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Yr 7 Maths Emergency L2

Question 1

List all the factors of:


(a) 24 (b) 42 (c) 39 (d) 80 (e) 95

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Question 2

Write down the cube root of:


(a) 64 (b) 27 (c) 1 (d) 729 (e) 1000

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Question 3 Do not use a calculator

5 and 7 are a pair of prime numbers which have a difference of 2.


What other pairs of prime numbers less than 50 have a difference of 2?

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Question 4 Do not use a calculator

Work out:
(a) 47 × 10 × 100 (b) 308 × 100 ÷ 10
(c) 5900 ÷ 100 × 10 (d) 94 × 10 ÷ 10
(e) 72 000 ÷ 10 × 100 (f) 39 000 ÷ 100 × 10
(g) 4060 × 100 × 10 ÷ 100 (h) 3000 ÷10 × 100 × 10

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Question 5 Do not use a calculator

Complete the following statements:


(a) Multiplying by 100 and then dividing by 10 is the same
as multiplying by . . .
(b) Multiplying by 100 and then dividing by 100 is the same
as multiplying by . . .

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Question 6 Do not use a calculator

Work out:
(a) 75 × 400 ÷ 10 (b) 798 × 50 ÷ 10
(c) 27 × 600 ÷ 100 (d) 92 × 700 ÷ 10
(e) 567 × 300 ÷ 100 (f) 56 × 500 ÷ 10
(g) 83 × 900 ÷ 100 (h) 90 × 30 ÷ 10

Impact Maths - Red Book 1 - Copyright Heinemann © 2000


Question 7

A fruit grower is putting peaches into packs.


She can put them into packs of 6 or packs of 8.
She fills 5 packs of 6 and 4 packs of 8 and has two peaches left over.
How could she have packed them to have no peaches left over?

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Question 8

A plumber charges £36 an hour for emergency work.


He charges a customer £288 for repairing a leaking pipe.
For how many hours of work did he charge the customer?

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Question 9

Work out:
(a) 17 squared (b) 12 cubed
(c) 93 (d) 5 to the power of 5

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Question 10

Write:
(a) 1 000 000 as a power of 100
(b) 900 as a number squared
(c) 216 as a power of 6
(d) 44 as a power of 2

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Question 11 Do not use a calculator

Work out:
(a) £32.14 + £26.43 (b) £48.75 + £25.46
(c) £39.86 + £52.74 (d) 5.7 + 2.6
(e) 18.5 + 0.73 (f) 2.8 + 25.6 + 3.24
(g) 6.07 + 25 + 0.38 (h) 0.08 + 32.3 + 2.354
(i) 6.45 + 54.7 + 2.086

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Question 12 Do not use a calculator

Write down the answers:


(a) 2.93 × 10 (b) 0.072 × 100 (c) 0.0453 × 1000
(d) 5.062 × 100 (e) 1.52 × 1000 (f) 0.009 × 10

Impact Maths - Red Book 1 - Copyright Heinemann © 2000


Question 13 Do not use a calculator

Find the value of:


(a) 562.9 ÷ 100 (b) 983.5 ÷ 1000 (c) 28.62 ÷ 10
(d) 5.3 ÷ 1000 (e) 0.062 ÷ 10 (f) 7.23 ÷ 100

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Question 14 Do not use a calculator

Work out:
(a) 280 × 0.1 (b) 493 × 0.01 (c) 17 × 0.1
(d) 62 × 0.01 (e) 5.3 × 0.1 (f) 8.4 × 0.01
(g) 6 ÷ 0.1 (h) 53 ÷ 0.01 (i) 72.9 ÷ 0.1
(j) 0.7 ÷ 0.01 (k) 25.08 ÷ 0.1 (l) 9.4 ÷ 0.01

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Question 15 Do not use a calculator

Round 3.197:
(a) to the nearest whole number
(b) to one decimal place
(c) to two decimal places.

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Question 16 Do not use a calculator

At a Summer Fair ten-pence coins are laid along a


straight line adjoining each other. The diameter of one
of the coins is 2.4 cm.
(a) Calculate the length of the line taken up by 9 coins.
(b) Use your answer to part (a) to work out the
length taken up by 9000 of the coins.
(c) Work out the cash value of the 9000 coins.

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Question 17

Work out:
(a) 6.8 ÷ 4 (b) 148.8 ÷ 6 (c) 29.6 ÷ 5 (d) 24.18 ÷ 3
(e) 492.3 ÷ 9 (f) 35.028 ÷ 7 (g) 36.144 ÷ 9 (h) 59.4 ÷ 8

Impact Maths - Red Book 1 - Copyright Heinemann © 2000


Question 18

Matt uses a piece of rope 20 metres long to mark out


a square area. The two ends of the rope are joined
together with a knot, which uses 0.45 m from one end
and 0.39 m from the other end. Calculate the length of
a side of the square area.

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Question 19

Estimate how long these journeys might take by car, bicycle or walking.
Cars average about 40 miles in an hour.
Bicycles can travel about 60 miles in a day.
You can walk about 20 miles in a day.

Birmingham to By car By bicycle Walking


(a) Brighton 177 miles
(b) Bristol 86 miles
(c) Gloucester 52 miles
(d) Liverpool 101 miles
(e) Plymouth 200 miles
(f) Guildford 125 miles

Impact Maths - Red Book 1 - Copyright Heinemann © 2000


Question 20

Here is part of a train timetable.

London 10 03 10 10 10 12 10 30 10 35 10 42 10 50
Woking 10 28 …… 10 43 …… 11 00 11 13 11 17
Basingstoke …… 10 55 11 16 …… 11 20 11 46 11 37
Portsmouth …… …… …… …… …… 12 55 ……
Southampton …… 11 29 …… 11 39 …… …… 12 14
Bournemouth …… …… …… 12 10 …… …… 12 55

(a) What is the shortest journey time for London to Basingstoke?


(b) What is the time that the Portsmouth train leaves London?
(c) What are the journey times of the three trains from London
to Southampton?
(d) You arrive at Basingstoke at 10:50. What is your best plan for
getting to Bournemouth?
(e) What is the journey time from Basingstoke to Portsmouth?

Impact Maths - Red Book 1 - Copyright Heinemann © 2000

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