AMC 8 · Test Mode

2009 AMC 8

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Problem 1 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Algebra & Patterns work-backwards

Bridget bought a bag of apples at the grocery store. She gave half of the apples to Ann. Then she gave Cassie 3 apples, keeping 4 apples for herself. How many apples did Bridget buy?

Show hint
Work backwards from the 4 she kept.
Show solution
  1. After giving Cassie 3: she had 4 + 3 = 7.
  2. Before giving Ann half: original = 2 · 7 = 14.
E 14 apples.
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Problem 2 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Ratios, Rates & Proportions proportion

On average, for every 4 sports cars sold at the local dealership, 7 sedans are sold. The dealership predicts that it will sell 28 sports cars next month. How many sedans does it expect to sell?

Show hint
28 is 7 × 4. So sedans = 7 × 7.
Show solution
  1. 28 / 4 = 7 ⇒ ratio scales by 7.
  2. Sedans: 7 × 7 = 49.
D 49 sedans.
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Problem 3 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Ratios, Rates & Proportions unit-rate

The graph shows the constant rate at which Suzanna rides her bike. If she rides a total of a half an hour at the same speed, how many miles would she have ridden?

Show hint
Read off the rate from the graph: 1 mile per 5 minutes, so 30 min gives 30/5 miles.
Show solution
  1. Rate: 1 mile per 5 minutes = 12 mph.
  2. 30 minutes ⇒ 6 miles.
C 6 miles.
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Problem 4 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Geometry & Measurement tiling-fit

The five pieces shown below can be arranged to form four of the five figures shown in the choices. Which figure cannot be formed?

Show hint
One of the pieces is a 5-block straight strip; it must be placed straight in any arrangement. Look for a target shape with no 5-in-a-row segment.
Show solution
  1. The 1×5 strip must lie either entirely horizontal or vertical in any arrangement.
  2. Figure B has no straight 5-block run, horizontal or vertical, so the 1×5 piece cannot fit. So B is impossible.
B B.
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Problem 5 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Algebra & Patterns tribonacci recurrence

A sequence of numbers starts with 1, 2, and 3. The fourth number of the sequence is the sum of the previous three numbers in the sequence: 1 + 2 + 3 = 6. In the same way, every number after the fourth is the sum of the previous three numbers. What is the eighth number in the sequence?

Show hint
Just iterate the rule: each new term = sum of the previous three.
Show solution
  1. 1, 2, 3, 6, 11, 20, 37, 68.
D 68.
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Problem 6 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Ratios, Rates & Proportions combined-rate

Steve's empty swimming pool will hold 24,000 gallons of water when full. It will be filled by 4 hoses, each of which supplies 2.5 gallons of water per minute. How many hours will it take to fill Steve's pool?

Show hint
Combined rate = 4 · 2.5 = 10 gal/min. Convert minutes to hours.
Show solution
  1. Rate: 10 gal/min ⇒ 600 gal/hour.
  2. Time: 24,000 / 600 = 40 hours.
A 40 hours.
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Problem 7 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Geometry & Measurement triangle-area

The triangular plot of ACD lies between Aspen Road, Brown Road and a railroad. Main Street runs east and west, and the railroad runs north and south. The numbers in the diagram indicate distances in miles. The width of the railroad track can be ignored. How many square miles are in the plot of land ACD?

Show hint
Both C and D sit on the railroad; CD = 3. The plot's base is CD with the apex at A.
Show solution
  1. Base CD = 3 (along the railroad). Height from A to the railroad = 3 (along Main Street).
  2. Area = (1/2)(3)(3) = 4.5.
C 4.5 square miles.
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Problem 8 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Fractions, Decimals & Percents percent-multiplier

The length of a rectangle is increased by 10% and the width is decreased by 10%. What percent of the old area is the new area?

Show hint
Multiply the two factors: 1.1 · 0.9 = ?
Show solution
  1. New area / old area = 1.1 · 0.9 = 0.99 = 99%.
B 99%.
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Problem 9 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Geometry & Measurement shared-sides-polygon-chain

Construct a square on one side of an equilateral triangle. On one non-adjacent side of the square, construct a regular pentagon, as shown. On a non-adjacent side of the pentagon, construct a hexagon. Continue to construct regular polygons in the same way, until you construct an octagon. How many sides does the resulting polygon have?

Show hint
Each interior polygon loses 2 sides to the chain (one to the previous, one to the next). The first and last lose only 1.
Show solution
  1. End polygons (triangle, octagon) contribute all but 1: (3 − 1) + (8 − 1) = 2 + 7 = 9.
  2. Middle polygons (square, pentagon, hexagon, heptagon) contribute all but 2: (4 + 5 + 6 + 7) − 4 · 2 = 22 − 8 = 14.
  3. Total: 9 + 14 = 23.
B 23 sides.
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Problem 10 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Counting & Probability interior-of-board

On a checkerboard composed of 64 unit squares, what is the probability that a randomly chosen unit square does not touch the outer edge of the board?

Show hint
Interior = (8 − 2)2 = 36 inside squares.
Show solution
  1. Interior: 6 × 6 = 36.
  2. Probability: 36 / 64 = 9/16.
D 9/16.
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Problem 11 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Number Theory gcd

The Amaco Middle School bookstore sells pencils costing a whole number of cents. Some seventh graders each bought a pencil, paying a total of $1.43. Some of the 30 sixth graders each bought a pencil, and they paid a total of $1.95. How many more sixth graders than seventh graders bought a pencil?

Show hint
Working in cents, the price divides both 143 and 195. Compute gcd(143, 195).
Show solution
  1. 143 = 11 · 13; 195 = 3 · 5 · 13. So price | 13 and price > 1 ⇒ price = 13¢.
  2. Seventh graders: 143/13 = 11. Sixth graders: 195/13 = 15.
  3. Difference: 15 − 11 = 4.
D 4 more.
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Problem 12 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Counting & Probability enumerate-outcomes

The two spinners shown are spun once and each lands on one of the numbered sectors. What is the probability that the sum of the numbers in the two sectors is prime?

Show hint
Odd + even = odd, so all 9 sums are odd. Just count which are prime.
Show solution
  1. Sums: 3, 5, 7, 5, 7, 9, 7, 9, 11. Non-prime: the two 9s.
  2. Prime probability: 7/9 = 7/9.
D 7/9.
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Problem 13 · 2009 AMC 8 Easy
Counting & Probability last-digit-only

A three-digit integer contains one of each of the digits 1, 3, and 5. What is the probability that the integer is divisible by 5?

Show hint
Divisible by 5 iff units digit is 5. Each of {1, 3, 5} is equally likely in the units position.
Show solution
  1. By symmetry of the 6 arrangements, units digit is 5 with probability 1/3.
B 1/3.
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Problem 14 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Ratios, Rates & Proportions harmonic-mean

Austin and Temple are 50 miles apart along Interstate 35. Bonnie drove from Austin to her daughter's house in Temple, averaging 60 miles per hour. Leaving the car with her daughter, Bonnie rode a bus back to Austin along the same route and averaged 40 miles per hour on the return trip. What was the average speed for the round trip, in miles per hour?

Show hint
Average speed = total distance / total time. Don't just average the two speeds — equal distances at different speeds gives the harmonic mean.
Show solution
  1. Time out: 50/60 = 5/6 hr. Time back: 50/40 = 5/4 hr. Total time: 5/6 + 5/4 = 25/12 hr.
  2. Total distance: 100. Average: 100 / (25/12) = 48 mph.
B 48 mph.
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Problem 15 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Ratios, Rates & Proportions limiting-ingredient

A recipe that makes 5 servings of hot chocolate requires 2 squares of chocolate, 1/4 cup sugar, 1 cup water and 4 cups milk. Jordan has 5 squares of chocolate, 2 cups of sugar, lots of water, and 7 cups of milk. If she maintains the same ratio of ingredients, what is the greatest number of servings of hot chocolate she can make?

Show hint
For each ingredient, compute how many recipes worth Jordan has, then multiply by 5 servings. The smallest result limits the answer.
Show solution
  1. Chocolate: 5/2 recipes worth.
  2. Sugar: 2 / (1/4) = 8 recipes.
  3. Milk: 7/4 recipes.
  4. Smallest is milk at 7/4. Servings: 5 · 7/4 = 35/4 = .
D 8¾ servings.
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Problem 16 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Counting & Probability factor-triples

How many 3-digit positive integers have digits whose product equals 24?

Show hint
List unordered digit triples (each digit 1-9) with product 24. Then count arrangements (3! for distinct, 3!/2! for one repeat).
Show solution
  1. Triples: {1, 3, 8}, {1, 4, 6}, {2, 2, 6}, {2, 3, 4}.
  2. Permutations: 6 + 6 + 3 + 6 = 21.
D 21.
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Problem 17 · 2009 AMC 8 Hard
Number Theory exponent-parity-mod

The positive integers x and y are the two smallest positive integers for which the product of 360 and x is a square and the product of 360 and y is a cube. What is the sum of x and y?

Show hint
Prime-factor 360 = 23 · 32 · 5. Make every exponent even (square) or a multiple of 3 (cube).
Show solution
  1. 360 = 23 · 32 · 51.
  2. Square: bump 2's exponent to 4 and 5's to 2 ⇒ multiply by 2 · 5 = 10. So x = 10.
  3. Cube: bump 2's to 3 (already), 3's to 3 (add one 3), 5's to 3 (add two 5s) ⇒ multiply by 3 · 25 = 75. So y = 75.
  4. x + y = 85.
B 85.
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Problem 18 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Counting & Probability pattern-scaling

The diagram represents a 7-foot-by-7-foot floor that is tiled with 1-square-foot light tiles and dark tiles. Notice that the corners have dark tiles. If a 15-foot-by-15-foot floor is to be tiled in the same manner, how many dark tiles will be needed?

Show hint
Dark tiles sit at (odd row, odd column). In a 7×7: 4 odd rows × 4 odd cols = 16. In a 15×15: 8 × 8.
Show solution
  1. 7-foot floor: odd positions 1, 3, 5, 7 ⇒ 4 each direction; 4 × 4 = 16 (consistent with diagram).
  2. 15-foot floor: odd positions 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15 ⇒ 8 each direction.
  3. Dark tiles: 8 × 8 = 64.
C 64 dark tiles.
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Problem 19 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Geometry & Measurement case-analysis isosceles-triangles

Two angles of an isosceles triangle measure 70° and x°. What is the sum of the three possible values of x?

Show hint
Three cases for which pair of angles are equal: 70° and x°, the two 70°-angles, or two x°-angles.
Show solution
  1. Case 1: x = 70 (the matched pair).
  2. Case 2: two 70° angles ⇒ x = 180 − 140 = 40.
  3. Case 3: two x° angles ⇒ 2x + 70 = 180 ⇒ x = 55.
  4. Sum: 70 + 40 + 55 = 165.
D 165.
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Problem 20 · 2009 AMC 8 Hard
Geometry & Measurement non-congruent-triangles

How many non-congruent triangles have vertices at three of the eight points in the array shown below?

Show hint (soft nudge)
Triangle types break into 1-and-2 (one vertex on one row, two on the other) and degenerate (all three collinear — exclude).
Show hint (sharpest)
Catalog by which row and the horizontal spacing between the two same-row vertices.
Show solution
  1. Choose two vertices on one row (their separation 1, 2, or 3 units) and one vertex on the other row.
  2. Pinning the lone vertex's horizontal position relative to the pair (and using the 2×4 symmetry) yields exactly 8 non-congruent triangles.
D 8.
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Problem 21 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Algebra & Patterns invariant-total

Andy and Bethany have a rectangular array of numbers with 40 rows and 75 columns. Andy adds the numbers in each row. The average of his 40 sums is A. Bethany adds the numbers in each column. The average of her 75 sums is B. What is the value of AB?

Show hint
Both Andy and Bethany sum the same array total. So 40A = sum of array = 75B.
Show solution
  1. Sum of all entries = 40 · A = 75 · B.
  2. A/B = 75/40 = 15/8.
D 15/8.
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Problem 22 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Counting & Probability casework-on-digit-count

How many whole numbers between 1 and 1000 do not contain the digit 1?

Show hint
Split by number of digits. Each non-leading position can be any of 9 digits {0, 2, …, 9}; the leading position avoids 0 and 1, so 8 choices.
Show solution
  1. 1 digit (no 1): 8 numbers.
  2. 2 digits: 8 · 9 = 72.
  3. 3 digits: 8 · 9 · 9 = 648.
  4. 1000 contains 1, excluded.
  5. Total: 8 + 72 + 648 = 728.
D 728.
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Problem 23 · 2009 AMC 8 Medium
Algebra & Patterns quadratic

On the last day of school, Mrs. Awesome gave jelly beans to her class. She gave each boy as many jelly beans as there were boys in the class. She gave each girl as many jelly beans as there were girls in the class. She brought 400 jelly beans, and when she finished, she had six jelly beans left. There were two more boys than girls in her class. How many students were in her class?

Show hint
Each boy gets b beans, so all boys get b2. Similarly girls get g2. b2 + g2 = 394.
Show solution
  1. b = g + 2 and b2 + g2 = 400 − 6 = 394.
  2. (g + 2)2 + g2 = 394 ⇒ 2g2 + 4g + 4 = 394 ⇒ g2 + 2g − 195 = 0.
  3. (g + 15)(g − 13) = 0 ⇒ g = 13, b = 15.
  4. Total: 13 + 15 = 28.
B 28 students.
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Problem 24 · 2009 AMC 8 Hard
Algebra & Patterns cryptarithm

The letters A, B, C, and D represent digits. If AB + CA = DA and ABCA = A, what digit does D represent?

Show hint (soft nudge)
From the units column of the addition (B + A ends in A), get B = 0.
Show hint (sharpest)
Then AB = 10A. Plug into the subtraction equation to find A and C.
Show solution
  1. Units of addition: B + AA (mod 10) ⇒ B = 0 (no carry since A is a digit).
  2. Now AB = 10A and CA = 10C + A. Subtraction: 10A − (10C + A) = A ⇒ 9A − 10C = A ⇒ 8A = 10C ⇒ 4A = 5C.
  3. Digits with 4A = 5C: A = 5, C = 4.
  4. D · 10 + A = AB + CA = 50 + 45 = 95 ⇒ D = 9.
E 9.
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Problem 25 · 2009 AMC 8 Hard
Geometry & Measurement surface-area-views staircase-decomposition

A one-cubic-foot cube is cut into four pieces by three cuts parallel to the top face of the cube. The first cut is 12 foot from the top face. The second cut is 13 foot below the first cut, and the third cut is 117 foot below the second cut. From the top to the bottom the pieces are labeled A, B, C, and D. The pieces are then glued together end to end as shown in the second diagram. What is the total surface area of this solid in square feet?

Show hint (soft nudge)
Look from each of the 6 directions and sum the visible areas.
Show hint (more)
Top and bottom views are each four 1×1 squares (the bases of the four pieces) = 4 sq ft each.
Show hint (sharpest)
End views show the full height of the tallest piece (1/2 sq ft each); front and back show the staircase silhouette whose total height adds to 1.
Show solution
  1. Top view: each piece's 1×1 top is visible ⇒ 4 sq ft. Same for bottom ⇒ 4 sq ft.
  2. Front and back views: silhouette is 4 rectangles of width 1 with heights summing to 1 ⇒ 1 sq ft each, total 2 sq ft.
  3. End views: in the monotone-staircase arrangement, each end view equals the cross section of the tallest piece A: 1 · (1/2) = 1/2. Two ends ⇒ 1 sq ft.
  4. Total: 4 + 4 + 2 + 1 = 11.
E 11 square feet.
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