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Watch: The 6 times table

Watch this Supermovers video with Fred the Red to learn a fun song about the 6 times table.

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What is the 6x table?

Here is the 6 times table:

1 Ă— 6 = 67 Ă— 6 = 42
2 Ă— 6 = 128 Ă— 6 = 48
3 Ă— 6 = 189 Ă— 6 = 54
4 Ă— 6 = 2410 Ă— 6 = 60
5 Ă— 6 = 3011 Ă— 6 = 66
6 Ă— 6 = 3612 Ă— 6 = 72
Did you know?

Did you know that the 6 times table is the 3 times table doubled?

The 6 times table shares some common even multiples of the 3 times table!

For example:

1 Ă— 6 = 6 and 2 Ă— 3 = 6

2 Ă— 6 = 12 and 4 Ă— 3 = 12

3 Ă— 6 = 18 and 6 Ă— 3 = 18

Did you know?

You can apply your 6 times table knowledge to division facts as well as harder problems.

Remember, division is the inverse operation of multiplication.

If 7 Ă— 6 = 42, then 42 Ă· 6 = 7

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What is a fact family?

A fact family is a group of numbers that all relate to each other. In this case, the array can form two multiplications and two divisions.

6 x 8 array
Multiplication and division fact table

The array shows 6 lots of 8 or 8 lots of 6. As a multiplication, that’s:

6 Ă— 8 = 48 and 8 Ă— 6 = 48

Using the multiplication facts, you can find the inverse operations by rearranging the numbers.

48 Ă· 6 = 8 and 48 Ă· 8 = 6

So:

6 Ă— 8 = 48
8 Ă— 6 = 48
48 Ă· 6 = 8
48 Ă· 8 = 6

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Example

An example of two multiplications: 6 times 12 equals 72. Blank times 12 equals 720. Arrow shows a hint.

If the answer has been multiplied by 10, then one of the factors being multiplied also has to be multiplied by 10.

Since 12 has remained the same in both multiplications, 6 must have been multiplied by 10 too in order to become 60.

60 Ă— 12 = 720

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Activity

Quiz

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NEW! Play Guardians: Defenders of Mathematica - the Halloween update
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More on Multiplying and dividing

Find out more by working through a topic