Let’s have a look at the worksheet that challenges students and prepares them for exams. We have covered the entire chapter while selecting the questions from each section. This will help Class 6 students thoroughly prepare for Chapter 3: Number Play.
Class 6 Mathematics Chapter 3 Number Play Worksheet
A. Numbers Can Tell Us Things (Taller Neighbours)
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In a line, each child says the number of taller neighbours standing immediately next to them (left/right only).
For 6 children of different heights, is it possible to get the sequence:
1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 1?
If yes, describe a possible height order (use H1 shortest … H6 tallest). If no, explain why. -
For 5 children of different heights, can the sequence 2, 1, 1, 1, 2 ever happen?
Give a clear reason. -
With 7 children all of different heights, what is the maximum number of children who can say “2”?
Also write one arrangement (shortest → tallest positions) that achieves it.
B. Supercells (Bigger than adjacent cells)
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For the row: 420, 815, 600, 999, 100, 450, 449
Mark all supercells and state how many supercells exist. -
Create a row of 9 different 3-digit numbers (100–999) such that the number of supercells is as large as possible.
Write the row and state the number of supercells you achieved. -
Can a row of 8 different numbers have exactly 1 supercell?
Either (a) construct an example or (b) prove it cannot happen. -
Consider this 3×3 grid (neighbours are up/down/left/right only):
312, 450, 275, 498, 367, 410, 120, 600, 305.
List all supercells (write the numbers and their positions like (row, col)). -
Fill a 3×3 grid using digits 1, 0, 6, 3, 9 (each number must be a 5-digit number using all these digits exactly once)
such that only the centre cell is a supercell. (Any valid solution is fine.)
C. Patterns on the Number Line
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Place these numbers in increasing order and then identify which two are closest:
1050, 1500, 2180, 2754, 3050, 5030, 5300, 8400, 9590, 9950. -
Without drawing, answer using reasoning:
On a number line from 15,070 to 15,090, tick marks are at every 1 unit.
If one point is at 15,077 and another at 15,083,
how many integers lie strictly between them?
D. Playing with Digits
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How many 4-digit numbers exist? How many 5-digit numbers exist?
(Answer in numbers, not words.) -
Digit sum challenge:
(a) Find the smallest number whose digit sum is 14.
(b) Find the largest 5-digit number whose digit sum is 14. -
A 3-digit number has three consecutive digits (like 345).
(a) Write all such 3-digit numbers possible.
(b) Compute their digit sums and state the pattern you observe. -
Digit detective:
How many times does the digit 7 appear in the numbers from 1 to 200?
Show a counting method; don’t list all numbers.
E. Pretty Palindromic Patterns
- Using only digits 1, 2, 3, write all 4-digit palindromes possible.
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A 5-digit palindrome is of the form A B C B A.
If the number is odd and A = 2B and B = 2C, find the palindrome.
(Digits must be valid 0–9.) -
On a 12-hour clock, a time is palindromic if reading digits (ignoring “:”) gives a palindrome (example: 12:21).
List all palindromic times between 1:00 and 12:59 that have two-digit minutes.
F. The Magic Number of Kaprekar
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Perform the Kaprekar routine for 7421:
form the largest number A from digits, form the smallest number B from digits,
compute C = A − B, and repeat until you reach 6174.
Write each round clearly and state how many rounds it took. -
The chapter mentions that for many 3-digit numbers, the routine reaches a repeating loop.
Start with 321 and perform the routine until you see repetition.
What number begins repeating?
G. Games and Winning Strategies
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Two players start at 0. On each turn, a player adds 1, 2, or 3.
The player who first reaches 22 wins.
(a) Is there a guaranteed winning strategy?
(b) If yes, list the “safe numbers” the winning player should aim to say.
Class 6 Mathematics – Answer Key
Chapter: Number Play (NCERT) | Worksheet Answer Key (with reasoning)
A. Numbers Can Tell Us Things (Taller Neighbours)
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Answer: Not possible.
Reason: If a child says 2, both neighbours must be taller. Two adjacent children cannot both say 2.
The sequence has adjacent 2’s, so it cannot happen. -
Answer: Not possible.
Reason: End children have only one neighbour, so the maximum they can say is 1. The sequence has 2 at both ends. -
Answer: Maximum = 3 (positions 2, 4, 6).
One example arrangement (shortest→tallest labels 1–7): 7, 1, 6, 2, 5, 3, 4
(Then positions 2, 4, 6 each have two taller neighbours.)
B. Supercells (Bigger than adjacent cells)
- Answer: Supercells are 815, 999, 450. Total = 3.
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Answer: Maximum supercells in 9 cells = 5 (alternate high–low, including ends).
Example row: 900, 100, 850, 150, 800, 200, 750, 250, 700
Supercells: 900, 850, 800, 750, 700 → 5 -
Answer: Yes.
Example: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
Only the last cell is greater than its neighbour → exactly 1 supercell. -
Answer: Supercells are:
450 at (1,2), 498 at (2,1), 410 at (2,3), 600 at (3,2) -
Answer: One valid grid (each number uses digits 1,0,6,3,9 exactly once) where only the centre is a supercell:
Row 1: 10369 61930 10963
Row 2: 63109 96310 61390
Row 3: 13069 60931 13609Centre 96310 is larger than up/down/left/right; no other cell satisfies the condition.
C. Patterns on the Number Line
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Answer (increasing order): 1050, 1500, 2180, 2754, 3050, 5030, 5300, 8400, 9590, 9950
Closest pair: 5030 and 5300 (difference 270) - Answer: Integers strictly between 15077 and 15083 are 15078, 15079, 15080, 15081, 15082 → 5
D. Playing with Digits
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Answer:
4-digit numbers: 1000 to 9999 → 9000
5-digit numbers: 10000 to 99999 → 90000 -
Answer:
(a) Smallest number with digit sum 14: 59
(b) Largest 5-digit number with digit sum 14: 95000 -
Answer:
(a) 123, 234, 345, 456, 567, 678, 789
(b) Digit sums: 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24 → increases by 3 each time -
Answer: 40
Method: Ones place: 7, 17, …, 197 → 20 times. Tens place: 70–79 (10) and 170–179 (10) → 20 times. Total = 20 + 20 = 40.
E. Pretty Palindromic Patterns
- Answer: 1111, 1221, 1331, 2112, 2222, 2332, 3113, 3223, 3333
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Answer: No solution.
Reason: A = 2B and B = 2C ⇒ A = 4C, so A is always even. But an odd palindrome needs the last digit A to be odd. Impossible. -
Answer:
1:01, 1:11, 1:21, 1:31, 1:41, 1:51
2:02, 2:12, 2:22, 2:32, 2:42, 2:52
3:03, 3:13, 3:23, 3:33, 3:43, 3:53
4:04, 4:14, 4:24, 4:34, 4:44, 4:54
5:05, 5:15, 5:25, 5:35, 5:45, 5:55
6:06, 6:16, 6:26, 6:36, 6:46, 6:56
7:07, 7:17, 7:27, 7:37, 7:47, 7:57
8:08, 8:18, 8:28, 8:38, 8:48, 8:58
9:09, 9:19, 9:29, 9:39, 9:49, 9:59
10:01, 11:11, 12:21
F. The Magic Number of Kaprekar
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Answer:
7421 → 7421 − 1247 = 6174
Reached in 1 round. -
Answer: Repeating number is 495.
Work: 321−123=198 → 981−189=792 → 972−279=693 → 963−369=594 → 954−459=495 (then repeats)
G. Games and Winning Strategies
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Answer: Yes, there is a guaranteed winning strategy.
Safe numbers: 2, 6, 10, 14, 18, 22
Strategy: First say 2. After the opponent adds 1/2/3, respond by adding 3/2/1 so that the two moves total 4, landing on the next safe number.