ISEE Lower Level Quantitative Reasoning › How to add
Zack ate pieces of chocolate at lunch and
pieces of chocolate after dinner. How many pieces did he eat?
This is an addition problem because we want to know how many total pieces of chocolate Zack ate all together. We can add or
If I have quarter and
nickels, how many cents do I have?
Each quarter is worth and each nickel is worth
.
We have one quarter and three nickels.
If I have quarter and
pennies, how many cents do I have?
Each quarter is worth and each penny is worth
.
We have one quarters and three pennies.
If I have pennies and
quarters, how many cents do I have?
Each penny is worth and each quarter is worth
We have three pennies and three quarters.
If I have nickels and
dimes, how many cents do I have?
Each nickel is worth and each dime is worth
.
We have four nickels and three dimes.
The fence is centimeters taller than the grill. The grill is
centimeters. How tall is the fence?
centimeters
centimeters
centimeters
centimeters
centimeters
This is an addition problem because we have the difference in height from the question. The grill is centimeters tall and fence is
centimeters taller than the grill,
is our difference. We can add our difference to the grill's height to find out how tall the fence is.
David is inches taller than Alison. Alison is
inches tall. How tall is David?
inches
inches
inches
inches
inches
This is an addition problem because we have the difference in height from the question. Alison is inches tall and David is
inches taller than her,
is our difference. We can add our difference to Alison's height to find out how tall David is.
The pet store has tanks for frogs. The first tank has
frogs and the second tank has
frogs. How many total frogs does the pet store have?
This is an addition problem because we want to know how many total frogs the pet store has all together. We can either add or
If I have quarters and
pennies, how many cents do I have?
Each quarter is worth and each penny is worth
.
We have three quarters and three pennies.
Suzzy finds coins under her couch,
in a drawer, and
sitting out on the table. How many total coins does she have?
This is an addition problem because we want to know how many total coins Suzzy found all together. We can add the numbers in any order,