PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Practice Question 557
Question: 557
For the equation 3 + 4x - 2 = k + 6x - 2x, what does the constant k need to equal in order for there to be multiple solutions for x
Correct Answer: A
Explanation:
(A) Before proceeding too far, simplify the equation by grouping like terms:
3 + 4x - 2 = k + 6x - 2x
1 + 4x = k + 4x
So if k = 1, both sides of the equations are equivalent to one another. The equation reduces to x = x, which has an infinite number of solutions.
More Tests
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 1
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 2
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 3
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 4
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 5
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 6
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 7
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 8
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 9
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 10
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 11
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 12
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 13
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 14
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 15
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 16
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 17
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 18
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 19
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 20
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 21
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 22
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 23
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 24
- PSAT Math Multiple-Choice Test 25