Use Variables in Real-World Problems

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6th Grade Math › Use Variables in Real-World Problems

Questions 1 - 10
1

A water bottle holds $750$ milliliters. Someone pours the water equally into $p$ identical cups. Let $p$ be the number of cups (a positive whole number). Which expression gives the amount of water in each cup, in milliliters?​

$750-p$

$\dfrac{p}{750}$

$750p$

$\dfrac{750}{p}$

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the example is "750 ml divided equally into p cups" → expression 750/p (p any positive whole number representing cups, 750/p gives amount per cup for any p). The correct choice is C, $\dfrac{750}{p}$, because p represents any positive whole number of cups, and the expression correctly divides the total water by p to find the general amount per cup. A common error is choosing A, $750p$, which multiplies instead of divides, reversing the operation, or B, $750-p$, which subtracts, misinterpreting division as subtraction in sharing equally. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let x=Sarah's starting dollars, let n=number of items, let t=temperature in °C—clear definition prevents confusion). Unknown vs general: unknown specific value (solve for: x in x-12=8 has one answer x=20, specific), general set (n in 5n can be any value: n=1 gives 5, n=10 gives 50, formula works for all n). Writing from context: read problem (identifies relationship: cost per item), choose variable (n for number), write expression/equation (5n for cost, or 5n=20 if total given), define (state what n means). Real-world: variables make formulas general (perimeter 2l+2w works for any rectangle dimensions l,w, not just specific values). Mistakes: undefined variables (forgetting to state what represents), wrong purpose (unknown vs general confused), expression/equation mismatch for problem type, not using variables when should (solving only arithmetically without algebra).

2

A rectangle has length $l$ centimeters and width $w$ centimeters. Which expression represents the perimeter of the rectangle?

$2lw$

$2l+2w$

$l+w$

$lw$

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the example is "rectangle with length l and width w" → expression 2l+2w (l and w any positive numbers representing dimensions, 2l+2w gives perimeter for any l and w). The correct choice is B, $2l+2w$, where l and w are general variables for any dimensions, and the expression models the perimeter by adding twice each side. A common error is choosing A, $lw$, which is area instead of perimeter, or D, $2lw$, which doubles the area. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let l=length in cm, let w=width in cm—clear definition prevents confusion). Real-world: variables make formulas general (perimeter 2l+2w works for any rectangle dimensions l,w, not just specific values).

3

A rope is $24$ feet long and is cut into $6$ equal pieces. Let $p$ be the length of one piece in feet. Which equation represents this situation?​

$p-6=24$

$6p=24$

$24p=6$

$\dfrac{p}{6}=24$

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the example is "24 ft rope cut into 6 equal pieces, p length per piece" → equation 6p = 24 (p is unknown specific length, solve: p=4). The correct choice is C, $6p=24$, because p represents a specific unknown length, and the equation correctly multiplies pieces by p to equal total, allowing solution for p. A common error is choosing B, $\dfrac{p}{6}=24$, which divides incorrectly, or A, $p-6=24$, which subtracts, both using wrong operations for equal division. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let x=Sarah's starting dollars, let n=number of items, let t=temperature in °C—clear definition prevents confusion). Unknown vs general: unknown specific value (solve for: x in x-12=8 has one answer x=20, specific), general set (n in 5n can be any value: n=1 gives 5, n=10 gives 50, formula works for all n). Writing from context: read problem (identifies relationship: cost per item), choose variable (n for number), write expression/equation (5n for cost, or 5n=20 if total given), define (state what n means). Real-world: variables make formulas general (perimeter 2l+2w works for any rectangle dimensions l,w, not just specific values). Mistakes: undefined variables (forgetting to state what represents), wrong purpose (unknown vs general confused), expression/equation mismatch for problem type, not using variables when should (solving only arithmetically without algebra).

4

In science class, the temperature in a terrarium can be any value from $18^\circ\text{C}$ to $30^\circ\text{C}$. Let $t$ be the temperature in degrees Celsius. Which statement correctly describes what values $t$ can take?

$t$ must be a negative number.

$t$ can be any number such that $t\ge 18$ only.

$t$ can be any whole number greater than $30$.

$t$ can be any number such that $18\le t\le 30$.

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the example is "temperature t between 18°C and 30°C" → variable t represents any number in the set [18,30] (general range). The correct choice is B, $t$ can be any number such that $18\le t\le 30$, because t represents any value in that closed interval, correctly describing the general set of possible temperatures without implying specifics or negatives. A common error is choosing A, $t$ can be any whole number greater than 30, which exceeds the upper limit, or C, $t$ must be a negative number, which ignores the positive range, both treating the variable's purpose as unrestricted or wrong in set definition. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let x=Sarah's starting dollars, let n=number of items, let t=temperature in °C—clear definition prevents confusion). Unknown vs general: unknown specific value (solve for: x in x-12=8 has one answer x=20, specific), general set (n in 5n can be any value: n=1 gives 5, n=10 gives 50, formula works for all n). Writing from context: read problem (identifies relationship: cost per item), choose variable (n for number), write expression/equation (5n for cost, or 5n=20 if total given), define (state what n means). Real-world: variables make formulas general (perimeter 2l+2w works for any rectangle dimensions l,w, not just specific values). Mistakes: undefined variables (forgetting to state what represents), wrong purpose (unknown vs general confused), expression/equation mismatch for problem type, not using variables when should (solving only arithmetically without algebra).

5

A rectangle has length $l$ centimeters and width $w$ centimeters. Which expression represents the perimeter of the rectangle?​

$2lw$

$2l+2w$

$lw$

$l+w$

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the example is "rectangle with length l and width w" → expression 2l + 2w (l and w any positive numbers representing dimensions, 2l + 2w gives perimeter for any l and w). The correct choice is B, $2l+2w$, because l and w represent any positive lengths, and the expression correctly adds twice the length and twice the width to give the general perimeter formula. A common error is choosing A, $lw$, which is the area instead of perimeter, confusing the two concepts, or D, $2lw$, which doubles the area formula, misapplying the operations for perimeter. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let x=Sarah's starting dollars, let n=number of items, let t=temperature in °C—clear definition prevents confusion). Unknown vs general: unknown specific value (solve for: x in x-12=8 has one answer x=20, specific), general set (n in 5n can be any value: n=1 gives 5, n=10 gives 50, formula works for all n). Writing from context: read problem (identifies relationship: cost per item), choose variable (n for number), write expression/equation (5n for cost, or 5n=20 if total given), define (state what n means). Real-world: variables make formulas general (perimeter 2l+2w works for any rectangle dimensions l,w, not just specific values). Mistakes: undefined variables (forgetting to state what represents), wrong purpose (unknown vs general confused), expression/equation mismatch for problem type, not using variables when should (solving only arithmetically without algebra).

6

A bus travels at $40$ miles per hour. Let $t$ be the time in hours. Which equation shows the relationship between distance $d$ (in miles) and time $t$?

$t=40d$

$d=\dfrac{40}{t}$

$d=40+t$

$d=40t$

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the example is "bus travels 40 mph for t hours" → equation d = 40t (t any non-negative number representing time, d = 40t gives distance for any t). The correct choice is A, $d=40t$, because t represents any time, and the equation correctly multiplies speed by time to express the general distance formula. A common error is choosing D, $d=\dfrac{40}{t}$, which divides instead, confusing distance with another rate, or B, $t=40d$, which solves for t incorrectly, swapping variables. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let x=Sarah's starting dollars, let n=number of items, let t=temperature in °C—clear definition prevents confusion). Unknown vs general: unknown specific value (solve for: x in x-12=8 has one answer x=20, specific), general set (n in 5n can be any value: n=1 gives 5, n=10 gives 50, formula works for all n). Writing from context: read problem (identifies relationship: cost per item), choose variable (n for number), write expression/equation (5n for cost, or 5n=20 if total given), define (state what n means). Real-world: variables make formulas general (perimeter 2l+2w works for any rectangle dimensions l,w, not just specific values). Mistakes: undefined variables (forgetting to state what represents), wrong purpose (unknown vs general confused), expression/equation mismatch for problem type, not using variables when should (solving only arithmetically without algebra).

7

A class is ordering pizzas. Each pizza costs $10. The class has $80 to spend. Let $p$ be the number of pizzas they can buy. Which equation should you write to find $p$?

$10p=80$

$10+p=80$

$80p=10$

$p=10-80$

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the example is "$10 per pizza, $80 to spend, p pizzas" → equation 10p=80 (p is unknown specific number, solve: p=8). The correct choice is B, $10p=80$, where p is a specific unknown, and the equation multiplies cost per pizza by number to equal budget. A common error is choosing A, $10+p=80$, which adds instead of multiplying, or D, $80p=10$, which reverses. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let p=number of pizzas—clear definition prevents confusion). Unknown vs general: unknown specific value (solve for: p in 10p=80 has one answer p=8, specific). Writing from context: read problem (identifies relationship: cost times number equals total), write equation (10p=80).

8

Two students write variables for different situations:

Situation 1: “A notebook costs $\$4$ each. Let $n$ be the number of notebooks.”

Situation 2: “Lena had some dollars, spent $$6$, and has $\$10$ left. Let $x$ be the dollars Lena had at first.”

Which choice correctly describes the purpose of $n$ and $x$?

$n$ and $x$ both represent any number (including negatives) with no restrictions.

$n$ represents an unknown specific value to solve for, and $x$ represents any non-negative whole number.

$n$ and $x$ both represent unknown specific values to solve for.

$n$ represents any non-negative whole number of notebooks, and $x$ represents an unknown specific starting amount of money.

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the examples are Situation 1: n any non-negative whole number for notebooks (general set), Situation 2: x unknown specific starting money (solve for specific value). The correct choice is B, because it accurately distinguishes n as general for any notebooks and x as specific unknown to solve for, matching the purposes in each context. A common error is choosing A, treating both as specific unknowns, or C, swapping the purposes, both confusing general variables with specific ones. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let x=Sarah's starting dollars, let n=number of items, let t=temperature in °C—clear definition prevents confusion). Unknown vs general: unknown specific value (solve for: x in x-12=8 has one answer x=20, specific), general set (n in 5n can be any value: n=1 gives 5, n=10 gives 50, formula works for all n). Writing from context: read problem (identifies relationship: cost per item), choose variable (n for number), write expression/equation (5n for cost, or 5n=20 if total given), define (state what n means). Real-world: variables make formulas general (perimeter 2l+2w works for any rectangle dimensions l,w, not just specific values). Mistakes: undefined variables (forgetting to state what represents), wrong purpose (unknown vs general confused), expression/equation mismatch for problem type, not using variables when should (solving only arithmetically without algebra).

9

A gym charges a $\$12$ sign-up fee plus $$5$ per visit. Let $v$ be the number of visits. Which expression represents the total cost in dollars?​

$12v+5$

$5(v+12)$

$12+5v$

$\dfrac{12}{5v}$

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the example is "$12 sign-up plus $5 per visit v" → expression 12 + 5v (v any non-negative whole number representing visits, 12 + 5v gives total cost for any v). The correct choice is C, $12+5v$, because v represents any number of visits, and the expression correctly adds the fixed fee to the variable cost per visit for a general total. A common error is choosing A, $5(v+12)$, which distributes incorrectly, or B, $12v+5$, which swaps the coefficients, both misapplying the fixed and variable parts of the cost. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let x=Sarah's starting dollars, let n=number of items, let t=temperature in °C—clear definition prevents confusion). Unknown vs general: unknown specific value (solve for: x in x-12=8 has one answer x=20, specific), general set (n in 5n can be any value: n=1 gives 5, n=10 gives 50, formula works for all n). Writing from context: read problem (identifies relationship: cost per item), choose variable (n for number), write expression/equation (5n for cost, or 5n=20 if total given), define (state what n means). Real-world: variables make formulas general (perimeter 2l+2w works for any rectangle dimensions l,w, not just specific values). Mistakes: undefined variables (forgetting to state what represents), wrong purpose (unknown vs general confused), expression/equation mismatch for problem type, not using variables when should (solving only arithmetically without algebra).

10

A bus travels at $40$ miles per hour. Let $t$ be the time in hours. Which equation shows the relationship between distance $d$ (in miles) and time $t$?​

$d=\dfrac{40}{t}$

$t=40d$

$d=40+t$

$d=40t$

Explanation

This question tests using variables to represent unknowns (specific values to find) or any numbers in sets (general formulas), writing expressions/equations from contexts, understanding variable purpose varies by problem. Variable purposes: (1) unknown specific value (Sarah has x dollars, buys $12 item, has $8 left: x is specific unknown, equation x-12=8 to solve), (2) any number in specified set (cost formula 5n for n items: n represents any non-negative integer {0,1,2,...}, general relationship). Writing: identify what's unknown or general (number of items, person's age, cost), define variable (let n=items, let x=age), write expression (5n for cost) or equation (x-12=8 for Sarah's dollars). Context: "3 years older than Mary age m" → age is m+3 (m represents Mary's unknown age). Here, the example is "bus travels 40 mph for t hours" → equation d = 40t (t any non-negative number representing time, d = 40t gives distance for any t). The correct choice is A, $d=40t$, because t represents any time, and the equation correctly multiplies speed by time to express the general distance formula. A common error is choosing D, $d=\dfrac{40}{t}$, which divides instead, confusing distance with another rate, or B, $t=40d$, which solves for t incorrectly, swapping variables. Defining variables: state what variable represents (let x=Sarah's starting dollars, let n=number of items, let t=temperature in °C—clear definition prevents confusion). Unknown vs general: unknown specific value (solve for: x in x-12=8 has one answer x=20, specific), general set (n in 5n can be any value: n=1 gives 5, n=10 gives 50, formula works for all n). Writing from context: read problem (identifies relationship: cost per item), choose variable (n for number), write expression/equation (5n for cost, or 5n=20 if total given), define (state what n means). Real-world: variables make formulas general (perimeter 2l+2w works for any rectangle dimensions l,w, not just specific values). Mistakes: undefined variables (forgetting to state what represents), wrong purpose (unknown vs general confused), expression/equation mismatch for problem type, not using variables when should (solving only arithmetically without algebra).

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