 36 b 15, 30, 45 c 32, 64, 96 d 50, 100, 150
Is this content inappropriate?
2 a 40 b 8 and 12
Report this
c 9
Document
d 23
3 41, 43, 47
4 a 96, 98 and 100 b 95 and 100 c 100 d 100 e 97 f 96
5 No. 67 is prime but 57 is not because 3 and 19 are factors.
6 a True. 84 = 7 × 12. b False. 75 and 90 are multiples of 15 but not 75. c True. It is 97.
d False. It is 18. e False. It is 25.
7 a 12 b 60 c 100 d 42
8 a 1, 3, 9, 27 b 1, 2, 4, 7, 14, 28 c 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 72 d 1, 2, 41, 82 e 1, 31
9 a 2 b 2 and 3 c 2, 5 and 7 d 3 and 11 e 19
10 a 3 b 6 c 12 d 1
11 Because 17 is a factor of each of them. If 221 was prime, the only factors would be 1 and 221.
12 There are lots of possible answers. One is 4 and 9. Another is 10 and 21.

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Unit 1 Answers to Practice Book exercises

F Exercise 1.3 More about prime numbers


1 a 88 b 135 c 260

8 11 9 15 26 10

2 4 3 3 3 5 2 13 2 5

2 2

2 a Several trees are possible. The end numbers are always 2, 2, 2, 2, 5. b 24 × 5


3 a 450 b 432 c 484
4 a 2×3 b 2² × 3² × 5 × 7
5 a i 2³ × 3 × 5 ii 25 × 5 b 480 c 40
6 a 12 b 672
7 a 52 b 312
8 24 × 54
9 a The only common factor of two prime numbers is 1. b Multiply the two primes together.
10 a 34 b 2 × 7 × 11 c They have no prime factors in common.

F Exercise 1.4 Powers and roots


1 a 8 b 27 c 64 d 125 e 1000
2 a 16 b 81 c 256 d 10 000
3 a 8 b 6
4 a 0 b −100
5 a 1 and −1 b 6 and −6 c 13 and −13 d 16 and −16 e 19 and −19
− 1 = 52 + 5 + 1
3 3
3 −
1 27 −
1 26 5
6 a = =
= 13 and 3² + 3 + 1 = 9 + 3 + 1 = 13 b Both equal 21. c
2 2 2 4
7 a 64 b 16
8 a 11 b 17 c 20 d 1
9 a 2 b 5 c 3 d 10
10 a 14 641 b 11
11 One of the square roots of 25 is −5. That is less that both the square roots of 16, which are 4 and −4.

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Answers to Practice Book exercises


2 Sequences, expressions and formulae

F Exercise 2.1 Generating sequences


1 a 3, 5, 7 b 2, 0, −2 c 3, 8, 13 d −1, −6, −11 e −10, 10, 30 f −100, −120, −140
2 35. Check students’ explanations, e.g. start with 10 and add 5 five times (or 5 × 5).
3 195. Check students’ explanations, e.g. start with 5 and add 10 nineteen times (or 10 × 19).
4 7. Check students’ explanations, e.g. start with 23 and subtract 4 four times (or −4 × 4).
5 20. Check students’ explanations, e.g. start with 35 and subtract 3 five times (or −3 × 5).
6 40. Check students’ explanations, e.g. start with 20 and add 4 five times (or 4 × 5).
7 10. Check students’ explanations, e.g. the term-to-term rule is ‘add 3’, so start with 16 and subtract 3 twice
(or −3 × 2).
8
Position number 1 2 4 8 50

Term 0 1 3 7 49

9 a 2, 4, 6, 8 b 11, 12, 13, 14 c 5, 7, 9, 11 d 1, 4, 7, 11


10 a i 110 ii 120 b i 100 ii 200
c i 60 ii 110 d i 40 ii 90
11 C. Sequences A, B, C and D all give the correct third term, but only C gives the correct eighth term.

F Exercise 2.2 Finding rules for sequences


1 a i ‘add 3’ iii 3 × position number
b i ‘add 2’ iii 2 × position number + 1
c i ‘add 6’ iii 6 × position number − 3
2 a term = 6 × position number
b term = 3 × position number + 4
c term = 10 × position number − 2
3 a i ‘add 1’ iii term = position number + 1
b i ‘add 1’ iii term = position number + 11
c i ‘add 1’ iii term = position number + 21
4 a term = position number + 4
b term = position number + 24
c term = position number + 124
5 a 7, 10, 13, 16 b ‘add 3’
c Three extra grey squares are added to get the next pattern (or term).
d term = 3 × position number + 4
6 a b term = 2 × position number + 1

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Unit 2 Answers to Practice Book exercises

F Exercise 2.3 Using the nth term


1 a 5, 6, 7; 14 b 2, 4, 6; 20 c 6, 8, 10; 24
d −1, 0, 1; 8 e 3, 6, 9; 30 f 1, 4, 7; 28
2 a 3, 5, 7, 9
b ‘add 2’
c Two extra grey circles are added to get the next pattern (or term).
d term = 2 × position number + 1
e 2nd term = 2 × 2 + 1 = 5; 3rd term = 2 × 3 + 1 = 7; 4th term = 2 × 4 + 1 = 9
3 a Three extra grey squares are added to get the next pattern (or term).
b term = 3 × position number − 2
4 a Check students’ explanations, e.g. he put n + 3, it should have been 3 × n and he should have
put +1 at the end, not +3.
b 3n + 1

F Exercise 2.4 Using functions and mappings


1 a i ii
x 1 2 3 4 x 5 6 7 8
y 6 7 8 9 y 0 1 2 3

b i x 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

y 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

ii x 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

y 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

c i y=x+5 ii y = x − 5
2 a i ii
x 1 2 3 4 x 2 5 10 20

y 7 9 11 13 y 1 7 17 37

iii x 2 6 10 30
iv x 5 10 40 50

y 11 13 15 25 y −2 −1 5 7
x x
b i y = 2x + 5 ii y = 2x − 3 iii y = + 10 iv y = −
3
2 5

x
3 a i ‘subtract 5’ ii ‘divide by 2’ b i y=x−5 ii y =

4 y = 2x + 5. Check students’ explanations.


5 Maha. Check students’ explanations, e.g. all of Maha’s work, but only one of Hassan’s works.
6 y = 5x − 3. Check students’ explanations.

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Answers to Practice Book exercises Unit 2

F Exercise 2.5 Constructing linear expressions


3c 3
1 a c−2 b c + 10 c c
d or c e 2c + 5
2 4 4
n
2 a 2n + 7 b + 6
3

3 a $(4f + r) b $(12f + 3s + 2r)


4 D. Check students’ explanations, e.g. to multiply n + 4 by 3 the n + 4 must be in brackets.
5 2(n – 5)

F Exercise 2.6 Deriving and using formulae


1 a 10 b 2 c −9 d −7
e −2 f 7 g 25 h −2
i −22 j −2 k −5 l 12
2 a 10 b −6 c 25 d −11
e 48 f 501 g 8 h 640
i 6 j −25 k 32 l 100
m 19 n −40
3 a i number of seconds = 60 × number of minutes ii s = 60m
b 1800
4 64
5 8
6 24
7 Neither. Volume of pyramid A = 32 cm3, volume of pyramid B = 32 cm 3.
8 477.25 = 12.55 h + 38

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Answers to Practice Book exercises


3 Place value, ordering and rounding

F Exercise 3.1 Multiplying and dividing by 0.1 and 0.01


1 a i 100 ii one hundred b i 10 000 ii ten thousand
c i 100 000 000 ii one hundred million d i 1 000 000 000 ii one billion
2 a 101 b 106 c 103 d 107
3 a 3.3 b 99.9 c 3 d 0.87
e 0.77 f 0.7 g 7 h 0.07
4 a 50 b 56 c 556 d 5.5
e 500 f 560 g 5560 h 55
5 a 2.7 b 0.279 c 2 d 270
6 a ÷ b × c ÷ d × e ÷ f ×
7 a 0.1 b 0.1 c 0.01 d 0.1 e 0.01 f 0.01
8 D
9 2.34
10 a 0.1, as 0.1 ÷ 0.1 = 1 b Use any number smaller than 1.00.

F Exercise 3.2 Ordering decimals


1 a 3.76, 6.07, 7.36, 7.63 b 3.08, 5.99, 8.03, 8.11
c 19.42, 19.44, 23.05, 23.4 d 1.08, 1.18, 1.3, 2.11
e 45.399, 45.454, 45.545, 45.933 f 5.009, 5.077, 5.183, 50.44
g 31.14, 31.148, 31.41, 31.425 h 7.02, 7.052, 7.2, 7.502
2 a 0.2 cm, 7 mm, 27 mm, 4.3 cm b 19.5 mm, 29 cm, 34.5 cm, 500 mm
c 2000 g, 3 kg, 5550 g, 75.75 kg d 0.9 kg, 1.75 kg, 1800 g, 1975 g
e 100 ml, 0.125 l, 150 ml, 0.2 l f 0.05 km, 999 m, 2750 m, 25 km
g 200 g, 50 000 g, 57.725 kg, 359 999 g, 500 kg, 0.75 t, 850 kg, 1.001 t
3 a < b > c > d > e > f < g < h > i >
j < k > l <
4 a ≠ b = c ≠ d ≠ e = f ≠ g = h ≠ i ≠

5 a 32 km, since it’s much further than the rest. 1.6 m, since it’s only about two steps.
b No. 0.5 km × 10 = 5 km, but her furthest is only 4 km.
c Honesty. All her distances are multiples of 250 m; most of Frank’s are not.
6 1.23, 1.32, 2.13, 2.31, 3.12, 3.21, 12.3, 13.2, 21.3, 23.1, 31.2, 32.1

F Exercise 3.3 Rounding


1 a 10 b 430 c 500 d 300 e 8000
f 35 000 g 70 000 h 350 000 i 800 000
j 37 500 000 k 37 000 000 l 89 000 000
2 a 83 b 60 c 0 d 523.8 e 37.3 f 1.0
g 0.05 h 2.73 i 60.00
3 a B b C c A d B e B f C
4 a No. This is to one decimal place; the correct answer is 17.
b Correct c Correct d No. Forgot to change the 5 to a 6, answer is 46.00.
e No. Did not round up, answer is 40.0.

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Unit 3 Answers to Practice Book exercises

F Exercise 3.4 Adding and subtracting decimals


1 a 14.72 b 65.65 c 13.52 d 21.1
e 6.15 f 86.267 g 33.197 h 22.179
2 a 3.12 b 19.22 c 41.18 d 14.99
e 5.9 f 40.11 g 11.77 h 3.655
3 a 31.7 b 34.7 c 48.45 d 37.78
4 93.24 m
5 Yes, 0.255 m > 0.23 m.

F Exercise 3.5 Dividing decimals


1 a 16.5 b 14.7 c 13.8 d 7.3 e 151.8
f 130.1 g 113.9 h 101.2 i 13.2
2 a 1.10 b 10.97 c 1.10 d 10.93 e 0.11
f 1.09 g 1.08 h 0.11 i 1.10
3 1.95 m
4 0.43 kg
5 7.43 cm
6 2.1 cm
7 $8.23
8 2.34 kg

F Exercise 3.6 Multiplying by decimals


1 a 4.29 × 3 × 10 should be 4.29 × 3 ÷ 10.
4.29 × 3 equals 12.87, not 12.67
b 1.287
2 a 0.08 = 80 ÷ 100 should be 0.08 = 8 ÷ 100.
31 × 80 ÷ 100 should be 31 × 8 ÷ 100.
b 2.48
3 a 0.46 b 0.819 c 2.424 d 2.425 e 0.2425
f 0.3744 g 0.252 h 0.584 i 5.616
4 a 10.8 b 19.2 c 25.2 d 244.8 e 2.5
f 0.26 g 0.72 h 1.4 i 20.3
5 a 7.38 b 1.036 c 1.316 d 0.046
6 0.2 × 43.6 = 8.72, 96.8 × 0.09 = 8.712, 8.72 > 8.712, so 0.2 × 43.6 is larger.
7 0.4 × 8491.3 m = 3396.52 m = 3.396 52 km = 3.4 km to one decimal place

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Answers to Practice Book exercises Unit 3

F Exercise 3.7 Dividing by decimals


1 a (24 × 4) ÷ 10 should be 24 × 10 ÷ 4.
b 60
2 a 0.06 = 0.6 ÷ 100 should be 0.06 = 6 ÷ 100.
(35.4 × 100) ÷ 0.6 should be (35.4 × 100) ÷ 6.
b 590
3 a 60 b 70 c 60 d 60 e 6
f 54 g 39 h 6 i 765
4 a 1100 b 900 c 700 d 300 e 20
f 60 g 7100 h 106 i 3780
5 a 58.8 b 31.8 c 29.38 d 20 433.33
6 12.46

F Exercise 3.8 Estimating and approximating


1 a 100 b 100 c 4 d 15 000
2 a i 600 + 400 = 1000 ii 1013 − 424 = 589
b i 70 − 50 = 20 ii 28 + 46 = 74
c i 900 ÷ 30 = 30 ii 29 × 32 = 928
d i 50 × 20 = 1000 ii 1128 ÷ 24 = 47
3 i $80 ii total trolleys collected = 401, 401 × $0.20 = $80.20 iv 20¢ = $ 51 , 400 × $ 15 = $80
4 a i $128 ii 3.5 × $28 = $98, add call-out fee $30, total $128
iv estimate $30 call-out fee + 3 hours at $30 per hour = $120
b i 1 hour and 15 minutes ii $65 − $30 (call-out fee) = $35, 35 ÷ 28 = 1.25 hours = 1 hour 15 minutes
5 i $2120 ii cash price $17 995, payment plan price = $4995 + 36 × $420 = $4995 + $15 120 = $20 115 and
$20 115 − $17 995 = $2120
iv estimate: first payment $5000 + 40 × $400 = $5000 + $16 000 = $21 000; difference $21 000 − $18 000 = $3000
6 i $19 118.75 ii total muffins = 70 × 5 × 46 = 16 100; payment = 16 100 ÷ 4 × 4.75 = $19 118.75
iv estimate: 400 muffins per week × 40 weeks = 16 000 per year; 16 000 is 4000 batches of 4 muffins;
4000 batches × $5 per batch = $20 000

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Answers to Practice Book exercises


4 Length, mass and capacity

✦ Exercise 4.1 Choosing suitable units


1 a m b cm (or mm) c t d g e ml f l
2 a km2 b cm2 c m3 d cm3
3 a T b F c T d F e F f F
4 No. Check students’ explanations, such as: a car is usually less tall than most adults and 2.5 m is much greater than
most adults’ heights.
5 Yes. Check students’ explanations, such as: some of my friends weigh about this much.
6 No. Check students’ explanations, such as: he could not walk as fast as 10 km per hour.
7 67.5 kg
8 10 kg
9 3–6 kg
10 a 6.5–7.5 m b 11–13 m

✦ Exercise 4.2 Kilometres and miles


1 a T b F c F d T e F
2 No, a kilometre is shorter than a mile.
3 a 10 miles b 32 ÷ 8 = 4, 4 × 5 = 20 miles c 80 ÷ 8 = 10, 10 × 5 = 50 miles
4 a 55 miles b 45 miles c 75 miles d 125 miles
5 a 24 km b 25 ÷ 5 = 5, 5 × 8 = 40 km c 55 ÷ 5 = 11, 11 × 8 = 88 km
6 a 48 km b 480 km c 72 km d 7200 km
7 128 km. 128 km = 80 miles and 75 miles = 120 km.
8 296 km. 180 miles = 288 km and 296 km = 185 miles.
9 a 65 miles b 152 km c, d 105 miles = 168 km, 304 km = 190 miles
10 $11 077.40, possibly rounded to $11 000 or $11 100

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Answers to Practice Book exercises


5 Angles

F Exercise 5.1 Parallel lines


1 a They are vertically opposite angles. b c

°
x
°
y

2 a = 75°, vertically opposite angles; b = 75°, corresponding to the given angle; c = 105°, angles on a straight line;
d = 105°, alternate angle to c.
3 a g and i b c and e
4 a i BEF ii DEB iii EBC b No
5 Lines l and n are parallel because corresponding angles (80° and 100°) are equal. The angles are not the same for
line m so that is not parallel to the other two.
6

t° s°

120°

s = 120°, vertically opposite angles; s = t, corresponding angles; hence t = 120°.


7 Yes. The angle vertically opposite 50° is also 50°. That angle and the 75° add up to 125° and that makes an angle
alternate to the 125° marked.
8
°
a

°
b
°
c
a = c, corresponding angles; b + c = 180°, angles on a straight line; hence a + c = 180°.

F Exercise 5.2 Exploring angle properties


There are alternative explanations for some of the answers in this exercise.
1 120°
2 Each one is 165°.
3 Angle WXV = angle XYZ, corresponding angles; angle VXZ = angle XZY, alternate angles; angles
WXV + VXZ + ZXY = 180°, angles on a straight line; hence angle X + angle Y + angle Z = 180°.
4 Alternate angles; alternate angles; angles on a straight line.
5 Divide the shape into two triangles. Show the angles of the two triangles are the same as the four
angles of the quadrilateral.
6 a = c + d, exterior angle; e = g + h, exterior angle; a + e + f + b = 360°, angles at a point;
hence c + d + g + h + f + b = 360° and these are the angles of PQRS.
7 a The six angles of the two triangles add up to 2 × 180 = 360°. The four angles A, B, C and D must total
less than 360°.
b The 120° angle is the exterior angle of both triangles. Angles at A and D add up to 120° and so do angles
at B and C. Hence A + B + C + D = 240°.

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Unit 5 Answers to Practice Book exercises

F Exercise 5.3 Solving angle problems


There are alternative explanations for many of the answers in this exercise.
1
° °
b c
°
a

a + b = 180°, angles on a straight line, so a = 180 − b; b + c = 180°, angles on a straight line, so c = 180 − b;
hence a and c are equal.
2 a ° ° ° °
x b a y
°
c
°
z

x = a + c, exterior angle; y = b + c, exterior angle; z = b + a, exterior angle; x + y + z = a + c + b + c + b + a =


2(a + b + c) = 2 × 180 = 360°.
b
°
°
x b
°
°
a w

° °
° °
d z y c
a + w = b + x = c + y = d + z = 180°, angles on a straight line; hence ( a + b + c + d) + (w + x + y + z) =
4 × 180 = 720°; but w + x + y + z = 360°, angles of a quadrilateral; Hence a + b + c + d = 720° – 360° = 360°.
3 A

w° x°
B

D y°

C

a x = y, alternate angles; w = z, alternate angles; hence x + w = y + z or angle A = angle C.


b Prove that angle B = angle D in a similar way, by drawing the diagonal BD.
4 a = 110 – 40 = 70°, exterior angle of a triangle; b = 110 – 55 = 55°, exterior angle; c = 110 – 70 = 40°,
exterior angle.
5
x°y°

118° 74°

a = 118 – 74 = 44°, exterior angle; so x = 44°, vertically opposite angle.


b = 74°, alternate angle; y = 180 – 44 – 74 = 62°, angles on a straight line.
6 Divide the hexagon into two quadrilaterals by joining two opposite vertices. Show that the angles of the
quadrilaterals make the angles of the hexagon, so the angle sum is 2 × 360 = 720°.
7
°
a

°
b
°
c

c = a, corresponding angles; c + b = 180°, angles on a straight line; hence a + b = 180°.

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