ASVAB Math Knowledge Practice Test 657230 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.05
Score 0% 61%

Review

1

Simplify (7a)(5ab) + (7a2)(7b).

65% Answer Correctly
84a2b
168ab2
-14ab2
-14a2b

Solution

To multiply monomials, multiply the coefficients (the numbers that come before the variables) of each term, add the exponents of like variables, and multiply the different variables together.

(7a)(5ab) + (7a2)(7b)
(7 x 5)(a x a x b) + (7 x 7)(a2 x b)
(35)(a1+1 x b) + (49)(a2b)
35a2b + 49a2b
84a2b


2

If a = c = 2, b = d = 3, what is the area of this rectangle?

80% Answer Correctly
16
6
21
18

Solution

The area of a rectangle is equal to its length x width:

a = l x w
a = a x b
a = 2 x 3
a = 6


3

Solve for y:
y - 7 = 3 - 3y

59% Answer Correctly
-7
-3
2\(\frac{1}{2}\)
-\(\frac{5}{8}\)

Solution

To solve this equation, repeatedly do the same thing to both sides of the equation until the variable is isolated on one side of the equal sign and the answer on the other.

y - 7 = 3 - 3y
y = 3 - 3y + 7
y + 3y = 3 + 7
4y = 10
y = \( \frac{10}{4} \)
y = 2\(\frac{1}{2}\)


4

When two lines intersect, adjacent angles are __________ (they add up to 180°) and angles across from either other are __________ (they're equal).

61% Answer Correctly

obtuse, acute

acute, obtuse

vertical, supplementary

supplementary, vertical


Solution

Angles around a line add up to 180°. Angles around a point add up to 360°. When two lines intersect, adjacent angles are supplementary (they add up to 180°) and angles across from either other are vertical (they're equal).


5

Which of the following is not required to define the slope-intercept equation for a line?

42% Answer Correctly

slope

y-intercept

\({\Delta y \over \Delta x}\)

x-intercept


Solution

A line on the coordinate grid can be defined by a slope-intercept equation: y = mx + b. For a given value of x, the value of y can be determined given the slope (m) and y-intercept (b) of the line. The slope of a line is change in y over change in x, \({\Delta y \over \Delta x}\), and the y-intercept is the y-coordinate where the line crosses the vertical y-axis.