Class VI Mathematics

Chapter 1: Knowing Our Numbers

Standard NCERT & CBSE aligned study curriculum. Master concepts, track accuracy, revise weak areas, and challenge yourself with 9 customized practice modes.

Chapter Overview

Welcome to Class VI Mathematics: Knowing Our Numbers. This chapter forms a core structural component of the math syllabus, designed to build analytical rigor and key formula models.

Use the detailed subtopic guide below to review standard definitions, key mathematical rules, and study guidelines.

Prerequisite Concepts

Place value basicsHindu-Arabic numerals

Detailed Subtopics Study Guide

Review detailed conceptual explanations, mathematical equations, and guidelines for each subtopic in this chapter:

1Comparing numbers

Concept Explanation

Comparing numbers is determining which number is greater or smaller by counting digits or comparing place values from left to right.

Mathematical Representation
10^{n-1} \le x < 10^n \implies x \text{ has } n \text{ digits}
Study Guideline: A number with more digits is always larger. If digit counts are equal, compare the leftmost digits.

2Place value Indian and International

Concept Explanation

The Indian system uses periods of Ones, Thousands, Lakhs, Crores. The International system uses periods of Ones, Thousands, Millions.

Mathematical Representation
1 \text{ Million} = 10 \text{ Lakhs}, \quad 10 \text{ Millions} = 1 \text{ Crore}
Study Guideline: Indian commas: 12,34,567. International commas: 1,234,567 (grouped in threes).

3Estimation of sums

Concept Explanation

Estimation is rounding numbers to a specified place value (nearest ten, hundred, thousand) before calculating to find an approximate answer quickly.

Mathematical Representation
a + b \approx \text{Round}(a) + \text{Round}(b)
Study Guideline: If the digit to the right of the rounding place is 5 or more, round up; if it is 4 or less, round down.

4Roman numerals

Concept Explanation

Roman numerals use seven letters: I(1), V(5), X(10), L(50), C(100), D(500), and M(1000). Placing a smaller symbol before a larger one subtracts its value.

Mathematical Representation
VI = 5+1=6, \quad IV = 5-1=4, \quad IX = 10-1=9, \quad XL = 50-10=40
Study Guideline: Symbols I, X, C, M can be repeated up to three times in a row. V, L, D are never repeated or subtracted.