CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Answers The questions and example answers that appear in this resource were written by the author. In examination, the way marks would be awarded to answers like these may be different. Chapter 1 Exercise 1.1 Exercise 1.3 1 Student’s own tables. 1 2 Various answers are possible; these are examples: a 12 . 11 b x<5 c 4x = 12 ∴ x = 3 ___ d√25 = 5 e 32 ≠ 3 × 2 f k>2 g 4,5 a b c 2, 3, 5, 7 53, 59 97, 101, 103 2 a b c d e f g h 2×2×3×3 5 × 13 2×2×2×2×2×2 2×2×3×7 2×2×2×2×5 2×2×2×5×5×5 2 × 5 × 127 13 × 151 3 a b c d e f g h LCM = 378, HCF = 1 LCM = 255, HCF = 5 LCM = 864, HCF = 3 LCM = 848, HCF = 1 LCM = 24 264, HCF = 2 LCM = 2574, HCF = 6 LCM = 35 200, HCF = 2 LCM = 17 325, HCF = 5 3 4 −2, 0, −7, −32, __ 1 2 1 b __ 2 c 3, 5, 23, 29 d 1, 9, 4, 25 a a 121, 144, 169, 196, … 1 , __ b __ 1 , __ 2 , __ 2 , etc. 4 6 7 9 c 83, 89, 97, 101, … d 2, 3, 5, 7 5 a b 365 289 1 703 473 212 Exercise 1.4 Exercise 1.2 1 1 a d g 18 24 72 b e h 36 36 96 c f 90 24 2 a d g 6 3 12 b e h 18 10 50 c f 9 1 3 18 metres 4 120 shoppers 5 20 students 6 14 cm, 165 squares 1 −3 °C 2 a −2 °C b −9 °C c −12 °C 3 a d 4 −2 b e 7 −3 c −1 4 a d −3 0 b −26 c −14 5 a d −5 −9 b e 41 16 c −78 6 a b 80.34 to the euro −5.5 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Exercise 1.5 1 2 a d g 9 625 5832 b e h 324 216 42 875 c f 441 3375 a d g 11 11 56 b e h 8 36 27 c f i 21 51 6 3 square: 121, 144, 169, 196, 225, 256, 289 cube: 125, 216 4 square: 1, 49, 64, 256, 676, 625 cube: 1, 64 5 a d 6 7 8 9 7 10 3 __ g 4 j 5 b e 5 3 c f 14 25 h 5 i 2 k l 12 c 65 536 a 64 b 3 1 __ 4 2401 d 1728 e 8000 f 100 000 g 1954 h 155 i 1028 j 4096 1 a __ 4 1 d ___ 5 2 1 g ___ 3 4 1 j ____ 12 4 1 b __ 5 1 e ___ 3 3 1 h ___ 8 6 1 c __ 8 1 f ___ 2 5 1 i ____ 23 3 a d g j 2−1 2−3 11−2 3−1 b e h 6−1 3−3 4−3 c f i 3−2 2−4 5−1 a d g j m p 38 32 4−1 412 109 46 b e h k n 102 2−7 103 36 10−4 c f i l o 33 31 1 42 21 Exercise 1.6 1 2 a d g 26 15.66 3.83 b e h 66 3.39 2.15 c f i 25 2.44 1.76 j m p s v k n q 2.79 8.04 304.82 4.03 3.90 l o r u x 7.82 1.09 94.78 6.87 −19.10 t w 0.21 8.78 0.63 6.61 20.19 Exercise 1.7 1 a b c d e f g h i i i i i i i i ii ii ii ii ii ii ii ii 2 a c 53 200 17.4 b d 713 000 0.00728 3 a c e g 36 12 000 430 000 0.0046 b d f h 5.2 0.0088 120 10 4 a c 4 × 5 = 20 1000 × 7 = 7000 b d 70 × 5 = 350 42 ÷ 6 = 7 5 a 20 b c 12 5.65 9.88 12.87 0.01 10.10 45.44 14.00 26.00 3 iii iii iii iii iii iii iii iii 5.7 9.9 12.9 0.0 10.1 45.4 14.0 26.0 d 6 10 13 0 10 45 14 26 243 Review exercise 1 24, −12, 0, −15, −17 2 15, 30, 45, 60, 75 3 60 4 a b c 5 14 6 a d g 5 145 5 b e h 5 138 10 c f 64 −168 7 a d 16.07 11.01 b e 9.79 0.12 c f 13.51 −7.74 8 a d g 30 3−1 38 b e h 33 32 3−4 c f 3−2 30 2×2×7×7 3 × 3 × 5 × 41 2×2×3×3×5×7×7 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 9 a d 10 a d 37 40 b 26 c 2−1 1240 31.5 b 0.765 c 0.0238 11 Yes (80 × 80) 3 ___ 12 Yes, table sides are √1.4 = 1.18 metres or 118 cm long. Alternatively, area of cloth = 1.44 m2 and this is greater than the table area. 13 1.5 metres 14 a 40 b 6 c 22 d 72 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 2 Exercise 2.4 Exercise 2.1 1 a 7x c 5x − 2 2 a p+5 3 x a $ __ 3 6x x 2x 2x ($ = ___ ) b $ __ , $ ___ and $ ___ 3 9 9 9 1 b b x + 12 x d 2x − __ 3 p−4 c 4p 2 Exercise 2.2 1 2 3 a d g j m p 20 25 75 15 15 7.5 b e h k n 60 −50 100 2 3 c f i l o 11 9 9 16 15 a d g −10 −23 −1000 b e h −10 −26 8000 c f 12 28 a c 54 cm2 110.25 cm2 b d 1.875 m2 8 cm2 3 2 4 a b c d e f g h b e h 8ab −30mn −4x3y c f i k 3b l 20y m ____ 3x n 3x ____ y 2 p ___ 2 x s ___ 6y 15a 2 q _____ 4 27x 2 t _____ 10 12xy −6x 6xy3 1 j ___ 4y 2 y x2 6x2y 4b 9m ___ 4 2y 2 o ____ x 2 − 14y r _____ 5 b d f h j l b d f h 2x − 8 −9 + 6x 2x − x2 3x2 − 9x −x + 2 4x −2x2 xy − 3x −3x + 2 3x + 1 x2 + x + 2 b x2 + xy x 3y __ + ___ 2 2 2 −5x − 6x d f 3x2 − 6x Exercise 2.5 1 a d g 2 2x 2 a ____ 3 2y c ___ 3 3x −2y −5 ______ 3 or 2 5 e ________ 2 2x y 7 x g 7x−1 or __ 2m + 6n 6x + 2 a2 + 6a − 5 y2 − 5y − 2 3x2 − 2x + 3 4x2y − 2xy 5ab − 4ac 4x2 + 5x − y − 5 a d g 3x + 6 −2x − 6 x2 + 3x −2x − 2x2 −4x + 10x2 4x2 − 4xy 2x2 − 4x −2x − 2 −2x2 + 6x x3 − 2x2 − x x a x 2 + __ 2 c −8x3 + 4x2 + 2x e Exercise 2.3 1 a c e g i k a c e g 3 x11 6x8 2x3y2 b e h c f y13 x5y4 −27x12 b 3x2 d x −1 1 ____ or ___ 2 2x f 2 x 2z 3 2x2y−3z or _____ y 4x 4xy−1 or ___ y h x y −1 ___ x i _____ or 3 3y j − 3x z 3 k _______ 2 l 1 or __ a ___ 1 3 2 9 x c ___ 2y 1 or ________ e ______ 1 ( 8xy) 2 64 x 2y 2 3 b ___3 x 1 d ___ xy g y x 2 i ___2 y 8x 7 k ____3 9y 6x3 48x4 f x 3 x3y−2 or ___ 2 y 5y−6 5 x x ____6 or _____ 2 2 y 16x2y2 x 3 h ___4 y ___ y 2 j 6 x 4x 3 l ____2 7y Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 4 5 a d g j x 6 a ___2 y 7 b −8x9 e −x9y18 h 16x5 k 3 yx y 2 c f i l b 2 x 2 c ____ 3y f x7y 3 i x7y 3x4y 50x 3 g _____ 27y 8x 10y 3 j _______ 3 x 8 a ___2 y 1 d ___ x 9 x 16 k ____ y 16 x 5 b ___4 y y 16 e ____ x 22 16 8 c _____ x 5y 7 y 22 f ____4 2x a d b e c f xy10 x=3 x=4 x=5 x = −5 Review exercise 1 5 16x4 x12y8 1 −8x6 5x 9 e ____3 2y 49 h _______ 25x 3y d 6 x6 x27 −2x3y3 x16y4 a x + 12 b c 5x d e 4x f g 12 − x h x−4 x __ 3 x __ 4 x3 − x l 2 a −6 b 24 c 3 a −2 b c d 7 e 2 __ 3 −4 − 14 ____ 9 5 4 a d 630 12 b 44 c 150 5 a c e g i 2y + 10 12x − 8y 20x − 14y + 6z 2x + 7 15x − 6y b d f h 4y − 4 xy + 2x 6x2 + 2x 4x + 18 6 a 9a + b b x2 + 3x − 2 c −4a4b + 6a2b3 d −7x + 4 5y 10x2 − ___ 2 2 6x + 15x − 8 −x3 + 3x2 − x + 5 3125x y __________ 4 2 x=4 x = −3 4x e ___ y f 7 a c b d 8 5x 5 a ____ 6 b d 64x 9 e _____ y 15 11x − 3 −2x2 + 5x + 12 16x4y8 9x 4 g ____3 4y h 15 1 c ___ x 4 f x9y8 xy 6 ____ 2 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 3 Exercise 3.1 1 a c e obtuse, 112° right, 90° obtuse, 125° b d f 2 a b d i 90° ii 180° 30° c 360° quarter to one or 12:45 acute, 32° reflex, 279° reflex, 193° 3 No. If the acute angle is <45° it will produce an acute or right angle. 4 Yes. The smallest obtuse angle is .90° and the largest is ,180°. Halving will give angles between (but not equal to) 45° and 90°, all of which are acute. a 45° b 28° c (90 − x)° d x° 5 6 a c e g 7 z = 65° (angles on line); y = 65° (VO); x = 25° (comp angle to z) 8 angle QON = 48° (85° − 37°), so a = 48° (VO) 9 a b 135° 76° x° (90 − x)° b d f h b c d e f 6 f 1 x = 47° (alt angles); y = 81° (angles in triangle BEF or on st line); z = 52° (alt angles) x = 72° (angle BFE = 72°, then alt angles); y = 43° (angles in triangle BCJ ) x = 45° (angles round a point); y = 90° (co-int angles) a b c d e f g h i j k angle EOD = 41° (angles on line), so x = 41° (VO) x = 20° (angles round point) x = 68° (angle BFG = 68°, angles on line, then alt angles) x = 85° (co-int angles); y = 72° (alt angles) x = 99° (co-int angles); y = 123° (angle ABF = 123°, co-int angles then VO) x = 15° (co-int angles) x = 60° (co-int angles) x = 45° (angle STQ corr angles then VO) x = 77.5° and y = 75° (co-int angles) x = 90° (angle ECD and angle ACD co-int angles then angles round as point) x = 18° (angle DFE co-int with angle CDF then angle BFE co-int with angle ABF, then subtract DFE from BFE ) Exercise 3.2 90° (180 − x)° (90 + x)° (220 − 2x)° 10 angle HGB = 143° (angles on line); angle AGF = 143° (VO); angle BGF = 37° (VO); angle DFG = 143° (corr angles); angle CFG = 37° (corr angles); angle CFE = 143° (VO); angle EFD = 37° (VO) 11 a 12 a b c d e l 2 a b c d e f 74° (angles in triangle) 103° (angles in triangle) 58° (ext angle equals sum int opps) 51° (ext angle equals sum int opps) 21° (ext angle equals sum int opps) 68° (ext angle equals sum int opps) 53° (base angles isosceles) 60° (equilateral triangle) x = 58° (base angles isosceles and angles in triangle); y = 26° (ext angle equals sum int opps) x = 33° (base angles isosceles then ext angles equals sum int opps) x = 45° (co-int angles then angles in triangle) x = 45° (base angles isosceles); y = 75° (base angles isosceles) x = 36; so A = 36° and B = 72° x = 40; so A = 80°; B = 40° and angle ACD = 120° x = 60° x = 72° x = 60; so R = 60° and angle RTS = 120° x = 110° Exercise 3.3 1 a b c d e f g square, rhombus rectangle, square square, rectangle square, rectangle, rhombus, parallelogram square, rectangle square, rectangle, parallelogram, rhombus square, rhombus, kite Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 2 3 Review exercise h i rhombus, square, kite rhombus, square, kite a c e f x = 69° b x = 64° x = 52° d x = 115° x = 30°; 2x = 60°; 3x = 90° a = 44°; b = 68°; c = 44°; d = e = 68° 1 b c A − Kite B − Trapezium C − Rhombus D − Parallelogram E − Square F − Rectangle d e f g Exercise 3.4 1 a 60° b 720° c 120° 2 a 1080° b 1440° c 2340° 3 900 ____ = 128.57° 4 20 sides 5 a h 2 7 165.6° 360 _____ = 25sides 14.4 b Exercise 3.5 a c e g i b d f h j circumference radius chord segment sector diameter arc semicircle segment tangent Exercise 3.6 1 a b 3 Student’s own diagram 3 Student’s own diagram 4 Scalene 5 a 5 He’s drawn the arcs using the length of AC instead of the lengths of the other two given sides. B 7 cm a x = 113° b x = 41° c x = 89° d x = 66° e x = 74°; y = 106°; z = 46° f x = 38°; y = 104° g x = 110°; y = 124° h x = 40°; y = 70°; z = 70° a x = 60 + 60 + 120 = 240° b x = 90 + 90 + 135 = 315° 7 8 cm radius chord diameter b OA, OB, OC, OD c 24.8 cm d Student’s own diagram AB, AC and BC are radii of the circles, so they must measure half the diameter, in other words, 4.5 cm long. Use that measurement to construct the equilateral triangle. C 4.5 cm 4.5 cm 3 cm A A When two parallel lines are cut by a transversal, the alternate angles are formed inside the parallel lines, on opposite sides of the transversal A triangle with two equal sides A quadrilateral with two pairs of adjacent sides equal in length A quadrilateral with four equal sides and opposite sides parallel to each other A many-sided shape with all sides equal and all interior angles equal An eight-sided shape The distance around the perimeter of a circle A straight line that crosses a pair of parallel lines 4 a i ii iii Either B A D E C or B D A E C You can start with any of the sides and draw the arcs in different order. 2 b a 4.5 cm B C Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 4 Exercise 4.1 f Stem 1 eye colour, hair colour 2 6 2 grade, height, shoe size, mass, number of brothers/sisters 3 8 4 0245689 3 shoe size, number of brothers/sisters 5 1234444555566777899 6 013335577799 7 013688 8 028 9 1 4 height, mass 5 possible answers include: eye colour, hair colour – observation; height, mass – measured; grade, shoe size, number of siblings – survey, questionnaire Key: 2 | 6 = 26 per cent Exercise 4.2 1 2 Mark a b 3 a Tally Frequency | 1 2 || 2 3 || 2 4 | | | | 5 Hair colour 5 | | | | | | | | 9 6 | | | | | | 7 7 | | | | | 6 8 ||| 3 9 ||| 3 10 || 2 4 a Eye colour Brown Blue Green Blonde 0 0 1 Brown 3 0 0 Black 3 1 2 b Score 1 2 3 4 5 6 Frequency 5 8 7 7 7 6 c 5 a The scores are fairly similar for even a low number of throws, so the dice is probably fair. Score Score Frequency b e The actual data values are given, so you can calculate exact mode, median and range. You can also see the shape of the distribution of the data quite clearly. 1 Frequency 8 Leaf 0–29 30–39 40–49 50–59 1 1 7 19 60–69 70–79 80–100 12 6 Stem Leaf 0 1257 1 22689 2 0349 3 1113579 4 138 5 1 Key: 0 | 1 = 1 car, 1 | 2 = 12 cars 4 10 c 2 d 26 There are very few marks at the low and high end of the scale. Answers may vary. For example: All the students with brown hair have brown eyes. There are no blonde students with brown eyes. Most students have black hair. And so on, based on the data. Student’s own answer with a reason. b 51 cars Exercise 4.3 1 a b pictogram number of students in each year group in a school Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK c d e f g 2 30 students half a stick figure 225 Year 11; 285 rounded; unlikely the year groups will all be multiples of 15 6 7 Student’s own chart, for example: Time spent on social media Key Alain =1hr Li Zayn David 3 a b d e f g 4 The number of students in Grade 10 whose home language is Bahasa and Chinese. 18 c 30 The favourite sports of students in Grade 10, separated by class. athletics athletics 9 a Pie chart with sector sizes: A – 18°; B – 43°; C – 148°; D – 90°; E or lower – 61° b 6 a b c d e f g 29.6° C April–November northern hemisphere no 10 mm February There is little or no rain. c 1 a b c survey or questionnaire discrete; you cannot have half a child quantitative; it can be counted d No. of children in family Tally Frequency 0 | | | | | | Charts can be drawn vertically or horizontally. 1 | | | | | | | | 10 a 2 | | | | | | | | | 11 3 | | | | | | | | | | 12 Bread 4 | | | | 5 5 | | | | 2 Hot porridge 6 | 1 Breakfast food chosen e 0 4 8 f 12 16 20 24 28 32 Frequency b Breakfast food chosen 2 Bread a 10A Leaf Key Hot porridge 0 4 8 57 9 15 479 7665 16 1223446 886554 17 11 7543 18 0 12 16 20 24 28 32 Key: 9 | 15 = 159 cm and 14 | 5 = 145 cm Frequency a d cars b 17% handcarts and bicycles 10B Leaf Stem 14 Grade 11 Cereal 7 Pie chart with sector sizes: 0 − 53°; 1 − 75°; 2 − 83°; 3 − 90°; 4 − 37°; 5 − 15°; 6 − 7° The number of families that have three or fewer children is five times greater than the number of families with four or more children. Grade 10 9 C Review exercise Cereal 5 d 50 c 20 b 13 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK c 3 Student’s own pictogram 4 a b c d e f g 10 The heights in 10A are clustered more towards the higher end, suggesting they are taller (as a group) than the students in 10B. Compound bar chart It shows how many people, out of every 100, have a mobile phone and how many have a land line phone. No. The figures are percentages. Canada, USA and Denmark Germany, UK, Sweden and Italy Denmark Student’s opinion with reason 5 a b c d e Downtown $4750 $2500 $3750 15% 6 a The value drops very quickly in the first year. After that the value drops more steadily and slowly b $3600 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 5 35 j ___ 6 18 m ___ 65 −5 p ___ 6 Exercise 5.1 1 2 1 a __ 2 __ d 1 4 __ g 1 5 3 __ j 8 b a d g j b e h 33 65 117 63 e h __ 1 3 __ 1 4 __ 2 3 300 168 48 c __ 1 f __ 1 i 3 __ c f i 25 55 104 3 8 4 13 ___ s 21 5 a 6 10 d ___ 27 38 a ___ 9 19 d ___ 4 Exercise 5.2 1 2 3 4 11 25 ___ 8 59 e ___ 5 25 h ___ 9 13 a ___ 6 93 d ___ 10 59 g ___ 4 − 25 j ____ 9 1 a ___ 25 9 d ___ 20 30 g ___ 91 9 j ___ 44 72 m ___ 5 108 a ____ 5 28 d ___ 5 b e g 120 h j 3 k 11 a ___ 20 13 d ___ 24 19 g ___ 21 c f i 17 ___ 11 15 ___ 4 28 ___ 3 24 183 ____ 56 41 n ___ 40 − 10 q ____ 3 43 ___ t 12 96 b ___ 7 10 e ___ 9 4 b __ 5 5 e ___ 12 11 h ____ 170 k l o 161 ____ 20 29 ___ 21 r − 26 ____ c 7 ___ 96 9 ___ 14 39 ___ 7 215 ____ 72 187 ____ 9 f c f g 0 7 a $525 8 a b 300 450 per day × 5 days = 2250 tiles per week b i 9 $375 2 9 ___ 25 b ___ 1 10 16 e ___ 99 6 h ___ 25 1 k __ 2 21 n ___ 4 63 b ___ 13 b e h c __ 2 5 f ___ 4 11 15 ___ i 28 3 l ___ 25 1 o __ 6 c 14 3 f 6 ___ 3 ___ 14 233 ____ 50 11 ___ 30 ___ 4 15 16 ___ 15 i 72 19 7 l __ 4 c ___ 4 45 19 f ___ 60 13 ___ i 24 Exercise 5.3 1 a d g j b e h 67% 29.8% 47% c f i 16.7% 30% 112% 2 1 a __ 4 1 d __ 8 3 __ g 5 b __ 4 c 9 ___ f 49 ___ a 60 kg b $24 c d g j 55 ml 258 km 475 m3 e h k $64 0.2 grams $2 f i l 150 litres $19.50 $2.08 4.2 kg 4 a d 40% 40% b e 2% 31.25% c 54% 5 a d g +20% +3.3% +2566.7% b e −10% −28.3% c f +53.3% +33.3% 3 50% 62.5% 4% 207% e h 5 __ 1 2 ___ 11 50 10 50 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 6 a d $54.72 $40 236 b e $945 $98.55 c f $32.28 $99.68 7 a d $58.48 $19 882 b e $520 $76.93 c f $83.16 $45.24 8 28 595 tickets 9 1800 shares 10 $129 375 4 a c e g i 1.2 × 1031 3.375 × 1036 2 × 1026 1.2 × 102 3 × 10−8 b d f h 4.5 × 1011 1.32 × 10−11 2.67 × 105 2 × 10−3 5 a the Sun b 6.051 × 106 6 a b 500 seconds = 5 × 102 seconds 19 166.67 seconds = 1.92 × 104 seconds 11 21.95% 12 $15 696 Review exercise 13 $6228 1 14 2.5 g 7 15 ___ = 28%increase, so $7 more is better 2 25 16 a b 76 droplets 380 000 virus particles 3 Exercise 5.4 1 2 3 12 a c e g i k 4.5× 104 8 × 10 4.19 × 106 6.5 × 10−3 4.5 × 10−4 6.75 × 10−3 b d f h j l 8 × 105 2.345 × 106 3.2 × 1010 9 × 10−3 8 × 10−7 4.5 × 10−10 4 a c e g i 2500 426 500 0.00000915 0.000028 0.00245 b d f h 39 000 0.00001045 0.000000001 94 000 000 a c e g i 5.62 × 1021 1.28 × 10−14 1.58 × 10−20 1.98 × 1012 2.29 × 108 b d f h 6.56 × 10−17 1.44 × 1013 5.04 × 1018 1.52 × 1017 5 4 a __ 5 __ a 1 6 13 ___ d 15 71 g ___ 6 1 __ 4 b 63 e 3 ___ h 44 361 ____ 16 a b 8% b __ 2 c __ 2 c 5 __ f 31 ___ i 334 ____ 5% c 63.33% 3 3 3 48 45 2.67% 6 a 24.6 kg b 0.5 litres c $70 7 a 12.5% b 33.33% c 34% 8 $103.50 9 $37.40 b 0.625% 10 67.7% 11 a 97.5% 12 2940 metres 13 a b 5.9 × 109 km 5.753 × 109 km Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 6 Exercise 6.1 1 2 a c e g i k x = 16 x=8 x=7 x = −16 x = −9 x = 13 b d f h j l x = 24 x = 54 x = −2 x = −60 x = −15 x = 15 a x=8 b x = 15 c 5 x = − __ = −2 __ 1 2 2 x = −4 d x = −10 f x = −12 e 3 4 Exercise 6.2 a x=3 b 9 1 __ __ c x= = 4 d 2 2 3 36 18 f e x = ___ = ___ = 3 __ 5 5 10 g x=2 h i x=4 j 5 x=5 a b x = −2 d 4 = 1 __ 1 x = __ 1 = __ x 3 2 a c e g i k m o 12(x + 4) 4(a − 4) 4(x − 5) x(3 − y) 3(x − 5y) 6(2x − 3) 3b(3a − 4c) 2x(7 − 13y) b d f h j l n p 2(1 + 4y) 2(x − 6) 8(2a − 1) a(b + 5) 8(a + 3) 8xz(3y − 1) 2y(3x − 2z) −7x2(2 + x3) 3 a x(x + 8) b a(12 − a) c x(9x + 4) d 2x(11 − 8x) e 2b(3ab + 4) f 18xy(1 − 2x) g 3x(2 − 3x) h 2xy2(7x − 3) i 3abc2(3c −ab) j x(4x − 7y) k b2(3a − 4c) l 7ab(2a − 3b) a c e g i k (3 + y)(x + 4) (a + 2b)(3 − 2a) (2 − y)(x + 1) (2 − y)(9 + x) (x − 6)(3x − 5) (2x + 3)(3x + y) b d f h j l (y − 3)(x + 5) (2a − b)(4a − 3) (x − 3)(x + 4) (2b − c)(4a + 1) (x − y)(x − 2) (x − y)(4 − 3x) b a = 2c + 3b x = −5 3 1 x = − __ = −1 __ 2 2 x=3 3 3 a 4xy xy2z x=4 l 8 c x = − __ = −2 __ 2 a d g j x=4 1 11 = 5 __ k x = ___ 2 2 x = 10 1 3 4 3 e x=8 f g x = −4 h 4 x = −9 i x = −10 j x = −13 k x = −34 l 7 20 x = ___ = 1 ___ 13 13 Exercise 6.3 a x = 18 b x = 27 1 c x = 24 d x = −44 e x = 17 f x = 29 g x = 16 h i x = −1 2 m = __ D k c = y − mx x = 23 3 P+c b = ______ a j 1 x = __ 2 4 a−c b = ___ x k x = − __ 1 3 3 16 ___ m x = = 1 ___ 13 13 l x=9 5 a n x = 10 o p 1 −11 = −5 __ x = ____ 2 2 x = 42 a=c−b 8 3y pq ab3 c f i l 5 5ab 7ab 3xy c+d d−c c a = ____ d a = ____ b b e a = bc − d (or a = −d + bc) f a = d + bc de − c h a = ____ b 13 b e h k g i cd − b a = _____ 2 e+d a = ____ bc Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK ef − d j a = ____ bc 6 7 8 k c ( f − de) a = ________ b d(e − c) d l a = ________ m a = __ c + b b c n a = __ − 2b d a w = __ P − l b w = 35.5 cm 2 C b 9 cm c 46 cm a r = ___ 2π 2A − a; b = 3.8 cm b = ___ h 2 m+r a x = _____ np b mq − p x = ______ n 3 a c e g 4(x − 2) −2(x + 2) 7xy(2xy + 1) (4 + 3x)(x − 3) b d f h 3(4x − y) 3x( y − 8) (x − y)(2 + x) 4x(x + y)(x − 2) 4 a b 4(x − 7) = 4x − 28 2x(x + 9) = 2x2 + 18x c d 4x(4x + 3y) = 16x2 + 12xy 19x(x + 2y) = 19x2 + 38xy Review exercise 1 14 a c e g x = −3 x=9 x=2 x = 1.5 b d f h x = −6 x = −6 x = −13 x=5 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Exercise 7.2 Chapter 7 Exercise 7.1 1 2 a c e 120 mm 128 mm 36.2 cm b d f 45 cm 98 mm 233 mm a c e g 15.71 metres 53.99 mm 18.85 metres 24.38 cm b d f h 43.98 cm 21.57 metres 150.80 mm 23.00 cm 3 90 metres 4 164 × 45.50 = $7462 5 9 cm each 6 about 88 cm 7 a 63π cm b 70π cm 8 a c e g i k m 841 mm2 332.5 cm2 186 cm2 150 cm2 71 cm2 5.76 m2 243 cm2 b d f h j l 406 m2 1.53 m2 399 cm2 59.5 cm2 2296 mm2 7261.92 cm2 a c e 7853.98 mm2 7696.90 mm2 17.45 cm2 b d 2290.22 cm2 18.10 m2 10 a c e g i 288 cm2 373.5 cm2 366 cm2 272.97 cm2 5640.43 cm2 b d f h 82 cm2 581.5 cm2 39 cm2 4000 cm2 11 a c e 30 cm2 36.4 cm2 720 cm2 b d f 90 cm2 61.2 cm2 600 + 625π cm2 b 47.12 cm b 266.67π cm2 9 1 a b c d cube cuboid square-based pyramid octahedron 2 a b c cuboid triangular prism cylinder 3 The following are examples; there are other possible nets. a b 12 11.1 m2 13 70 mm = 7 cm 14 a c 43.98 mm 8.38 mm 15 6671.70 km 16 a c 24π cm2 (81π − 162) mm2 17 61.4 cm2 15 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK c 7 a Volume = 480 cm3 Surface area = 376 cm2 b Volume = 66 m3 Surface area = 110 m2 c Volume = 4904.78 mm3 Surface area = 1901.59 mm3 8 332.5 cm3 9 a b 224 m3 44 10 67.5π m3 d 11 Various answers – for example: Volume (mm3) 64 000 64 000 64 000 64 000 Length (mm) 80 Breadth (mm) Height (mm) 50 100 50 40 64 80 80 20 20 8 16 Review exercise Exercise 7.3 a 2 4.55 cm 3 a c e g 346.4 cm2 2000 mm2 40 cm2 106 cm2 175.93 cm2 1 a c 2.56 mm2 13.5 cm2 b d 523.2 m2 402.12 mm2 2 a 384 cm2 b 8 cm 4 15 metres 3 a c 340 cm2 4 tins b 153 000 cm2 5 243 cm2 6 4 a c e g 90 000 mm3 20 420.35 mm3 960 cm3 1800 cm3 b d f h 60 cm3 1120 cm3 5.76 m3 1.95 m3 a b c d 7 64 5 a c 5.28 cm3 b 33 510.32 m3 8 a b c 9 37.7 cm3 6 16 1 25.2 cm3 56 cm3 b 66.0 cm b d f 33 000 mm2 80 cm2 35 cm2 cuboid B 14 265.48 mm3 student’s own diagram cylinder 7539.82 mm2, cuboid 9000 mm2 180π cm3 565.49 cm3 Radius of base = 3 cm, so C = 6π cm Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 8 Exercise 8.1 Exercise 8.2 9 17 3 , green = ___ red = ___ , white = ___ 25 50 10 1 b 30% c 1 d __ 3 2 a A: 0.61, B: 0.22, C: 0.11, D: 0.05, E: 0.01 b i highly likely ii unlikely iii highly unlikely 1 3 a a b c 53.89% 77.22% Yes, 53.89 rounds down to 50% 4 a red, blue 5 a 6 1 1 c __ b __ 2 2 a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or 10 1 b __ 2 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 1 i ___ 10 3 iv ___ 10 3 vii ___ 10 2 7 a __ 5 1 8 a __ 4 7 ___ 9 a 20 3 d ___ 10 13 10 ___ 40 0.73 11 ii b yes d 0 ix 17 0.12 2000 HH HT T TH TT 2 0.88 1 c __ 2 2 __ c 5 c 1 b __ 4 Yellow a b 3 0.24 1 2 3 1 1, 1 1, 2 1, 3 2 2, 1 2, 2 2, 3 3 3, 1 3, 2 3, 3 1 d __ 3 1 c __ 3 1 b ___ 18 d __ 1 9 9 1 a ___ 36 1 c __ 6 Exercise 8.3 1 a 0 5 1 b __ 2 __ b 1 2 __ e 1 5 b H 3 no sugar; probability = __ 5 12 __ 8 13 a 0.16 b 0.84 c 0.6 d strawberry 63, lime 66, lemon 54, blackberry 69, apple 48 14 a d T 3 a __ 4 3 iii ___ 10 1 vi __ 2 1 H Green c 2 v __ 5 9 ___ viii 10 b 1 4 b ___ 15 1 2 __ 6 16 3 a ___ 81 A E A C CA CE CA N NA NE NA B BA BE BA R RA RE RA R RA RE RA c 1 __ 5 d b 25 ___ 81 40 c ___ 81 ___ 4 15 Review exercise 1 a b 10 000 Heads = 0.4083, Tails = 0.5917 1 c __ 2 d could be – probability of the tails outcome is higher than the heads outcome for a great many tosses Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 2 3 18 1 a __ 2 9 e ___ 10 1 a ___ 36 1 c __ 2 2 b __ 5 9 f ___ 10 b d c ___ 1 10 1 g __ 2 d 7, probability is __ 1 6 __ 1 6 0 4 5 1 a ___ 10 1 a __ 6 c 0 1 b __ 2 1 b __ 3 d __ 1 2 c __ 1 5 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 9 Exercise 9.1 1 a b c d e f g h 17, 19, 21 (add 2) 121, 132, 143 (add 11) 8, 4, 2 (divide by 2) 40, 48, 56 (add 8) −10, −12, −14 (subtract 2) 2, 4, 8 (multiply by 2) 11, 16, 22 (add one more each time than added to previous term) 21, 26, 31 (add 5) a 7, 9, 11, 13 c e 1, __ 1 , __ 1 , __ 1 d 2 4 8 100, 47, 20.5, 7.25 a b c d e f 5, 7, 9 1, 4, 9 5, 11, 17 0, 7, 26 0, 2, 6 1, −1, −3 4 a c d 8n − 6 b 1594 th 30 : 234 + 6 = 240, 240 ÷ 8 = 30 18th term = 138 and 19th term = 146, so 139 is not a term 5 a b c d e f 2n + 5 3 − 8n 6n − 4 (n + 1)2 1.2n + 1.1 n3 + 1 2 3 b 3 _ _ _ 3 _ a b {−2, −1, 0, 1, 2} {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} 4 a b A ∪ B = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9} A ∩ B = {} 5 a {−2, −1, 0, 1, 2} 6 a b {x: x is even, x < 10} {x: x is square numbers, x < 25} 50th = 105 50th = −397 50th = 296 50th = 2601 50th = 61.1 50th = 125 001 {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} C P h i s c y p 5, 11, 23, 47 35th term = 73 35th term = 1225 35th term = 209 35th term = 42 874 35th term = 1190 35th term = −67 b a, b, d, f, g, j, k 7 37, 32, 27, 22 8 a c 9 a t, e, m, r l, n, o, q, u, v, w, x, z b d 9 {c, h, i, s, y} 20 {c, e, h, i, m, p, r, s, t, y} B A 2 4 6 8 10 5 1, 3, 7, 9 b i ii iii 10 Exercise 9.2 1 3 A ∩ B = {10} 4 A ∪ B = {2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10} 18 − 4 = 14 a √16 , √12 , 0.090090009 B A 4 12 − 4 = 8 _ b √45 , √90 , π, √ 8 Exercise 9.3 19 4 1 a d false true b e 2 a b {} {1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11, 12, 13, 15, 18} true false c false Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK T-shirts tested(100) 11 logo flaw stitching flaw 4 12 − 4 = 8 15 − 4 = 11 _ 4 0.213231234 …, √2, 4π 5 −3 2 , ___ a __ , −4, 0, 25, 3.21, −2.5, 85, 0.75 3 5 b −4, 0, 25, 85 6 a A 77 a 23 b B 2, 4, 8, 10 6 3, 9 77 Review exercise 1 a b c d 5n − 4 26 − 6n 3n − 1 −n2 2 a b 2, −1, −6, −13, −22 … 5, 11, 21, 35, 53 … 3 a 120th term = 596 120th term = −694 120th term = 359 120th term = −14 400 1, 5, 7 b c A ∩ B = {6} n(A ∪ B) = 7 cracked 7 wrong size 3 8−3=5 11 − 3 = 8 = 120 b c 20 n2 + 3 327 a 13 104 b 104 c 16 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 10 Exercise 10.1 1 a b c d e 6 g h j 0 1 2 3 b y 4 5 6 7 8 c x −1 0 1 2 3 y 1 −1 −3 −5 −7 x −1 0 1 2 3 y 9 7 5 3 1 x −1 0 1 2 3 y −1 −2 −3 −4 x 4 4 4 y −1 0 1 d g m = __ 1 , c = __ 1 2 4 4 m = __ , c = −2 5 m is undefined, c = 7 h m = −3, c = 0 a y = −x b −5 c d 4 4 e f y =2x + 1 2 3 g y = 2.5 1 x −1 y = __ 2 x=2 1 x y = __ 2 y = −2x −1 h i y = −2x j y = − __ 1 x + 2 3 y=x+4 k y = 3x − 2 l y=x−3 a x = 2, y = −6 b x = 6, y = 3 c x = −4, y = 6 d x = 10, y = 10 e −5 x = ___ , y = −5 2 b d f h j x2 − x − 6 x2 + 2x − 35 2x2 + x − 1 6x2 − 7xy + 2y2 x2 + x − 132 1 − __ 1 x2 4 m −12x2 + 14x − 4 l −3x2 + 11x − 6 2 a c e x2 + 8x + 16 x2 + 10x + 25 x2 + 2xy + y2 b d f x2 − 6x + 9 y2 − 4y + 4 4x2 − 4xy + y2 3 a b c Length x + 40; width x − 40 A = x2 − 1600 1600 cm2 x −1 0 1 2 3 y −2 −2 −2 −2 −2 x −1 0 1 2 3 y 1.5 e f 7 x −1 1 −1.2 −0.8 −0.4 2 3 0 0.4 x −1 0 1 2 3 y −1 −0.5 0 0.5 1 x −1 0 1 2 3 y 0.5 Exercise 10.2 1 y=x−2 4 a d g h no b yes no e no yes (horizontal lines) yes (vertical lines) a m=1 6 m = __ 7 undefined c f yes no b m = −1 c m = −1 e m=2 f m=0 h m = ___ 1 16 a c e g i x2 + 5x + 6 x2 + 12x + 35 x2 − 4x + 3 y2 − 9y + 14 2x4 − x2 − 3 k −0.5 −1.5 −2.5 −3.5 3 g 21 0 student’s graphs of values above d 8 −0.5 −2.5 −4.5 −6.5 2 5 m = −1, c = −1 m=− __ 1 , c = 5 2 m = 1, c = 0 −1 y i m = 3, c = −4 x (in fact, any five values of y are correct) f a Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Review exercise a b c d y = __ 1 x 2 x −1 0 1 2 3 y −0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5 a b 3 x −1 0 1 2 3 y 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 22 4 6 D 0 14 28 42 b y=2 x −1 0 1 2 3 y 2 2 2 2 2 Caroline’s distance at 7 km/h y 45 25 20 15 5 x −1 0 1 2 3 y 2 4 6 8 10 y=x−3 b c y = −x − 2 d e y = 2x −3 f 2 x + __ 1 y = − __ 3 2 4 y = − __ x − 3 5 y = −x + 2 g y=2 h x = −4 b y=7 d x = −10 f y = −3 4 A 0, B 1, C 2, D 1, E 4 5 a y = −2x − 6 4 x + 4 y = __ 3 y = −x 30 10 y − 2x − 4 = 0 a e 2 35 d c 0 40 m = −2, c = −1 m = 1, c = −6 m = 0, c = − __ 1 2 m = −1, c = 0 c t y = __ 1 x + 3 2 Student’s graphs of four lines using values above. 2 a Distance (kilometres) 1 6 0 c x 0 2 4 6 Time (hours) y = 7x e i ii iii f i ii iii d 7 b d x2 − 3x − 40 4x2 + 12x + 9 3 hours 1 h 26 min 43 min 21 km 17.5 km 5.25 km 7 a c x2 + 10x −24 4x2 + 18x + 20 8 a 14, 48 i.e. (x + 6)(x + 8) = x2 + 14x + 48 4, 24 i.e. (x + 4)(x + 6) = x2 + 10x + 24 2, 2, 14 i.e. (2x + 2)(2x + 7) = 4x2 + 18x + 14 b c Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 11 Exercise 11.1 1 Exercise 11.4 a c e g 5 cm 12 mm 1.09 cm 8.49 cm b d f h 17 cm 10 cm 0.45 cm 6.11 cm 2 a c e 55.68 mm 5.29 cm 9.85 cm b d f 14.36 cm 10.91 mm 9.33 cm 3 a no c no 4 20 mm 5 44 cm 6 height = 86.60 mm, area = 4330.13 mm2 7 13 metres and 15 metres 8 1562 metres b yes d A, C, F and G are congruent. 2 Only 4 are possible. 3 a Yes, angle sum of a triangle is 180°, so third angle of each must be 60°. No. the 3 cm side is the hypotenuse of one triangle and the side adjacent to the right angle of the other. For example: b c yes 3cm 30° 3cm 4 a 67.4° b 7 cm Exercise 11.2 5 a Yes b 76.2 cm 1 A and C, B and D, E and F 2 a c e f g h Review exercise 2.24 cm b 6 mm 7.5 mm d 6.4 cm y = 6.67 cm, z = 4.8 cm x = 5.59 cm, y = 13.6 cm x = 9 cm, y = 24 cm x = 50 cm, y = 20 cm 3 angle ABC = angle ADE (corr angle are equal) angle ACB = angle AED (corr angle are equal) angle A = angle A (common) ∴ triangle ABC is similar to triangle ADE 4 25.5 metres Exercise 11.3 1 23 1 a b Measurement 200 mm on D is incorrect, it should be 160 mm. 100 mm 2 a b x = 18 cm x = 27 cm, y = 16 cm 3 scale factor = 27 ÷ 15 = 1.8 perimeter of A = 83 cm, perimeter of B = 83 × 1.8 = 149.4 cm 1 a b Sketch of rectangle with width labelled 50 metres and length 120 metres. 130 metres 2 102 = 62 + 82 ∴ triangle ABC is right-angled (converse Pythagoras) 3 P = 2250 mm 4 a b c 5 a, b and d 6 Reasons will vary, but here are some suggestions. a True, sides will be exactly the same length in both rectangles. b True, the base and height will be equal in congruent triangles, so their area will be equal too. c False, they may be congruent but you cannot say they will be congruent as they could be differently shaped triangles with the same area. x = 3.5 cm x = 63°, y = 87° x = 12 cm Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK d False, they could be the same type of quadrilateral and be congruent, but they could also be different shaped rectangles (for example) or a square a rectangle. 7 5.63 metres 8 a 140 mm ] 68 mm 560 mm 420 mm 140 mm b 24 156 mm Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 12 Exercise 12.1 1 a b c d e f 2 mean 6.14 27.44 13.08 5 4.89 5.22 median 6 27 13 5 5 5 mode 6 27 and 38 12 no mode 4 6 b 3 a iii and vi b For example: Different sets can still add up to the same total as another set. If divided by the same number they will have the same mean. 3 255 4 15 5 a c 6 Need to know how many cows there are to work out mean litres of milk produced per cow. 4 b d 14 metres 10 metres 40 8 a d e $20.40 b $6 c $10 2 (only the category B workers) The mean is between $20 and $40 so the statement is true. a 32 b b 111 38 c 2.78 c d c 25 Score Frequency 0 6 1 6 2 10 3 11 4 5 5 1 6 1 Total 40 1 38.5 a 2 2.25 Data set mean Exercise 12.2 b Runner B has the faster mean time; they also achieved the faster time, so would technically be beating Runner A. A is more consistent with a range of only 2 seconds (B has a range of 3.8 seconds). Median. The mean will be affected by the very high value of 112 minutes and the mode has only two values, so unlikely to be statistically valid. The median is 21 minutes which seems reasonable given the data. 1 8.6 metres 10 metres a a mean = 12.8, median = 15, mode = 17, range = 19 mode too high, mean not reliable as range is large Exercise 12.3 7 1 a b 2 9 a mean = 4.3, median = 5, mode = 2 and 5. The data is bimodal and the lower mode (2) is not representative of the data. mean = 3.15, median = 2, mode = 2. The mean is not representative of the data because it is too high. This is because there are some values in the data set that are much higher than the others. (This gives a big range, and when the range is big, the mean is generally not representative.) mean = 17.67, median = 17, no mode. There is no mode, so this cannot be representative of the data. The mean and median are similar, so they are both representative of the data. median mode 3 a b c 2 d 3 A B C 3.5 46.14 4.12 3 40 4.5 3 and 5 40 6.5 8 years 288 c ____ = 5.3 years 54 b 4 years d 5 years 6 Review exercise 1 a b c mean 6.4, median 6, mode 6, range 6 mean 2.6, median 2, mode 2, range 5 mean 13.8, median 12.8, no mode, range 11.9 2 a 19 b 9 and 10 c 5.66 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 3 a b c 4 26 a c mode 154, median 154, mean 145, range 96 One value is very low and that lowers the mean height. You can see from the range that the data is spread out. The mode or the median as they are both unaffected by very high or very low values. You could also work out the mean of ten values, leaving out the outlier of 60 cm and you would get a mean of 153.5, which is more representative of the sample data. 28 kg 61 kg b d 61 kilograms 20 e Given that these are rounded masses and the mean of the given data is 61, it could be argued that a mean of approximately 60 kg is accurate enough, but given that both the mode and the median are 61 it would be more accurate to round 60.5 to 61 and to use that as the approximate mean. 5 C – although B’s mean is bigger it has a larger range. C’s smaller range suggests that its mean is probably more representative. 6 a 4.82 cm3 b 5 cm3 c 5 cm3 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 13 Exercise 13.1 1 Student’s own diagrams 2 a c e 2600 metres 820 cm 20 mm b d f 230 mm 2450.809 km 0.157 metres 3 a c e 9080 g 500 g 0.0152 kg b d f 49 340 g 0.068 kg 2.3 tonnes 4 a b c d e f 19 km 9015 cm 435 mm 492 cm 635 metres 580 500 cm 5 a c e 1200 mm2 16 420 mm2 0.009441 km2 b d f 900 mm2 370 000 m2 423 000 mm2 6 a c e g 69 000 mm3 30 040 mm3 0.103 cm3 0.455 litres b d f h 19 000 mm3 4 815 000 cm3 0.0000469 m3 42 250 cm3 7 220 metres 8 110 cm 9 42 cm 100 metres 15 cm 2 mm 63 cm 35 metres 500 cm 10 88 (round down as you cannot have part of a box) Exercise 13.2 1 27 Name Time in Time out Lunch a Hours worked b Daily earnings Dawoot __ 1 past 9 Half past five 3 __ hour 4 7__ 1 hours 2 $100.88 Nadira 8.17 a.m. 5.30 p.m. __ 1 hour 8 h 43 min $117.24 John Robyn Mari 08 23 7.22 a.m. 08 08 17 50 4.30 p.m. 18 30 8 h 42 min 8 h 8 min 9 h 37 min $117.02 $109.39 $129.34 2 6 h 25 min 3 20 min 4 2 45 min 1 hour 45 min Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 4 5 a c 5 h : 47 min 12 h : 12 min b d a d e 09 00 b 1 hour c 10 05 30 minutes It would arrive late at East Place at 10 54 and at West Lane at 11 19. 10 h : 26 min 14 h : 30 min Exercise 13.3 1 2 The upper bound is ‘inexact’ so 42.5 in table means ,42.5 Upper bound Lower bound a 42.5 41.5 b 13 325.5 13 324.5 c 450 350 d 12.245 12.235 e 11.495 11.485 f 2.55 2.45 g 395 385 h 1.1325 1.1315 a b 71.5 < h , 72.5 Yes, it is less than 72.5 (although it would be impossible to measure to that accuracy). Exercise 13.4 1 a 1 cm per 100 000 rupiah b i ii iii 2 c i a Temperature in degrees C against temperature in degrees F i 32 °F ii 50 °F iii 210 °F Oven could be marked in Fahrenheit, but of course she could also have experienced a power failure or other practical problem. b c d 28 525 000 rupiah 1 050 000 rupiah 5 250 000 rupiah Aus$38 ii Aus$304 3 a c 9 kg i 20 kg b 45 kg ii 35 kg iii 145 lb Exercise 13.5 1 a c e US$1 = ¥115.76 €1 = IR84.25 ¥1 = £0.01 b d f 2 a 3800 b 50 550 c 9650.10 3 a 13 891.20 b 64 160 c 185 652 £1 = NZ$1.97 Can$1 = €0.71 R1 = US$0.07 Review exercise 1 a c e g i k 2 23 min 45 s 3 2 h 19 min 55 s 4 1.615 metres < h , 1.625 metres 5 a b 2700 m 6000 kg 263 000 mg 0.24 litres 0.006428 km2 29 000 000 m3 b d f h j l 690 mm 0.0235 kg 29 250 ml 1000 mm2 7 900 000 cm3 0.168 cm3 No, that is lower than the lower bound of 45. Yes, that is within the bounds. 6 a 7 €590.67 8 a b c 9 £4046.25 conversion graph showing litres against gallons (conversion factor) b i 45 litres ii 112.5 litres c i ≈3.3 gallons ii ≈26.7 gallons d i 48.3 km/g and 67.62 km/g ii 10.62 kilometres per litre and 14.87 kilometres per litre US$1 = IR76 152 000 rupees US$163.82 Fahrenheit scale as 50 °C is hot, not cold Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 14 Exercise 14.1 1 a c x = 3, y = 2 x = 3, y = −1 b d x = 1, y = 2 x = 3, y = 5 2 a c x = 2, y = 1 x = 5, y = 2 b d x = 3, y = −1 x = 3, y = 2 3 a A: y = −2 B: y = x C: y = 3x − 6 D: y = −7x − 1 E: y = −2x + 4 b i ii iii iv v 4 5 6 x = −2, y = −2 x = 3, y = 3 x = 3, y = −2 x = −1, y = 6 x = 2, y = 0 2 Answers may vary within the given range. a 9, 8 … b 10, 11 … c 2, 1, 0 … d 3…6 e 300, 301 … f 0, −1, −2 … g −3, −2, −1, … 0 h 2, 3 i 6, 7 … or 3, 2, 1 … 3 a c e g x , −4 x > −2 −5 < x , 0 −5 , x < 17 i 1 j x , −2 or x > 2 __ 2 4 x > −4 x . 10 −3 , x , 4 x < −2 or x > 3 2.7 < x < 6.3 a x 6 a c e x = 1, y = 3 x = 3, y = 1 x = −1, y = −6 b d f x = −3, y = 10 x = 1, y = 2 x = 2, y = 3 a x = 2, y = −1 b x = 4, y = 1 c d x = 4, y = −3 e x = __ 2 , y = 2 3 x = 2, y = 1 f x = −1, y = 4 a c x = 1, y = −2 x = 3, y = 1 b d x = 2, y = 1 x = 5, y = 2 e x = 7, y = −4 f g i x = 3, y = 2 x = 2, y = −1 h j 1 , y = −2 x = __ 3 x = 3, y = 3 x = 5, y = 1 7 x = 70 and y = 50 8 A pack of markers is 150 grams, a notebook is 80 grams. 9 x + y = 23; 8x − 15y = 92, x = 19 19 people took a class b x −3 c x −5 d x −3 e x 1.2 4.8 f x a x.9 b y , −5 c x<1 d −2 , y , 6 e −10 < x , −4 f (y + 3) > (x − 4) −3.5 2.8 −8 −3 g x Exercise 14.2 1 b d f h h x 15 17 i x 3 29 9 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Review exercise 1 a x = 2, y = 5 b x = 4, y = 2 c x = 0.5, y = 1.5 d x = 1, y = − __ 1 2 2 x = 2 and y = −6 3 x = 1, y = −1 4 x = 31 and y = 7 5 Melon costs $2.60 and peach costs $0.35 6 a b c 7 b 15 b L < 15 L 11 A: y = −2x + 6; B: y = −x + 5 x = 1 and y = 4 4 = −2(1) + 6 = −2 + 6 = 4 and 1 + 4 = 5 10 cm 8 a b , 15 c p , 500 p 500 d 1200 < p < 1500 p 1200 1500 e 180 < u , 250 u 180 250 f 60 < m , 75 m 60 30 75 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 15 Exercise 15.1 1 1 cm 0.5 cm 0.5 cm 0.5 cm 0.5 cm 0.4 cm 2 3.3 cm 2.1 cm 5.4 cm 5.4 cm 5.4 cm 3.3 cm 3 a ii iv 200 mm 125 mm b i 100 mm iii 250 mm 1 : 200 4 a c 16 metres 12.4 metres b d 10 metres 2 metres 5 13 mm or 1.3 cm 6 0.32 mm ii 333° ± 1° b 037° ± 1° Exercise 15.2 1 a b c B i 115° ± 1° 022° ± 1° 2 329° ± 1° 3 a 4 6 km 200 metres Exercise 15.3 1 Triangle Hypotenuse Opposite u Adjacent u ABC AB BC AC DEF DF EF DE XYZ XZ XY YZ a b c d e f i sin u 0.6 0.385 0.814 0.96 0.471 0.6 ii cos u 0.8 0.923 0.581 0.28 0.882 0.8 iii tan u 0.75 0.417 1.400 3.429 0.533 0.75 2 31 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 3 a d g 0.743 0.416 0.185 4 a c e 5.75 cm 7.27 metres 61.44 cm a d 32° 39° b e 12° 73° c f 44° 50° a d 36.9° 66.0° b e 23.2° 68.0° c f 45.6° 9.6° 5 6 b e h 0.978 0.839 0.993 b d f c f 2.605 0.839 2 (v) 26.26 mm 7.56 cm 7.47 metres (i) N control tower (iv) (ii) Exercise 15.4 1 a 2 6.06 metres 3 16.62 cm 4 52.43 km 5 a 15.08 metres 1689 metres b 30.16 cm 200 km b 975 metres Review exercise 1 32 (iii) Lines drawn accurately to the following lengths: a 1 cm b 2 cm c 3.4 cm d 1.4 cm e 3.6 cm f 1.8 cm 3 a 150° b 160° 4 a 0.8 b 0.6 c d 0.8 e 0.8 f 5 a c e g x = 14.43 cm x = 14.41 cm x = 12.49 cm x = 36.03° 6 185.41 metres 7 a 8 4.71 metres 64.2° __ 4 or 1.33 3 0.75 b d f h x = 13.44 cm x = 51.82 cm x = 43.34° x = 58.67° b 4.36 metres Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 16 Exercise 16.1 Review exercise 1 1 a 2 a a A strong negative correlation. The more hours of watching TV, the lower the test score. b A strong positive correlation. The longer the length of arm, the higher the bowling speed. c Zero correlation. The month of birth has no effect on mass. d A strong negative correlation. The more someone sits during the day (eg the less active they are), the less the length of life. e A moderate positive correlation. Usually the taller one is, the bigger the shoe size. 2 a Student’s own line (line should go close to (160, 4.5) and (175, 5.5)) Answers (b) and (c) depend on student’s best fit line b ≈4.80 metres c i Between 175 cm and 185 cm ii This is not a reliable prediction because 6.07 metres is beyond the range of the given data. d Moderately positive e Taller athletes can jump further 3 The number of accidents at different speeds b average speed answers to (c) depend on student’s best fit line c i ≈35 accidents ii ,45 km/h d strong positive e There are more accidents when vehicles are travelling at a higher average speed. b c d e There is a strong negative correlation at first, but this becomes weaker as the cars get older. 0−2 years it stabilises around the $6000 level ≈3 years $5000 – $9000. This is not very reliable as there is limited data from only one dealership. a y 10 9 8 7 6 Rating 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 1 2 3x Price ($) b c 33 Weak positive Answers will vary. Reasons should include that for prices above $2 dollars, all of the taste ratings are six or higher, but also that two of the cheaper ones are also rated highly. Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Unit 5 Chapter 17 Exercise 17.1 Review exercise 1 $19.26 1 a 12 h b 40 h c 2 $25 560 2 a $1190 b $1386 c 3 a c 3 a $62 808 b $4149.02 4 $1203.40 4 a Student’s own graph showing values: 5 $542.75 6 a b d $930.75 $765 $625 $1083.75 $1179.38 Years b c $25 $506.50 Exercise 17.2 5 1500 1592.74 10 3000 3439.16 A comment such as, the amount of compound interest increases faster than the simple interest 5 years 5 $862.50 3 2.8% 6 $3360 4 $2800 more 7 a $1335, $2225 5 $2281 more 6 a d b c $1950, $3250 $18 000, $30 000 8 a $4818 9 $425 7 $562.75 8 a $2000 b e $187.73 $346.08 b $9000 c $210 $225.75 1 a c 2 $1080 3 $387.20 4 $64.41 5 a 120% 11 $43.36 (each) b d $144 $245.65 $179.10 b 10 $211.20 Exercise 17.3 34 300 2 $160 $343.75 c 300 a d $7.50 $574.55 b e Simple interest Compound interest 1 1 $7.50 $448 25 __ 1 h 2 $1232 b $40.04 12 $204 $264.50 $400 c $963.90 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 18 Exercise 18.1 1 a b c x −6 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 1 2 3 y −33 −22 −13 −6 −1 2 3 2 −1 −6 x −6 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 y 50 37 26 17 10 5 2 1 2 5 10 17 26 x −6 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 y 4 1 0 1 4 9 16 25 36 49 64 81 100 −5 y 100 b 4 5 6 −13 −22 −33 y 8 90 (0, 8) y = 3x2 + 6x + 3 80 70 60 (b) 50 40 (−2, 0) 30 −2 20 x y = −2x2 + 8 10 (c) (0, 2) 0 2 c 0 −6 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 −10 1 2 3 4 5 y 6x −20 −30 (a) −40 2 a 3 a D b B c A 1.5 d y 1.0 0.5 x −3.0 −2.5 −2.0 −1.5 −1.0 −0.5 0 −0.5 −1.0 0.5 C 2 0 y = __ 1 x 2 + 2 2 4 a 8 metres b c 6 metres d e 3 seconds x 2 seconds just short of 4 seconds −1.5 −2.0 y = x2 + 3x 35 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 5 a y = 2x2 + 3 b x −10 −5 0 5 10 y 203 53 3 53 203 c y 250 200 150 100 50 −10 d e 0 −5 10 x 5 As the temperature increases from 0 °C, so does the price and as the temperature decreases from 0 °C, so does the price. 7 °C or −7 °C Exercise 18.2 1 a x −5 y = __ 2 x −0.4 −4 −3 −0.5 −0.67 −2 −1 1 2 3 4 5 −1 −2 2 1 0.67 0.5 0.4 3 4 5 y x 0 b x −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 1 −1 y = ___ x 0.2 0.25 0.33 0.5 1 −1 2 −0.5 −0.33 −0.25 −0.2 y 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 −0.2 1 2 3 4 5x −0.4 −0.6 −0.8 −1.0 36 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK c x −5 y=1 −4 −3 −2 −0.2 −0.25 −0.33 −0.5 −1 1 2 3 4 5 −1 1 0.5 0.33 0.25 0.2 3 4 5 y 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 −0.2 1 2 3 4 5x −0.4 −0.6 −0.8 −1.0 d x −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 1 2 y=1 0.4 0.5 0.67 1 2 −2 −1 −0.67 −0.5 −0.4 y 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 −0.5 1 2 3 4 5x −1.0 −1.5 −2.0 37 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 2 a length 1 2 3 4 6 8 12 24 width 24 12 8 6 4 3 2 1 Width (m) b c d 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 Length (m) The curve represents all the possible measurements for the rectangle with an area of 24 m2 ≈3.4 metres Exercise 18.3 1 a b c 2 a x = 1, x = 3 x = 0, x = 4 x = 4.2, x = −0.2 y 8 y = x2 − 4x − 5 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 −7 −6 −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 −1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9x −2 −3 −4 −5 −6 −7 −8 −9 −10 b i ii iii 38 x = −1 or x = 5 x = 1 or x = 3 x = −0.5 or x = 4.5 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 3 a b y 14 y = x2 − x − 6 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 (iii) y = 6 6 5 4 3 2 (ii) y = 0 1 x −4 b i ii iii 4 3 2 1 −3 a 4 c y = − __ x 2 a −1 0 1 2 3 x 1 2 3 −2 c y 40 20 x = 0 or x = 1 x = −2 or x = 3 x = −3 or x = 4 y = x2 − 4 −2 −1 0 −2 −1 1 2 3 4 5 −2 −3 −4 −5 (i) y = −6 −6 −7 −8 −3 −2 −1 0 4x −20 −40 3 Review exercise 1 y 5 b 9 y = __ x d y = −x2 + 9 y 5 a A is y = x2 + 2x − 8 because the coefficient of x2 is positive and so the graph is ∪-shaped. B is y = −x2 + 2x + 8 because the coefficient of x2 is negative and so the graph is ∩-shaped. b i ii iii iv v 4 3 2 x = −4 or x = 2 x = −2 or x = 4 x = −3 or x = 1 x=1 x = −1.5 or x = 3.5 1 −1.5 −1.0 −0.5 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 x −1 −2 39 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 19 Exercise 19.1 Exercise 19.2 1 1 a b 2 a C = 1, A = 1, M = 1, B = 1, R = 0, I = 2, D = 1, G = 0, E = 1 I = 2, all other letters have no rotational symmetry. A B C D E Working and reasoning may vary but size of angle should be as given below. Students must show their working and valid reasoning using statements that demonstrate knowledge of angle properties and relationships. a d b e 40° 40° 22° 122° 2 100° 3 54° 4 w = 90°, tangent meets radius x = 53°, angles on a straight line y = 90°, angle in a semi-circle z = 53°, angles in a triangle F c f 45° 64° Review exercise 1 a b c d e 2 a = b = 28°, c = 56°, d = e = 34° G H has no line symmetry 40 b A = 0, B = 3, C = 4, D = 4, E = 5, F = 2, G = 2, H = 2 3 a b 2, student’s diagram 2 4 Student’s own diagram but as an example: i i i i i 1 1 4 8 1 ii ii ii ii ii none none 4 8 none Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 20 Exercise 20.1 1 2 a d g j 4:5 5 : 14 1:5 6:5 b e h k a c e g i k x=9 x = 16 x=4 x = 1.875 x=7 x = 2.4 c f i 3:4 9 : 40 1 : 20 1 : 15 b d f h j l 3 $7200 and $4800 4 100 and 250 5 60 cm and 100 cm 6 a b c 6:1 7:8 1:4 x=4 x=3 x = 1.14 x = 2.67 x = 13.33 x = 0.16 60°, 30° and 90° 8 810 mg 8 a c 4:1 b 14.8 cm 120 mm or 12 cm Exercise 20.3 20 ml oil and 30 ml vinegar 240 ml oil and 360 ml vinegar 300 ml oil and 450 ml vinegar 7 b A is 6 metres (6000 mm acceptable) B is 12 metres (12 000 mm acceptable) C is 15.75 metres (15 750 mm acceptable) 1 25.6 litres 2 11.5 kilometre per litre 3 a b c 78.4 km/h 520 km/h 240 km/h (or 4 km/minute) 4 a c 5h 40 h b d 9 h 28 min 4.29 min 5 a c 150 km 3.75 km b d 300 km 18 km 6 167 seconds or 2.78 minutes 7 14500 ______ = 20 g/cm3 725 Exercise 20.4 Exercise 20.2 1 a 1 : 2.25 b 1 : 3.25 c 1 : 1.8 2 a 1.5 : 1 b 5:1 c 5:1 3 240 km 4 30 metres 5 a b 5 cm 3.5 cm 6 a It means one unit on the map is equivalent to 700 000 of the same units in reality. 1 a i ii iii b d 100 km 200 km 300 km 100 km/h 250 km c e vehicle stopped 125 km/h 2 b Map distance (mm) 10 71 50 80 1714 2143 Actual distance (km) 7 50 35 56 1200 1500 a 2 hours b 190 min = 3 h 10 min c 120 km/h d i 120 km ii 80 km e 48 km/h f 40 min g 50 min h 53.3 − 48 = 5.3 km/h i Pam 12 noon, Dabilo 11.30 a.m. 7 a A is 8 mm B is 16 mm C is 21 mm 41 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK a Distance (m) 3 Ani’s distance from the classroom y 35 30 1 a 14 : 19 25 2 a c 420 and 180 210 and 390 3 a c 1 spadeful b 0.5 bags 0.375 wheelbarrows full 4 a b 90 mm, 150 mm and 120 mm Yes, (150)2 = (90)2 + (120)2 5 5 cm 6 1 : 50 7 a 20 15 10 5 0 b c d 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 x Time (s) 2.5 m/s 64 metres 1.28 m/s a b c Yes, __ A = ____ 1 B 150 8 No, ___ is not = __ 1 2 15 10 A Yes, __ = ___ B 1 2 a 3 $12.50 4 60 metres 5 a c 75 km 3 h 20 min b 375 km 6 a 15 litres b 540 km 7 a inversely proportional b i $175 b 9 a 9 5 h 30 min 1 : 500 c b d 350 and 250 300 and 300 b 1:8 36.36 km/h 85 km 382.5 km 21.25 km 0.35 h 4.7 h 1.18 h 150 km 100 km/h 500 km b d after 2 hours for 1 hour 100 km/h 10 4.5 min 1 days 2 __ 2 12 days b 8 $250 a c e b 10.10 m/s 8 a i ii iii b i ii iii Exercise 20.5 1 Review exercise ii 11 187.5 g __ 1 day 2 5 days 10 1200 km/h 42 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 21 Exercise 21.1 1 a d g 9 8 7 and 2 2 9 cm 3 a c x−4 A = x2 − 4x 4 a S = 5x + 2 Review exercise b e h 26 6 40 and 60 b c f 134 2 P = 4x − 8 5x + 2 b M = ______ 3 a P = 3x + 12 b i 11 cm, 15 cm and 19 cm ii 3.75 cm, 7.75 cm and 11.75 cm 1 10 2 4 3 4 4 Nathi has $67 and Faisal has $83 5 55 6 $40 and $20 7 a b 8 144 km 9 Pam = 11, Amira = 22 5 6 a x + 1, x + 2 b S = 3x + 3 7 a c x+2 S = 3x − 1 b x−3 8 14 9 width = 13 cm, length = 39 cm 10 a b 2x + 5 = 2 − x P = 4x + 2 length = 27 mm, width = 22 mm 10 4.00 p.m. 11 80 km x = −1 11 80 silver cars, 8 red cars 12 father = 35, mother = 33 and Nadira = 10 43 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 22 Exercise 22.1 1 5 A9 B 10 8 B9 D C C9 C0 2 I0 6 (c) (ii) 2 H x 10 A'' (c) (i) 4 6K9 8 I x 7 A: centre (0, 2), scale factor 2 B: centre (2, 0), scale factor 2 C: centre (−4, −7), scale factor 2 D: centre (9, −5), scale factor __ 1 4 a i A' J F −8 A 3 y 8 A P9 B (b i) C S9 X 4 Q9 Q 2 −8 A: y = 5 B: x = 0 C: y = −1.5 D: x = −6 P 6 P99 R9 −8 −6 −4 −2 0 −2 (b ii) Q99 −4 S99 R99 −6 4 J9 K −6 G K0 I9 E −4 D 6 J0 C94 H0 2 B C F9 G9 (b) −10 −8 −6 −4 −2 0 E9 −2 D9 8 −10 8 B9 B 6 −8 y (a) A D'' 4 2 −6 B0 A9 2 −10 −8 −6 −4 −2 0 −2 C −4 (b) A0 B'' 4 C'' D9 D D0 A 6 (a) A y S R 2 4 6 A9 (a) 8 x b i B' B9 B C9 X c C' C X 44 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK d i 8 a y A' D' D A 7 6 5 4 3 C' 2 1 B' C −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 0 −4 −5 −6 A'' −7 ii A b A'' 9 rotation 180° about (0, 0) a y X b 10 8 ii C 6 C B 4 C'' A 2 c x 1 2 3 4 5 −2 C'' −3 B'' a B −4 ii −2 0 x 2 4 6 8 −2 B −4 B'' b X d enlargement scale factor 2, using (8, −1) as centre Review exercise ii D D'' 1 a i ii iii b i reflect in the line x = −1 rotate 90° clockwise about the origin reflect in the line y = −1 rotate 90° anti-clockwise about (0, 0) 2) then translate ( − −1 ii reflect in the line y = −1 then translate (− 8 ) 0 iii rotate 180° about origin then translate (6 ) 0 iv reflect in the line x = 0 ( y-axis) then translate ( 0 ) −2 45 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK 2 4 y D99 7 6 5 4 D' G' 3 2 1 E' F' −5 −4 −3 −2 −10 1 2 3 4 5 F −2 G −3 −4 D −5 −6 −7 G'' B' A''' (c) A'''' 6 4 F'' D C A A9 B B9 A99 −4 B99 0 −2 2 4 6 8x −2 (d) c B'''' B 1:2 d 4:1 4 C''' C'''' C 2 A'' D''' D'''' C' −10 −8 −6 D'−4 −2D'' 2 4 6 8 (b) B'' −2 A' C9 6 E'' B'''8 D9 8 x E y C99 10 2 10 (a) y 14 12 D'' 3 a&b −4 x 10 C'' −6 −8 −10 a c 46 B9 (−6, 6) B9 (−1, 8) b d B9 (6, −2) B9 (3, 9) Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Chapter 23 Exercise 23.1 1 3 Card Traffic light G B Green 3 4 2 3 4 1 6 Exercise 23.3 1 Even 2 Yellow Black 1 2 H 1 2 1 2 T H 1 2 1 2 T H 1 2 T 12 H 1 2 H 1 2 1 2 T H 1 2 T 1 2 1 b __ e 47 6 12 T __ 1 1 2 1 2 1 2 H 1 2 T 3, 9 1, 5, 7, 11 T H 1 a __ 2 2 a 2 b __ 3 c 1 __ d 6 B 1 __ 3 S 5 d ___ 12 ___ 1 a 1 2 M3 2, 4, 8, 10 c Not stop 7 c ___ 12 1 b ___ 18 Blue 1 b __ 4 Stop 2 9 7 9 a 1 3 Not stop Not green Exercise 23.2 1 2 7 9 1 4 G H A B C D E F 1 Stop 2 9 H T H T H T H T Y 1 Pedestrian crossing Coin R 2 a 9 1 2 H 1 2 1 2 T 1 2 1 2 T 1 2 1 2 T H ii 1 2 T iii 24 23 H H 1 d __ c 2 2 8 0, not possible on three coin tosses 19 b i 8 P(both) = ___ 24 = ___ 75 25 19 P(neither) = ___ 75 56 P(at least one) = ___ 75 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023 CAMBRIDGE IGCSE™ MATHEMATICS: CORE PRACTICE BOOK Review exercise 1 a &b 1 6 1 1 6 2 1 6 3 1 6 4 1 6 1 6 5 6 1 c __ 8 2 3 1 2 H 1 2 1 2 T H 1 2 1 2 T H 1 2 1 2 T H 1 2 1 2 T H 1 2 1 2 T H 1 2 T H 1 2 T 1 2 1 2 1 2 H 1 2 T D H T H 3 3 2 T H b 1 2 1 2 1 2 H 1 2 T c 3 i ___ 3 ii ___ 10 10 20% chance of getting neither. 2 4 iii __ 5 T H ___ 1 d a 1 2 1 2 1 2 a 12 W G 1 5 3 11 b 48 i __ 4 5 ii 1 __ 4 iii 11 ___ 20 Cambridge IGCSE™ Mathematics – Morrison © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2023