Yanguas Minds

Mental Math Tricks for Multiplying by 11

Imagine Numbers as Friends Holding Hands:

  • Think of each digit in a number as a friend. When you multiply by 11, it’s like these friends are holding hands and making new friends in between!

 

The Two-Digit Trick:

  • Let’s say you have the number 23.
  • In this number, 2 and 3 are friends.
  • When you multiply by 11, something magical happens! You take these two friends, and they reach out to hold hands with their new friend in the middle.
  • But who is this new friend? It’s the sum of their friendship! You add 2 and 3 together, which makes 5.
  • So, 2 and 3 stay on the outside, and their new friend 5 comes to join them in the middle. Now you have 253!

 

The Three-Digit Trick:

  • Now, let’s look at a number with three digits, like 314.
  • Here, you have three friends: 3, 1, and 4.
  • When multiplying by 11, each pair of friends makes a new friend by adding their digits together.
    • 3 and 1 add up to make 4.
    • 1 and 4 add up to make 5.
  • So, your new number is 3454. The original friends stay on the outside, and the new friends from adding digits are placed in the middle!

 

What About Carries?

  • Sometimes, when two friends add up their numbers, they get more than 9. Imagine they made a really big new friend!
  • For example, with 89, the digits are 8 and 9.
  • When they add together, they get 17.
  • Here, the big friend 17 can’t fit in just one space, so the 7 stays in the middle, and the 1 goes to the next space on the left, helping out the 8.
  • So, 89 × 11 becomes 979!

 

Why It Works:

  • The reason this trick works is that when you multiply by 11, you’re really just making each digit a little bit more by adding its neighbor. It’s like every digit is saying, “I want to share some of my number with my friend next door!”
  • That’s why you add the digits together to get the middle number. It’s just the digits helping each other out!

 

Rationale Behind the Shortcut:

When you multiply a number by 11, you’re essentially multiplying the number by (10 + 1). This can be broken down into two steps:

  1. Multiply by 10: This shifts all the digits of the number one place to the left. For example, multiplying 23 by 10 gives you 230.

  2. Add the Original Number: After shifting the digits by multiplying by 10, you add the original number back. So, for 23, you’d add 23 to 230, resulting in 253.

Mathematically, for any two-digit number ab (where a is the first digit and b is the second digit):

  • ab × 10  gives you ab10.
  • Then you add the original number ab to ab10.

This process gives you:

  • The first digit stays the same (from the multiplication by 10).
  • The middle digit is the sum of the two digits a and b (from adding the original number).
  • The last digit is the original second digit b.

For example, with 23:

  • 23 × 10 = 230
  • 230 + 23 = 253

Thus, the middle digit is the sum of 2 + 3 = 5, resulting in 253.

For Three-Digit Numbers:

The process is similar, but you’re adding neighboring digits together to create the middle parts:

  • For a three-digit number like abc, where a is the hundreds digit, b is the tens digit, and c is the ones digit:
    • You first shift everything left by multiplying by 10: abc10.
    • Then, you add the original number abc.
    • The result is that the first digit stays the same, the next digit is the sum of a + b, and the following digit is b + c.

For example, with 314:

  • 314 × 10 = 3140
  • 3140 + 314 = 3454