Finding a Missing Subtrahend
Finding a missing subtrahend means solving subtraction equations where the number being subtracted is unknown in Grade 6 math (Saxon Math, Course 1). For an equation a − x = b, solve by subtracting the result from the starting number: x = a − b. For example, if 45 − □ = 17, then □ = 45 − 17 = 28. This uses the inverse relationship between addition and subtraction: knowing the minuend and difference allows finding the subtrahend. Checking by substituting back (45 − 28 = 17 ✓) confirms correctness. This skill builds algebraic thinking and is directly connected to solving one-variable equations.
Key Concepts
Property To find the missing number being subtracted (the subtrahend), subtract the difference from the first number (the minuend). For an equation $a x = b$, the unknown is found by $x = a b$.
Examples To find $k$ in $90 k = 42$, you calculate $k = 90 42$, so $k = 48$.
To find $z$ in $150 z = 95$, you calculate $z = 150 95$, so $z = 55$.
Common Questions
What is a subtrahend in a subtraction problem?
The subtrahend is the number being subtracted. In 15 − 6 = 9, the number 6 is the subtrahend.
How do you find a missing subtrahend in a − x = b?
Subtract the result (b) from the starting number (a): x = a − b. For example, 45 − x = 17 gives x = 45 − 17 = 28.
How do you check your answer after finding a missing subtrahend?
Substitute the found value back: 45 − 28 = 17. If both sides match, the answer is correct.
How is finding a missing subtrahend related to algebra?
It is pre-algebra. The equation 45 − x = 17 uses the same strategy as formal equation solving: apply the inverse operation (subtraction) to isolate x.
What if the subtrahend is larger than the minuend?
The result would be negative. For example, 10 − x = −5 gives x = 10 − (−5) = 15, and 10 − 15 = −5. ✓