By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Explain and apply: Equation as balance
  • 2Explain and apply: Inverse operations
  • 3Explain and apply: Word problems
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Why this chapter matters
Finding the Unknown builds Class 7 Mathematics understanding of linear equations, unknowns, inverse operations, word problems through the newer Ganita Prakash style: explore, notice, explain, practise, and apply.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Finding the Unknown - Class 7 Mathematics (CBSE)

Based on the 2026-27 Class 7 Mathematics sequence for NCERT Ganita Prakash. These notes are written for students: understand the idea first, then practise enough examples to become accurate.


1. Why this chapter matters

Finding the Unknown turns arithmetic and expressions into equation-solving. An equation is like a balance: both sides must remain equal. Students learn to undo operations systematically and to translate real-life situations into mathematical statements.

In school tests, this chapter can appear as direct calculations, reasoning questions, short explanations, activity-based questions, and word problems. The safest preparation is not to memorise a single trick, but to know what each idea means and when to use it.

2. Core ideas

Equation as balance

If the same operation is done to both sides of an equation, equality is preserved. This balance idea is the safest way to solve.

Inverse operations

Addition is undone by subtraction, multiplication by division, and vice versa. Solving means isolating the unknown.

Word problems

The hardest part is often forming the equation. Define the unknown clearly before writing the equation.

3. Rules and formulas to remember

  • Addition equation: x + a = b -> x = b - a. Undo addition by subtraction.
  • Subtraction equation: x - a = b -> x = b + a. Undo subtraction by addition.
  • Multiplication equation: ax = b -> x = b/a. Undo multiplication by division.
  • Two-step equation: ax + b = c -> ax = c - b -> x = (c - b)/a. Work one inverse step at a time.

4. Worked examples

Example 1: Solve x + 17 = 42.

Subtract 17 from both sides: x = 42 - 17 = 25.

Example 2: Solve 5x = 60.

Divide both sides by 5: x = 12.

Example 3: Solve 3x + 4 = 31.

Subtract 4: 3x = 27. Divide by 3: x = 9.

Example 4: Riya thinks of a number. Twice the number plus 6 is 38. Find it.

Let the number be x. 2x + 6 = 38, so 2x = 32, x = 16.

5. Activity corner

Use a physical balance model with counters. Add the same number of counters to both sides, remove the same number, and divide into equal groups. Students see why equation steps are legal.

When writing an activity answer, include three things:

  • What you did.
  • What you observed.
  • What mathematical rule or pattern the activity shows.

6. Common mistakes and how to avoid them

  • Mistake: Moving terms without understanding the inverse operation Fix: Write the same operation on both sides.
  • Mistake: Forgetting to check the answer Fix: Substitute the value back into the original equation.
  • Mistake: Not defining the variable in word problems Fix: Start with 'Let the number be x' or a similar clear statement.

7. How to write high-scoring answers

  1. State the given information in mathematical form.
  2. Write the rule, formula, diagram, table, or operation you are using.
  3. Show every step clearly.
  4. Keep units such as cm, m, rupees, degrees, or minutes where needed.
  5. Check whether the answer is reasonable.

8. Practice set

  1. Solve x - 9 = 14.
  2. Solve 7x = 84.
  3. Solve x/5 = 11.
  4. Solve 4x - 3 = 29.
  5. A number divided by 6 gives 13. Find the number.
  6. How do you check an equation solution?

9. Answer key

  1. Solve x - 9 = 14. Answer: x = 23.

  2. Solve 7x = 84. Answer: x = 12.

  3. Solve x/5 = 11. Answer: x = 55.

  4. Solve 4x - 3 = 29. Answer: x = 8.

  5. A number divided by 6 gives 13. Find the number. Answer: 78.

  6. How do you check an equation solution? Answer: Substitute it into the original equation and see whether both sides match.

10. Quick revision

  • Main themes: linear equations, unknowns, inverse operations, word problems.
  • Redo the worked examples without looking at the solutions.
  • Explain the activity in your own words.
  • Correct the common mistakes once before the test.
  • Create one new word problem from daily life and solve it step by step.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Addition equation
x + a = b -> x = b - a
Undo addition by subtraction.
Subtraction equation
x - a = b -> x = b + a
Undo subtraction by addition.
Multiplication equation
ax = b -> x = b/a
Undo multiplication by division.
Two-step equation
ax + b = c -> ax = c - b -> x = (c - b)/a
Work one inverse step at a time.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Moving terms without understanding the inverse operation
Write the same operation on both sides.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting to check the answer
Substitute the value back into the original equation.
WATCH OUT
Not defining the variable in word problems
Start with 'Let the number be x' or a similar clear statement.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Concept
Solve x - 9 = 14.
Show solution
x = 23.
Q2EASY· Concept
Solve 7x = 84.
Show solution
x = 12.
Q3MEDIUM· Application
Solve x/5 = 11.
Show solution
x = 55.
Q4MEDIUM· Application
Solve 4x - 3 = 29.
Show solution
x = 8.
Q5MEDIUM· Application
A number divided by 6 gives 13. Find the number.
Show solution
78.
Q6HARD· Explain
How do you check an equation solution?
Show solution
Substitute it into the original equation and see whether both sides match.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Finding the Unknown belongs to the current Class 7 Ganita Prakash Mathematics sequence.
  • Key themes: linear equations, unknowns, inverse operations, word problems.
  • Addition equation: x + a = b -> x = b - a
  • Subtraction equation: x - a = b -> x = b + a
  • Multiplication equation: ax = b -> x = b/a
  • Always show steps for partial marks.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 6-10 marks, depending on school paper design

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Very Short11-3Definitions, quick facts, one-step calculations
Short Answer2-31-2Step-by-step procedures and examples
Activity / Competency3-50-1Reasoning, diagrams, data, construction, or word problem
Prep strategy
  • Understand the concept before memorising the rule
  • Practise the worked examples again without help
  • Redo the activity or draw its diagram
  • Check every answer using estimation, reverse operation, substitution, or a diagram

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

linear equations

Useful for daily-life calculations, school activities, data interpretation, and logical reasoning.

unknowns

Builds foundation for higher Class 8 and Class 9 Mathematics.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Write the formula or rule before substituting values
  2. Show working steps for partial marks
  3. Use diagrams, number lines, grids, tables, or constructions where useful
  4. Check whether the result is reasonable before finalising

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Create a puzzle based on Finding the Unknown and solve it in two different ways.
  • Look for a pattern, test it with examples, and explain why it works.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 7 School ExamHigh
Class 7 Maths OlympiadMedium
NMMS / Foundation reasoningMedium

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Yes. It is included in the 2026-27 Class 7 Mathematics sequence for NCERT Ganita Prakash.

Read the core ideas, solve the worked examples again, correct the common mistakes, and then attempt the practice set without looking at the answer key.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 20 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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