Michele Conway, Belle Cottingham, Alastair Duncombe and, Amanda George Solutions for Exercise 3: Exercise 1

Author:Michele Conway, Belle Cottingham, Alastair Duncombe & Amanda George

Michele Conway Mathematics Solutions for Exercise - Michele Conway, Belle Cottingham, Alastair Duncombe and, Amanda George Solutions for Exercise 3: Exercise 1

Attempt the free practice questions from Exercise 3: Exercise 1 with hints and solutions to strengthen your understanding. Cambridge Lower Secondary Maths Stage 9: Student's Book solutions are prepared by Experienced Embibe Experts.

Questions from Michele Conway, Belle Cottingham, Alastair Duncombe and, Amanda George Solutions for Exercise 3: Exercise 1 with Hints & Solutions

MEDIUM
Lower Secondary Stage 9
IMPORTANT

Sara thinks that 90>50 as the powers are the same and 9>5.

Matas thinks that 90>9-2 as they both have the same base of 9 but 0>-2.

Explain the mistakes that Sara and Matas have made.

EASY
Lower Secondary Stage 9
IMPORTANT

If 5k =0.04, then k=_____.

EASY
Lower Secondary Stage 9
IMPORTANT

Use numbers -1,-2, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 once only to complete these statements.

4x=26

Find the value of x.

EASY
Lower Secondary Stage 9
IMPORTANT

Use numbers -1,-2, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 once only to complete these statements.

x-2=y-1

Find the values of x & y.

MEDIUM
Lower Secondary Stage 9
IMPORTANT

Use numbers -1,-2, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 once only to complete these statements.

x-2=yz

Find the values of x, y & z.

MEDIUM
Lower Secondary Stage 9
IMPORTANT

Computer memory is measured in bytes. For example, one byte is needed to hold a character of text. A kilobyte is 210=1024 bytes. In computing this is called 1KB.

Use a calculator to write 2KB values as a power of 2 kilobytes.

MEDIUM
Lower Secondary Stage 9
IMPORTANT

Computer memory is measured in bytes. For example, one byte is needed to hold a character of text. A kilobyte is 210=1024 bytes. In computing this is called 1KB.

Use a calculator to write 1KB values as a power of 2 kilobytes.

MEDIUM
Lower Secondary Stage 9
IMPORTANT

Computer memory is measured in bytes. For example, one byte is needed to hold a character of text. A kilobyte is 210=1024 bytes. In computing this is called 1KB.

Use a calculator to write 0.5 KB values as a power of 2 kilobytes.