A binomial is an algebraic expression that has exactly two terms, usually joined by a plus or minus sign, like x+2x+2x+2 or 3x2−5y3x^2-5y3x2−5y.

Quick Scoop: Core Idea

  • A binomial is a special kind of polynomial with two nonzero terms.
  • Those two terms can involve numbers (constants), variables, and exponents, as long as they are standard whole-number exponents (no negatives, fractions, or decimals in basic school algebra).
  • The terms are connected by addition or subtraction , not multiplication or division between them.

Examples:

  • x+2x+2x+2
  • 3x2−5y3x^2-5y3x2−5y
  • 7+9y7+9y7+9y

Non‑examples:

  • xxx (only one term → monomial)
  • x+2+5x+2+5x+2+5 (three terms → trinomial)
  • 1x+2\dfrac{1}{x}+2x1​+2 (has a negative exponent if written as x−1x^{-1}x−1, which is not a basic polynomial term)

Mini Sections

1. Where the word comes from

  • The prefix “bi‑” means “two,” and “nomial” comes from “name/term,” so binomial ≈ “two-term” expression.
  • So whenever you see “binomial,” think: “polynomial with two pieces stuck together by + or −.”

2. Common places you meet binomials

Binomials show up a lot in algebra and beyond:

  • Algebra practice
    • Expanding (x+2)(x+3)(x+2)(x+3)(x+2)(x+3)
    • Factoring expressions like x2+5x+6x^2+5x+6x2+5x+6 into (x+2)(x+3)(x+2)(x+3)(x+2)(x+3)
  • Binomial theorem
    • Expressions like (x+y)n(x+y)^n(x+y)n are called binomials raised to a power, and their expansion uses binomial coefficients (those 1, 3, 3, 1 numbers you see in (x+y)3(x+y)^3(x+y)3).
  • Probability (binomial distribution)
    • Not the same as a binomial expression, but related in name: the binomial distribution models the probability of getting kkk “successes” in nnn repeated yes/no trials.

3. Quick checklist: “Is this a binomial?”

Ask yourself:

  1. Does it have exactly two nonzero terms?
  2. Are the terms joined by + or − (not by × or ÷)?
  3. Are the terms standard polynomial-style terms (constants and/or variables with nonnegative integer exponents)?

If all answers are yes , you’re looking at a binomial.

4. A tiny story-style example

Imagine you’re tracking money in two parts:

  • Your cash : ccc
  • Your bank balance : 50

Your “total quick money” could be written as the binomial c+50c+50c+50: one term for what you have in your wallet, one term for what’s in the bank, joined by +.

5. Related meanings of “binomial”

In another context (biology), a binomial can also mean a two-word scientific name of a species (like Homo sapiens).

In your math context, though, it almost always means “two-term algebraic expression.”

TL;DR

A binomial in math is a polynomial with exactly two terms, joined by + or −, like 2x+32x+32x+3 or 3x2−5y3x^2-5y3x2−5y.