Word Problems
Word problems are where weight meets real life: adding the shopping, sharing a load, working out cost from a per-kilogram price. The reliable method has three steps. First, make all the units the same, usually grams or all kilograms, before doing any arithmetic, because mixing 1 kg 250 g with 750 g directly is the number-one error. Second, pick the right operation: 'in all' or 'total' means add, 'how much more' or 'left' means subtract, 'each' or 'per kg' points to multiply or divide. Third, convert the answer back into a sensible unit (3500 g is usually better written as 3 kg 500 g). Shopping problems lean on price-per-kilogram: if mangoes cost 60 rupees per kg, then 1/2 kg costs 30 rupees and 250 g costs 15 rupees, found by scaling the price down in the same proportion as the weight. A typical exam item chains two of these ideas, for instance adding three packets, then subtracting what was used, or buying 2 kg 500 g at a per-kg rate. Slow, unit-matched working beats clever shortcuts here.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
Auto-graded with full solutions; saved to your dashboard. Use the calculator and formula sheet (top-right) any time.
Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Standard units of mass (learn the ladder)
| Gram and kilogram | 1 kg = 1000 g |
|---|---|
| Half and quarter kilogram | 1/2 kg = 500 g, 1/4 kg = 250 g |
| Quintal | 1 quintal = 100 kg |
| Tonne (metric ton) | 1 tonne = 1000 kg = 10 quintals |
Comparing weight on a balance
| Balanced pans | pans level → left weight = right weight |
|---|---|
| Heavier side | a pan goes DOWN → that side is heavier |
| Lighter side | a pan goes UP → that side is lighter |
| Find the unknown | unknown = known weights that make the pans level |