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SATs 2019 KS2 Mathematics Paper 1: Arithmetic
Table of Contents
- Question 1 (Addition)
- Question 2 (Addition)
- Question 3 (Missing Number)
- Question 4 (Missing Number)
- Question 5 (Multiplication)
- Question 6 (Decimals)
- Question 7 (Division)
- Question 8 (Division)
- Question 9 (Multiplication)
- Question 10 (Division)
- Question 11 (Subtraction)
- Question 12 (Subtraction)
- Question 13 (Division)
- Question 14 (Decimals)
- Question 15 (BODMAS)
- Question 16 (Indices)
- Question 17 (Multiplication)
- Question 18 (Percentages)
- Question 19 (Decimals)
- Question 20 (Decimals)
- Question 21 (Decimals)
- Question 22 (Fractions)
- Question 23 (Long Multiplication)
- Question 24 (Fractions)
- Question 25 (Long Division)
- Question 26 (Fractions)
- Question 27 (Percentages)
- Question 28 (Fractions)
- Question 29 (Percentages)
- Question 30 (Long Multiplication)
- Question 31 (Fractions)
- Question 32 (Fractions)
- Question 33 (Percentages)
- Question 34 (Fractions)
- Question 35 (Fractions)
- Question 36 (Long Division)
Question 1 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 6,000 + 90 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Place Value
💡 Strategy:
We are adding 90 (9 tens) to 6,000 (6 thousands). There are no other digits in the tens column of 6,000.
Step 2: Combine
🔧 Calculation:
We simply place the 90 into the last two digits.
\( 6,000 + 90 = 6,090 \)
🏁 Final Answer:
6,090
✓ (1 mark)
Question 2 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 8,275 + 82 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Column Addition
💡 Strategy:
Line up the digits correctly. The 82 must line up with the 75 (tens and units).
Step 2: Calculate
🔧 Method:
- Units: \( 5 + 2 = 7 \)
- Tens: \( 7 + 8 = 15 \) (Write 5, carry 1)
- Hundreds: \( 2 + 1 (\text{carry}) = 3 \)
- Thousands: \( 8 + 0 = 8 \)
8 2 7 5
+ 8 2
─────────
8 3 5 7
1
🏁 Final Answer:
8,357
✓ (1 mark)
Question 3 (1 mark)
Fill in the missing number:
\[ 826 = 800 + \square + 6 \]Worked Solution
Step 1: Partitioning
💡 Why we do this:
This question asks us to split (partition) the number 826 into Hundreds, Tens, and Units.
\( 826 = 8 \text{ Hundreds} + 2 \text{ Tens} + 6 \text{ Units} \)
Step 2: Identifying the Missing Part
🔧 Method:
- We have the Hundreds (800).
- We have the Units (6).
- We are missing the Tens.
The digit in the tens column is 2.
2 Tens = 20.
🏁 Final Answer:
20
✓ (1 mark)
Question 4 (1 mark)
Calculate the missing number:
\[ \square + 5 = 341 \]Worked Solution
Step 1: Inverse Operation
💡 Strategy:
To find a missing number in an addition, we do the inverse (opposite), which is subtraction.
\( 341 – 5 = \square \)
Step 2: Calculation
🔧 Method:
Count back 5 from 341.
- 341 – 1 = 340
- 340 – 4 = 336
Or use column subtraction:
3 34 11
- 5
─────────
3 3 6
🏁 Final Answer:
336
✓ (1 mark)
Question 5 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 9 \times 41 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Commutative Law
💡 Strategy:
It is easier to calculate if we put the larger number on top.
\( 41 \times 9 \)
Step 2: Short Multiplication
🔧 Method:
- Units: \( 1 \times 9 = 9 \)
- Tens: \( 4 \times 9 = 36 \)
4 1
x 9
───────
3 6 9
🏁 Final Answer:
369
✓ (1 mark)
Question 6 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 5.87 + 3.123 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Alignment
💡 Critical Rule:
When adding decimals, you MUST line up the decimal points.
5.87 has two decimal places. 3.123 has three. It helps to add a “ghost zero” to 5.87 so they are the same length: 5.870.
Step 2: Column Addition
🔧 Method:
- Thousandths: \( 0 + 3 = 3 \)
- Hundredths: \( 7 + 2 = 9 \)
- Tenths: \( 8 + 1 = 9 \)
- Units: \( 5 + 3 = 8 \)
5 . 8 7 0 + 3 . 1 2 3 ─────────── 8 . 9 9 3
🏁 Final Answer:
8.993
✓ (1 mark)
Question 7 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 180 \div 3 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Related Facts
💡 Strategy:
Ignore the zero for a moment. We know that:
\[ 18 \div 3 = 6 \]Step 2: Adjusting Place Value
🔧 Calculation:
Since the question is \( 180 \div 3 \) (which is 10 times bigger than 18), the answer must be 10 times bigger than 6.
\[ 6 \times 10 = 60 \]🏁 Final Answer:
60
✓ (1 mark)
Question 8 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 120 \div 12 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Times Tables
💡 Strategy:
This relies on knowing your 12 times table.
How many 12s go into 120?
Step 2: Calculation
🔧 Method:
\[ 12 \times 10 = 120 \]Therefore,
\[ 120 \div 12 = 10 \]🏁 Final Answer:
10
✓ (1 mark)
Question 9 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 213 \times 0 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: The Zero Rule
💡 Why we do this:
Multiplying by zero means “we have zero lots of something”.
No matter how big the number is, if you multiply it by zero, the answer is always zero.
🏁 Final Answer:
0
✓ (1 mark)
Question 10 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 91 \div 7 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Bus Stop Method
💡 Strategy:
We are dividing a 2-digit number by a 1-digit number. Short division (bus stop) is efficient.
Step 2: Working Through
🔧 Method:
- 9 ÷ 7: 7 goes into 9 1 time, with a remainder of 2.
- Carry the 2 to the next digit to make 21.
- 21 ÷ 7: 7 goes into 21 exactly 3 times.
1 3
┌────
7 │ 921
🏁 Final Answer:
13
✓ (1 mark)
Question 11 (1 mark)
Calculate the missing number:
\[ \square = 87 – 65 \]Worked Solution
Step 1: Setup
💡 Strategy:
This is a subtraction calculation. We can set it up in a column to subtract the ones and the tens separately.
Step 2: Column Subtraction
🔧 Method:
- Units: \( 7 – 5 = 2 \)
- Tens: \( 8 – 6 = 2 \)
8 7 - 6 5 ───── 2 2
🏁 Final Answer:
22
✓ (1 mark)
Question 12 (1 mark)
Calculate the missing number:
\[ 602 – \square = 594 \]Worked Solution
Step 1: Rearranging the Calculation
💡 Why we do this:
The question asks: “What do we take away from 602 to get 594?”
We can find the difference between the two numbers to find the answer: \[ 602 – 594 = \square \]
Step 2: Column Subtraction (Count On or Back)
🔧 Method:
The numbers are close together, so we could count up from 594 to 602.
- 594 + 6 = 600
- 600 + 2 = 602
- Total difference = 6 + 2 = 8
Alternatively, use column subtraction with borrowing:
56 90 12
- 5 9 4
────────────
8
🏁 Final Answer:
8
✓ (1 mark)
Question 13 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 1,210 \div 11 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Bus Stop Method
💡 Strategy:
We are dividing a 4-digit number by a 2-digit number (11). Short division is efficient here because the 11 times table is straightforward.
Step 2: Working Through
🔧 Method:
- 12 ÷ 11: 11 goes into 12 once, with a remainder of 1. Carry the 1.
- 11 ÷ 11: The number becomes 11. 11 goes into 11 exactly once.
- 0 ÷ 11: 11 goes into 0 zero times.
0 1 1 0
┌────────
11│ 1 211 0
🏁 Final Answer:
110
✓ (1 mark)
Question 14 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 25.34 \times 10 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Place Value Rule
💡 Why we do this:
When multiplying a decimal number by 10, all digits move one place to the left. The number gets 10 times bigger.
Step 2: Moving the Digits
🔧 How to do it:
- The 2 tens become 2 hundreds.
- The 5 units become 5 tens.
- The 3 tenths become 3 units.
- The 4 hundredths become 4 tenths.
Visually, the decimal point appears to move one place to the right:
\( 25.34 \rightarrow 253.4 \)
🏁 Final Answer:
253.4
✓ (1 mark)
Question 15 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 60 \div (30 – 24) \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Order of Operations (BODMAS)
💡 Rule:
We must follow the order of operations:
- Brackets (do this first!)
- Orders (indices)
- Division / Multiplication
- Addition / Subtraction
Step 2: Calculate Brackets
🔧 Calculation:
First, calculate inside the brackets: \( 30 – 24 = 6 \)
The question becomes: \[ 60 \div 6 \]
Step 3: Division
🔧 Calculation:
\( 60 \div 6 = 10 \)
🏁 Final Answer:
10
✓ (1 mark)
Question 16 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 3^3 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Understanding Indices
💡 Why we do this:
The small number (index or exponent) tells us how many times to multiply the base number by itself.
\( 3^3 \) means “3 cubed”, or \( 3 \times 3 \times 3 \).
Common Mistake: Do not calculate \( 3 \times 3 = 9 \). This is incorrect.
Step 2: Calculation
🔧 How to do it:
- First, multiply the first two numbers: \( 3 \times 3 = 9 \)
- Then, multiply the result by the third number: \( 9 \times 3 = 27 \)
🏁 Final Answer:
27
✓ (1 mark)
Question 17 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 101 \times 1000 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Place Value Rule
💡 Strategy:
Multiplying by 1000 moves all digits 3 places to the left.
Alternatively, when multiplying a whole number by 1000, we simply append three zeros to the end.
Step 2: Calculation
🔧 Method:
Start with: \( 101 \)
Add three zeros: \( 101,000 \)
🏁 Final Answer:
101,000
✓ (1 mark)
Question 18 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 20\% \text{ of } 3000 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Find 10% First
💡 Strategy:
It is easier to find 10% first and then double it to find 20%.
To find 10%, we divide by 10 (move decimal point one place left/remove one zero).
\( 10\% \text{ of } 3000 = 300 \)
Step 2: Double it to find 20%
🔧 Calculation:
If \( 10\% = 300 \), then \( 20\% \) is double that.
\( 300 \times 2 = 600 \)
🏁 Final Answer:
600
✓ (1 mark)
Question 19 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 7 – 2.25 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Placeholder Zeros
💡 Critical Rule:
The number 7 is the same as 7.00. We MUST use these placeholder zeros so that we can subtract the decimals correctly.
Step 2: Column Subtraction with Borrowing
🔧 Method:
We cannot do \( 0 – 5 \) or \( 0 – 2 \), so we must exchange from the units column.
67 . 90 10
- 2 . 2 5
──────────────
4 . 7 5
🏁 Final Answer:
4.75
✓ (1 mark)
Question 20 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 0.9 \div 100 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Place Value Rule
💡 Strategy:
Dividing by 100 makes the number smaller. We move the digits 2 places to the right.
Step 2: Moving the Digits
🔧 Method:
Start with 0.9.
- Divide by 10 (move 1 place): 0.09
- Divide by 100 (move 2 places): 0.009
We fill the empty spaces with zeros.
🏁 Final Answer:
0.009
✓ (1 mark)
Question 21 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 9 – 1.9 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Alignment and Placeholders
💡 Critical Rule:
To subtract a decimal from a whole number, turn the whole number into a decimal by adding a decimal point and a zero.
\( 9 \) becomes \( 9.0 \).
Step 2: Column Subtraction
🔧 Method:
We align the decimal points.
- Tenths: \( 0 – 9 \). We cannot do this. Borrow from the units.
- The 9 units becomes 8. The 0 tenths becomes 10.
- \( 10 – 9 = 1 \).
- Units: \( 8 – 1 = 7 \).
89 . 10
- 1 . 9
───────────
7 . 1
🏁 Final Answer:
7.1
✓ (1 mark)
Question 22 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 1\frac{3}{7} – \frac{4}{7} \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Convert Mixed Number
💡 Strategy:
We have a mixed number \( 1\frac{3}{7} \). It is easier to subtract if we convert this entire number into an improper fraction first.
\( 1 \) whole is equal to \( \frac{7}{7} \).
So, \( 1\frac{3}{7} = \frac{7}{7} + \frac{3}{7} = \frac{10}{7} \).
Step 2: Subtracting Fractions
🔧 Calculation:
Now the calculation is:
\[ \frac{10}{7} – \frac{4}{7} \]Since the denominators are the same, we simply subtract the numerators:
\[ 10 – 4 = 6 \]The denominator stays as 7.
🏁 Final Answer:
\[ \frac{6}{7} \]
✓ (1 mark)
Question 23 (2 marks)
Calculate: \[ 836 \times 27 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Setup for Long Multiplication
💡 Why we do this:
We are multiplying by a 2-digit number (27). We will split this into two parts:
- \( 836 \times 7 \)
- \( 836 \times 20 \)
Step 2: Calculate Rows
🔧 Row 1: \( 836 \times 7 \)
- \( 6 \times 7 = 42 \) (write 2, carry 4)
- \( 3 \times 7 = 21 + 4 = 25 \) (write 5, carry 2)
- \( 8 \times 7 = 56 + 2 = 58 \)
🔧 Row 2: \( 836 \times 20 \)
First, put a 0 in the units column (the magic zero).
- \( 6 \times 2 = 12 \) (write 2, carry 1)
- \( 3 \times 2 = 6 + 1 = 7 \)
- \( 8 \times 2 = 16 \)
8 3 6
x 2 7
────────────
5 8 5 2 (836 x 7)
1 6 7 2 0 (836 x 20)
────────────
2 2 5 7 2
1 1
🏁 Final Answer:
22,572
✓ (2 marks)
Question 24 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ \frac{1}{5} + \frac{3}{4} \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Common Denominator
💡 Strategy:
The denominators (5 and 4) are different. We cannot add them yet. We must find a common multiple.
Multiples of 5: 5, 10, 15, 20…
Multiples of 4: 4, 8, 12, 16, 20…
The Lowest Common Denominator is 20.
Step 2: Convert Fractions
🔧 Calculation:
Convert \( \frac{1}{5} \) to twentieths: Multiply top and bottom by 4.
\[ \frac{1 \times 4}{5 \times 4} = \frac{4}{20} \]Convert \( \frac{3}{4} \) to twentieths: Multiply top and bottom by 5.
\[ \frac{3 \times 5}{4 \times 5} = \frac{15}{20} \]Step 3: Add
🏁 Final Answer:
\[ \frac{19}{20} \]
✓ (1 mark)
Question 25 (2 marks)
Calculate: \[ 888 \div 37 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Multiples of 37
💡 Strategy:
Dividing by 37 is difficult mentally. Write out the first few multiples of 37 to help.
- \( 1 \times 37 = 37 \)
- \( 2 \times 37 = 74 \)
- \( 3 \times 37 = 111 \)
Step 2: Long Division
🔧 Method:
Part A: 37 into 88.
Looking at our list, 74 is the closest without going over. That is \( 2 \times 37 \).
Remainder: \( 88 – 74 = 14 \).
Bring down the 8 to make 148.
Part B: 37 into 148.
Let’s continue our list:
- \( 4 \times 37 = (2 \times 74) = 148 \)
Perfect! It goes in exactly 4 times.
2 4
┌──────
37 │ 8 8 8
- 7 4
──────
1 4 8
- 1 4 8
──────
0
🏁 Final Answer:
24
✓ (2 marks)
Question 26 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 1\frac{1}{5} + 2\frac{1}{10} \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Separate Wholes and Fractions
💡 Strategy:
We can add the whole numbers and the fractions separately.
Wholes: \( 1 + 2 = 3 \)
Step 2: Add Fractions
🔧 Calculation:
We need to add \( \frac{1}{5} + \frac{1}{10} \).
Change \( \frac{1}{5} \) into tenths by doubling top and bottom: \( \frac{2}{10} \).
Now add: \( \frac{2}{10} + \frac{1}{10} = \frac{3}{10} \).
Step 3: Combine
Combine the wholes and the fraction:
\[ 3 + \frac{3}{10} = 3\frac{3}{10} \]🏁 Final Answer:
\[ 3\frac{3}{10} \]
✓ (1 mark)
Question 27 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 35\% \text{ of } 320 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Partitioning Percentage
💡 Strategy:
We can break 35% down into chunks we can easily calculate: \( 30\% + 5\% \).
Step 2: Finding 10%
🔧 Calculation:
10% of 320 is \( 320 \div 10 = 32 \).
Step 3: Finding 30% and 5%
30%: This is 3 lots of 10%.
\( 32 \times 3 = 96 \)
5%: This is half of 10%.
Half of 32 is \( 16 \).
Step 4: Total
\( 96 (30\%) + 16 (5\%) = 112 \)
🏁 Final Answer:
112
✓ (1 mark)
Question 28 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ \frac{8}{9} – \frac{1}{4} \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Common Denominator
💡 Strategy:
Multiples of 9: 9, 18, 27, 36…
Multiples of 4: 4, 8, 12… 36…
The lowest common multiple is 36.
Step 2: Convert Fractions
🔧 Calculation:
\( \frac{8}{9} \): Multiply top and bottom by 4 → \( \frac{32}{36} \)
\( \frac{1}{4} \): Multiply top and bottom by 9 → \( \frac{9}{36} \)
Step 3: Subtract
🏁 Final Answer:
\[ \frac{23}{36} \]
✓ (1 mark)
Question 29 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 51\% \text{ of } 900 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Partitioning
💡 Strategy:
51% is very close to 50%. We can calculate \( 50\% + 1\% \).
Step 2: Calculate Parts
50%: This is half. Half of 900 is \( 450 \).
1%: Divide by 100. \( 900 \div 100 = 9 \).
Step 3: Total
\( 450 + 9 = 459 \)
🏁 Final Answer:
459
✓ (1 mark)
Question 30 (2 marks)
Calculate: \[ 3468 \times 62 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Setup
💡 Strategy:
We perform long multiplication, splitting 62 into 2 and 60.
Step 2: Multiply by 2
- \( 8 \times 2 = 16 \) (write 6, carry 1)
- \( 6 \times 2 = 12 + 1 = 13 \) (write 3, carry 1)
- \( 4 \times 2 = 8 + 1 = 9 \)
- \( 3 \times 2 = 6 \)
- Row 1: 6936
Step 3: Multiply by 60
Add the placeholder zero.
- \( 8 \times 6 = 48 \) (write 8, carry 4)
- \( 6 \times 6 = 36 + 4 = 40 \) (write 0, carry 4)
- \( 4 \times 6 = 24 + 4 = 28 \) (write 8, carry 2)
- \( 3 \times 6 = 18 + 2 = 20 \)
- Row 2: 208080
3 4 6 8
x 6 2
──────────────
6 9 3 6
2 0 8 0 8 0
──────────────
2 1 5 0 1 6
1 1 1
🏁 Final Answer:
215,016
✓ (2 marks)
Question 31 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ \frac{2}{3} \div 3 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Conceptual Understanding
💡 Why we do this:
Dividing a fraction by a whole number makes the pieces smaller. If you have \( \frac{2}{3} \) of a pizza and you share it among 3 people, each person gets a smaller slice.
Mathematically, dividing by 3 is the same as multiplying the denominator (bottom number) by 3.
Step 2: Calculation
🔧 Method:
Keep the numerator (top) the same. Multiply the denominator by the whole number.
\[ \frac{2}{3 \times 3} = \frac{2}{9} \]🏁 Final Answer:
\[ \frac{2}{9} \]
✓ (1 mark)
Question 32 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 2\frac{1}{2} – \frac{3}{4} \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Convert to Improper Fraction
💡 Strategy:
It is safer to turn mixed numbers into improper fractions before subtracting.
\( 2\frac{1}{2} \): \( 2 \times 2 + 1 = 5 \), so it is \( \frac{5}{2} \).
Step 2: Common Denominator
🔧 Method:
We are subtracting \( \frac{3}{4} \) from \( \frac{5}{2} \).
The common denominator for 2 and 4 is 4.
Convert \( \frac{5}{2} \) to quarters: Multiply top and bottom by 2.
\[ \frac{5 \times 2}{2 \times 2} = \frac{10}{4} \]Step 3: Subtract
This answer is acceptable, or you can convert it back to a mixed number: \( 1\frac{3}{4} \).
🏁 Final Answer:
\[ 1\frac{3}{4} \text{ or } \frac{7}{4} \]
✓ (1 mark)
Question 33 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 36\% \text{ of } 450 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Partitioning
💡 Strategy:
Break 36% down into smaller chunks: \( 30\% + 5\% + 1\% \).
Step 2: Calculate Parts
10%: \( 450 \div 10 = 45 \).
30%: \( 45 \times 3 = 135 \).
5%: Half of 10% (half of 45) = \( 22.5 \).
1%: \( 450 \div 100 = 4.5 \).
Step 3: Add Together
1 3 5 . 0
2 2 . 5
+ 4 . 5
───────────
1 6 2 . 0
1 1
🏁 Final Answer:
162
✓ (1 mark)
Question 34 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ 1\frac{3}{4} \times 10 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Convert to Improper Fraction
💡 Strategy:
Convert \( 1\frac{3}{4} \) to an improper fraction.
\( 1 \times 4 + 3 = 7 \), so it is \( \frac{7}{4} \).
Step 2: Multiply
🔧 Method:
Multiply the numerator by the whole number:
\[ \frac{7}{4} \times 10 = \frac{70}{4} \]Step 3: Simplify
We can simplify \( \frac{70}{4} \).
Half of 70 is 35, so \( \frac{35}{2} \).
\( 35 \div 2 = 17.5 \) (or \( 17\frac{1}{2} \)).
🏁 Final Answer:
17.5
✓ (1 mark)
Question 35 (1 mark)
Calculate: \[ \frac{5}{6} \times 540 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: The Rule
💡 Strategy:
When finding a fraction of an amount: Divide by the bottom, Multiply by the top.
Step 2: Divide by the Bottom
🔧 Calculation:
Divide 540 by 6.
We know \( 54 \div 6 = 9 \).
So, \( 540 \div 6 = 90 \).
Step 3: Multiply by the Top
🔧 Calculation:
Multiply the result (90) by the numerator (5).
\( 90 \times 5 = 450 \).
🏁 Final Answer:
450
✓ (1 mark)
Question 36 (2 marks)
Calculate: \[ 8051 \div 83 \]
Worked Solution
Step 1: Estimation
💡 Strategy:
Dividing by 83 is tricky. Let’s list some multiples or estimate.
83 is close to 80.
- \( 10 \times 83 = 830 \).
- The number 8051 is much larger than 830, so the answer is a 2-digit number.
- Actually, looking at the first three digits (805), we can see how many 83s fit.
Step 2: Long Division
🔧 Method:
Part A: 83 into 805.
Since \( 10 \times 83 = 830 \) (too big), let’s try 9.
\( 9 \times 3 = 27 \) (write 7, carry 2)
\( 9 \times 8 = 72 + 2 = 74 \)
So \( 9 \times 83 = 747 \).
Subtract: \( 805 – 747 \).
- \( 15 – 7 = 8 \)
- \( 9 – 4 = 5 \)
Remainder is 58. Bring down the 1 to make 581.
Part B: 83 into 581.
Look at the last digit (1). What times 3 ends in 1? 7.
Let’s test \( 83 \times 7 \).
- \( 7 \times 3 = 21 \)
- \( 7 \times 8 = 56 + 2 = 58 \)
It fits exactly!
9 7
┌────────
83 │ 8 0 5 1
- 7 4 7
───────
5 8 1
- 5 8 1
───────
0
🏁 Final Answer:
97
✓ (2 marks)