Subtraction Word Problems Large Numbers
Subtraction of Large Numbers: Subtraction Word Problems Large Numbers
Subtraction Word Problems Large Numbers
Subtraction Word Problems Large Numbers
What you'll learn
- To pick out the two important numbers from a real-life story and decide which to subtract from which.
- To solve problems about money collected and spent, populations, stock in a godown, distance travelled, and library books.
- To write the answer with the correct unit (₹, km, kg, books, seats).
Key concepts
Level 1 — Spotting the "total" and the "used/removed" part
Verbal: Look for a starting amount and something that is taken away, spent, sold, or moved. The answer is always: total − part removed = part remaining.
| Clue words | Meaning |
|---|---|
| "spent", "sold", "issued", "moved away" | amount to subtract |
| "collected", "population", "total", "had" | starting amount |
| "left", "remaining", "still empty" | what you must find |
Level 2 — Writing the correct number sentence
Symbolic: Total − Removed = Remaining
NCERT-style example: "A school collected ₹68,540 for its fete. It spent ₹34,275 on decorations. How much is left?"
68,540 − 34,275 = 34,265
Level 3 — Units matter
Always attach the unit to your final answer: ₹ for money, km for distance, kg for weight, and plain numbers for people/books/seats.
Worked example
The population of a town is 84,506. If 27,839 people moved to another city, what is the population now?
Step 1 — Total population = 84,506
Step 2 — People who moved = 27,839
Step 3 — 84,506 − 27,839 = 56,667
Answer: 56,667 people
A library has 12,000 books. 4,650 books are issued to students. How many books remain?
12,000 − 4,650 = 7,350
Answer: 7,350 books remain in the library.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Adding instead of subtracting | Not identifying "left/remaining" clue words | Underline the clue word first, then choose the operation |
| Subtracting the total from the part | Numbers written in the wrong order | The bigger starting amount always goes on top |
| Forgetting the unit in the final answer | Rushing to just the number | Write the unit every time: ₹, km, kg, books, seats |
Quick check
- A stadium has 45,000 seats. 38,275 tickets are sold. How many seats are empty?
- A shop had 9,500 kg of rice and sold 6,840 kg. How much rice is left?
- A train journey is 62,000 m. It has covered 45,500 m. How much distance is left? (convert to km if needed)
- Stretch: Make up your own word problem using today's date as one of the numbers.
Revision tip: Before calculating, say the problem in your own words: "I start with ___ and take away ___."
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Subtraction Word Problems Large Numbers.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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