Welcome to the World of Big Number Subtraction!
Do you remember when you learned to subtract small numbers like 5 – 3 = 2? Great news! Subtraction works the same way no matter how big the numbers get. Whether you’re subtracting 5 – 3 or 500 – 300, the idea is always the same: taking away!
What is Subtraction Really About?
Subtraction means taking away or finding the difference. It doesn’t matter if you have:
- 8 candies or 800 candies
- 6 toys or 600 toys
- 9 rupees or 900 rupees
The process is the same! You’re always answering: “How many are left?” or “What’s the difference?”
The Big Secret:
When we subtract big numbers, we break them into smaller, easier parts (hundreds, tens, and ones), then subtract each part separately. Easy!
Understanding Place Value First
Before we subtract, let’s understand what three-digit numbers are made of:
456
|||
||└─ ONES place (6 ones)
|└── TENS place (5 tens = 50)
└─── HUNDREDS place (4 hundreds = 400)
456 = 400 + 50 + 6
Think of it like money:
- 4 hundred-rupee notes = ₹400
- 5 ten-rupee coins = ₹50
- 6 one-rupee coins = ₹6
- Total = ₹456
Method 1: Column Subtraction (Traditional Method)
This is the most common method. We line up the numbers and subtract column by column, starting from the ones place.
Example 1: Simple Subtraction (No Borrowing)
Problem: 587 – 342 = ?
Story: You have 587 marbles. You give 342 marbles to your friend. How many marbles do you have left?
Step-by-Step:
Step 1: Write numbers in columns
H T O
5 8 7
- 3 4 2
─────────
Step 2: Subtract ONES (right column)
5 8 7
- 3 4 2
─────────
5 (7 - 2 = 5)
Step 3: Subtract TENS (middle column)
5 8 7
- 3 4 2
─────────
4 5 (8 - 4 = 4)
Step 4: Subtract HUNDREDS (left column)
5 8 7
- 3 4 2
─────────
2 4 5 (5 - 3 = 2)
Answer: 587 – 342 = 245 ✓
You have 245 marbles left!
Example 2: Subtraction WITH Borrowing (Regrouping)
Problem: 524 – 168 = ?
Story: A library has 524 books. They give away 168 books. How many books are left?
Step 1: Start with ONES
5 2 4
- 1 6 8
─────────
Wait! We can’t do 4 – 8. The 4 is smaller than 8!
Solution: BORROW from the tens!
Step 2: Borrow 1 ten (10 ones) from the tens place
1
5 2 4 → 5 1 14
- 1 6 8 - 1 6 8
───────── ─────────
6 (14 - 8 = 6)
We changed 2 tens into 1 ten and 10 ones. Now 4 becomes 14!
Step 3: Subtract TENS
1
5 1 14
- 1 6 8
─────────
6 (We can't do 1 - 6!)
Borrow again from hundreds!
Step 4: Borrow 1 hundred (10 tens) from hundreds
4 1
5 1 14 → 4 11 14
- 1 6 8 - 1 6 8
───────── ─────────
5 6 (11 - 6 = 5)
Step 5: Subtract HUNDREDS
4 11 14
4 11 14
- 1 6 8
─────────
3 5 6 (4 - 1 = 3)
Answer: 524 – 168 = 356 ✓
The library has 356 books left!
Method 2: Breaking Apart Numbers (Expanded Form)
This method breaks big numbers into hundreds, tens, and ones, then subtracts each part.
Example: 678 – 345 = ?
Story: You walked 678 steps today and 345 steps yesterday. How many more steps did you walk today?
Step 1: Break apart both numbers
678 = 600 + 70 + 8
345 = 300 + 40 + 5
Step 2: Subtract each place value
Hundreds: 600 - 300 = 300
Tens: 70 - 40 = 30
Ones: 8 - 5 = 3
Step 3: Add the results
300 + 30 + 3 = 333
Answer: 678 – 345 = 333 ✓
You walked 333 more steps today!
Method 3: Number Line Method (Jumping Back)
We can use a number line to “jump back” and subtract!
Example: 450 – 120 = ?
Story: A farmer has 450 oranges. He sells 120 oranges. How many oranges are left?
Start at 450, jump back 120
-100 -10 -10
←─────────←─────←─────
330 430 440 450
Jump back in parts:
- Start at 450
- Jump back 100 → land at 350
- Jump back 10 → land at 340
- Jump back 10 → land at 330
Answer: 450 – 120 = 330 ✓
The farmer has 330 oranges left!
Method 4: Counting Up (Finding the Difference)
Instead of taking away, we can count up from the smaller number to the bigger number!
Example: 500 – 237 = ?
Story: You need 500 points to win a game. You have 237 points. How many more points do you need?
Count up from 237 to 500:
237 → 240 → 300 → 500
+3 +60 +200
Step by step:
- From 237 to 240 = +3
- From 240 to 300 = +60
- From 300 to 500 = +200
Total: 3 + 60 + 200 = 263
Answer: 500 – 237 = 263 ✓
You need 263 more points to win!
Visual Examples with Pictures
Example 1: Subtracting with Blocks
Problem: 345 – 123 = ?
We have 345:
Hundreds: 🟦🟦🟦 (3 hundred blocks)
Tens: 🟩🟩🟩🟩 (4 ten blocks)
Ones: 🟨🟨🟨🟨🟨 (5 one blocks)
Take away 123:
Take away: 🟦 (1 hundred)
Take away: 🟩🟩 (2 tens)
Take away: 🟨🟨🟨 (3 ones)
What’s left:
Hundreds: 🟦🟦 (2 hundred blocks)
Tens: 🟩🟩 (2 ten blocks)
Ones: 🟨🟨 (2 one blocks)
Answer: 222 ✓
Example 2: Money Subtraction
Problem: ₹675 – ₹342 = ?
You have:
💵💵💵💵💵💵💵 = 6 hundred-rupee notes (₹600)
🪙🪙🪙🪙🪙🪙🪙 = 7 ten-rupee coins (₹70)
🟡🟡🟡🟡🟡 = 5 one-rupee coins (₹5)
Total: ₹675
You spend:
💵💵💵 = ₹300
🪙🪙🪙🪙 = ₹40
🟡🟡 = ₹2
Total: ₹342
What’s left:
💵💵💵💵 = ₹400
🪙🪙🪙 = ₹30
🟡🟡🟡 = ₹3
Total: ₹333
Answer: ₹675 – ₹342 = ₹333 ✓
Tips and Tricks for Success!
Tip #1: Always Line Up the Numbers
Make sure hundreds are under hundreds, tens under tens, and ones under ones!
✓ CORRECT ✗ WRONG
456 456
- 123 -123
───── ────
Tip #2: Start from the RIGHT (Ones place)
Always subtract from right to left: Ones → Tens → Hundreds
Tip #3: Remember the Borrowing Rhyme
"When the top is less,
Don't make a mess!
Borrow from next door,
Add ten and subtract more!"
Tip #4: Check Your Answer with Addition
Subtraction and addition are opposites! Check your work:
If 524 – 168 = 356, then 356 + 168 should equal 524 ✓
Tip #5: Use Friendly Numbers
Round to the nearest hundred or ten to estimate first:
Example: 687 – 234 ≈ 700 – 200 = 500
So your answer should be around 500. (Actual answer: 453)
Tip #6: The Zero Rule
When subtracting from zero in any place, you MUST borrow!
Example:
502
- 178
─────
Can’t do 2 – 8, can’t do 0 – 7… Borrow from the 5!
Tip #7: Practice with Real Objects
Use coins, blocks, or toys to see subtraction in action!
Tip #8: No Borrowing? Lucky You!
When each digit on top is bigger than the digit below, you don’t need to borrow. Super easy!
789
- 234
─────
555 (No borrowing needed!)
The Big Picture: Why This Matters
Understanding three-digit subtraction helps you:
✓ Count money – “If I have ₹850 and spend ₹325, how much is left?”
✓ Measure distances – “The school is 650 meters away. I’ve walked 280 meters. How much farther?”
✓ Track time – “The movie is 145 minutes. We’ve watched 78 minutes. How much is left?”
✓ Compare quantities – “Our school has 568 students. The other school has 342. What’s the difference?”
✓ Solve everyday problems – Shopping, cooking, playing games, and more!
Remember: Subtraction is Always About Taking Away!
Whether you’re subtracting:
- 5 – 3 (small numbers)
- 50 – 30 (bigger numbers)
- 500 – 300 (three-digit numbers)
- Or even 5,000 – 3,000 (really big numbers!)
The idea never changes: You’re finding out what’s left after taking something away!
The only difference with bigger numbers is that we work with more place values, but the process stays the same. You’ve got this! 🌟
Quick Review Checklist
✓ Three-digit numbers have hundreds, tens, and ones
✓ Line up numbers by place value
✓ Always start subtracting from the right (ones place)
✓ When you can’t subtract, borrow from the next place
✓ You can use different methods – choose what works best for you!
✓ Check your work by adding the answer back
✓ Estimation helps you know if your answer makes sense
Keep practicing, and soon you’ll be a subtraction superstar! 🎉
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