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Unknown Numbers in Equations

Finding Unknown Numbers in Equations

Sometimes in math, an equation has a missing number. This missing piece might be shown as a blank space (__\_\_), a question mark (??), or a letter like nn or xx. Your goal is to figure out what number belongs there to make the equation true!

The Magic of Opposite Operations

The best trick for finding an unknown number is to use opposite operations (also called inverse operations).

  • The opposite of addition is subtraction.
  • The opposite of multiplication is division.

When you read an equation with a missing part, you can often work backward using the opposite operation to solve it.

Addition and Subtraction Examples

Problem: __+345=812\_\_ + 345 = 812

To find the missing number, use the opposite of addition. Subtract 345345 from 812812: 812โˆ’345=467812 - 345 = 467 So, the unknown number is 467467. Let's check it: 467+345=812467 + 345 = 812. It works!

Multiplication and Division Examples

Problem: __ร—6=42\_\_ \times 6 = 42

Here, a number multiplied by 66 equals 4242. Use the opposite operation, which is division: 42รท6=742 \div 6 = 7 The missing number is 77. Check your work: 7ร—6=427 \times 6 = 42.

Problem: 56รทn=856 \div n = 8

In this division problem, nn is our unknown number. You can use fact families to help. If 5656 divided by nn is 88, then 88 times nn must be 5656: 8ร—n=568 \times n = 56 Since we know our multiplication facts, we know 8ร—7=568 \times 7 = 56. Therefore, n=7n = 7.

Quick Tip

Always double-check your answer by plugging it back into the original equation. If both sides match, you've found the correct unknown number!