Interpreting Remainders
Grade 4 · Math · Long Division · Wyoming, USA
Lesson Summary
Sometimes numbers do not divide evenly and there is an amount left over. This leftover part is called the remainder.
Explanation
A remainder is what is left after you divide as much as you can. For 29 ÷ 4, 4 goes into 29 seven times because 7 × 4 = 28. That leaves 29 − 28 = 1, so the answer is 7 remainder 1, written as 7 R1. In word problems you have to think about what the remainder means. If you need buses for 29 people and each bus holds 4, you actually need 8 buses because you cannot leave 1 person behind.
Practice Questions
Q1: What is 43 ÷ 5?
Answer: 8 R3 (8 remainder 3)
Q2: What is 67 ÷ 8?
Answer: 8 R3 (8 remainder 3)
Q3: You have 25 stickers to share equally among 4 friends. How many does each friend get, and how many are left over?
Answer: Each friend gets 6 stickers with 1 left over (25 ÷ 4 = 6 R1).
People Also Ask
What is Interpreting Remainders in Grade 4 Math?+
Interpreting Remainders is a lesson in the Long Division chapter of Grade 4 Math. It is part of the Wyoming, USA school curriculum and covers key concepts that students need to understand at this level.
What grade level covers Interpreting Remainders?+
Interpreting Remainders is taught in Grade 4 as part of the Math curriculum in Wyoming, USA.
How can I help my child with Long Division in Math?+
Start with the lesson summary and explanation on this page. Practice the questions provided, then use TutorTom for personalized, step-by-step help with Long Division topics.