Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Grade 4

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 17

PRIMARY 4 (GRADE 4) MOCK TEST PAPER SET 1

NAME: Index Number:

SCHOOL:

INSTRUCTIONS:
1. Please DO NOT OPEN the contest booklet until the Proctor has given permission to
start
2. TIME: 1 hour 30 minutes.
3. There are 25 questions with 100 total points:
Section A: Questions 1 to 15 score 3 points each, no points are deducted for an unanswered
or wrong answer.
Section B: Questions 16 to 20 score 5 points each, no points are deducted for an unanswered
or wrong answer.
Section C: Questions 21 to 25 score 6 points each, no points are deducted for an unanswered or
wrong answer.
4. Shade your answers neatly using a 2B lead pencil in the Answer Entry Sheet.
5. PROCTORING: No one may help any student in any way during the contest.
6. No electronic devices capable of storing and displaying visual information are allowed
during the course of the exam. Strictly No Calculators are allowed.
7. All students must fill and shade their Name, School and Index Number in the Answer
Entry Sheet and Contest booklet.
8. MINIMUM TIME: Students must stay in the exam hall for at least 1 hour.
9. A student must show detailed working and transfer answers to the Answer Entry Sheet.
10. No exam papers and written notes can be taken out by any contestant.
ROUGH WORKING
Section A: 15 Multiple Choice Questions
3 Points Each
Question 1

Four kids can paint four balls in four minutes. If everyone works at the same speed,
how many kids can paint 12 balls in 12 minutes?

A. 4
B. 6
C. 8
D. 10
E. 12

Question 2

Find the value of

25 × 48 + 32 × 25 + 25 × 20

A. 1250
B. 25000
C. 2500
D. 2525
E. 2505
Question 3

How many natural numbers from 1 to 100 are not divisible by 5 or 7?

A. 68
B. 66
C. 76
D. 78
E. 80

Question 4

The following 3 × 3 grid is filled with numbers from 1 to 9. The numbers in all sides add
up to 15 horizontally and vertically. Find the value of *.

2 *

A. 4
B. 5
C. 6
D. 7
E. 8
Question 5

A 8
× 8
B C C

Find the sum of 𝐴 + 𝐵 + 𝐶 if different letters stand for different digits.

A. 15
B. 12
C. 10
D. 8
E. 7

Question 6

What is the largest 3-digit number which is divisible by 24?

A. 999
B. 996
C. 992
D. 984
E. 968
Question 7

The following picture shows a 4 × 4 square. How many squares of any sizes are there
comprised of the one marked with X?

A. 1
B. 4
C. 5
D. 10
E. 16

Question 8

A 5 B
- C 9
2 9 9

Find the value of 𝐴5𝐵 + 𝐶9.

A. 400
B. 417
C. 444
D. 527
E. 544
Question 9

Sarah and Rose have few pencils. Two-fifths of Sarah’s pencils and eight-ninths of
Rose’s pencils are both 40 each. Who has more pencils and by how much?

A. Sarah, 40
B. Rose, 40
C. Sarah, 50
D. Rose, 50
E. Sarah, 55

Question 10

There are 5 green, 9 orange, 6 red, and 4 blue candies in the bag. At least how many
candies must Sam take to ensure he gets the first red candy?

A. 19
B. 4
C. 10
D. 3
E. 15
Question 11

The following 4 × 4 × 4 cube is painted red on all its faces. Find the number of smaller
cubes with at most two faces painted.

A. 8
B. 16
C. 24
D. 36
E. 56

Question 12

The combined age of Ram and Shyam five years from now will be 37. Ram was twice
as old as Shyam 3 years ago. How old is Ram now?

A. 7
B. 10
C. 14
D. 17
E. 20
Question 13

Two regular 6-sided dice were thrown on the ground. All the numbers visible on the
dice were added. The sum of numbers on all the visible faces was 31. What is the
difference between the numbers facing the ground?

A. 0
B. 1
C. 2
D. 3
E. 4

Question 14

Ron and Vanda each thought of a two-digit number. The product of their digits was 24
and 35 respectively. The difference between their numbers was 37. What is the sum of
their numbers?

A. 95
B. 100
C. 113
D. 121
E. 139
Question 15

Ann read a book with 1000 pages. How many digits were used to print the page
numbers on the book?

A. 3000
B. 2550
C. 2987
D. 3193
E. 2893
Section B: 5 Open-Ended Questions

5 points each

Question 16

Sam filled up some boxes with sweets. If he put 5 sweets in each box, he was left with
4 extra sweets. If he put 6 sweets in each box, the last box would have only 2 sweets.
Find the number of sweets Sam had.

Question 17

When the product of 9 and a number is divided by 4 and then multiplied by 25, the
result is 19800. Find the number.
Question 18

What is the largest possible value of ‘𝑚’ in 653𝑚2 such that it is divisible by 3?

Question 19

A five-digit number is formed such that it satisfies the following conditions:

• It is a multiple of 3 and 5.
• The third digit is half of the first digit and one less than the second digit.
• The sum of the first three digits is 13 and the sum of the last three digits is 8.
• The fourth digit is the second-largest digit of that number.

Find the sum of digits of that number.


Question 20

Find the sum of the numbers in the 12th group of the following sequence:

(1, 4, 6), (2, 6, 10), (3, 8, 14), …


Section C: 5 Open-Ended Questions

6 points each

Question 21

16 trees are planted on one side of the road. Two cars are parked between every two
trees. How many cars are there?

Question 22

Ten small ropes of the same length were knotted together to form a big rope of 81 cm.
If the knotted area was 1 cm for every rope, how long was each rope?
Question 23

Find the value of the digit at the ones place of the following expression:

99 × 101 × 103 × 105 × 107 − 100 × 102 × 104 × 106 × 108

Question 24

Among Jack, Jade and James, one of them is a painter, the other is a lawyer and the
third is a firefighter. Jack is older than the firefighter while the lawyer is younger than
James. Also, Jade and lawyer are not the same age. Find who the firefighter is.

(Put Jack=1, Jade=2 and James=3 in your answer)


Question 25

Patrick scored 82 and 85 marks respectively in English and Science. If the total marks of
these papers are 100, how many marks should he score in Mathematics so that his
average marks in these three subjects becomes 87?
ANSWER KEY

QUESTION 1 A QUESTION 14 C

QUESTION 2 C QUESTION 15 E

QUESTION 3 A QUESTION 16 0044

QUESTION 4 D QUESTION 17 0352

QUESTION 5 A QUESTION 18 0008

QUESTION 6 D QUESTION 19 0018

QUESTION 7 D QUESTION 20 0088

QUESTION 8 B QUESTION 21 0030

QUESTION 9 E QUESTION 22 0009

QUESTION 10 A QUESTION 23 0005

QUESTION 11 E QUESTION 24 0002

QUESTION 12 D QUESTION 25 0094

QUESTION 13 B

You might also like