Forming Equations

Forming equations involves translating words or real-life situations into algebraic expressions. This is an important step in solving many GCSE Maths problems.

Overview

Forming an equation means taking information written in words and turning it into an algebraic equation.

“A number plus 5 is 17” → \( x + 5 = 17 \)

This topic is important because many GCSE algebra questions begin with a word problem. Before solving it, you first need to form the correct equation.

What you should understand after this topic

  • Choose a variable for an unknown value
  • Translate words into algebra
  • Form a correct equation from a statement
  • Solve the equation if required
  • Check that the equation matches the wording

Key Definitions

Equation

A statement showing that two expressions are equal.

Variable

A letter used to represent an unknown value.

Expression

A mathematical phrase made with numbers, variables and operations.

Form

Build or create the algebraic equation from the information given.

Unknown

The value you are trying to find.

Translate

Change words into mathematical symbols and algebra.

Key Rules

Choose a variable first

For example, let \(x\) be the unknown number.

Translate one phrase at a time

Do not rush straight to the final equation.

Look for the equality statement

Words like “is” or “equals” usually show where the equals sign goes.

Check the wording at the end

Make sure the algebra says exactly what the sentence says.

Quick Pattern Check

Simple number statement

“A number plus 3 is 10”

Multiplication statement

“Twice a number is 18”

Two linked quantities

“One number is 4 more than another”

Perimeter or age problem

Use known formulas and relationships to build the equation.

How to Solve

What does forming equations mean?

Forming equations means translating a word problem into algebra. You turn words into mathematical expressions and connect them with an equals sign.

Key idea: Every equation represents a relationship that is true.

Step 1: Choose the unknown

Start by deciding what the letter represents.

Let \(x\) be the number.
Exam tip: Always define your variable clearly.

Step 2: Translate words into algebra

Break the sentence into parts and translate each phrase.

“A number plus 7 is 19”
Let \(x\) be the number.
“A number plus 7” → \(x + 7\).
“is 19” → \(= 19\).
Equation: \(x + 7 = 19\).

Common phrase translations

Add

“more than”, “plus” → \(+\)

Subtract

“less than”, “minus” → \(-\)

Multiply

“times”, “twice”, “double” → \(\times\)

Equals

“is”, “gives”, “total” → \(=\)

Step 3: Solve the equation

Once the equation is formed, solve it if required.

\(x + 7 = 19\)
Subtract 7 from both sides: \(x = 12\)
Solving equations is covered in solving equations.

Check your equation

Substitute your answer back into the original statement.
Make sure it satisfies the condition in the question.
Exam tip: This helps catch mistakes quickly.

Example Questions

Edexcel

Exam-style questions inspired by Edexcel GCSE Mathematics, focusing on translating words into algebraic equations and solving them.

Edexcel

Form an equation for: \( \text{A number increased by 5 is equal to 17} \).

Edexcel

Form an equation for: \( \text{Three times a number decreased by 2 is equal to 13} \).

Edexcel

Form an equation and solve: \( \text{A number divided by 4 is equal to 6} \).

Edexcel

The perimeter of a rectangle is 30 cm. Its length is \( x \) cm and its width is 5 cm. Form an equation.

Edexcel

The sum of two consecutive integers is 41. Form an equation to find the integers.

AQA

Exam-style questions based on the AQA GCSE Mathematics specification, focusing on algebraic modelling and solving real-life problems.

AQA

Ali is \( x \) years old. His sister is 4 years older. Their combined age is 24. Form an equation.

AQA

The cost of 3 pens and a notebook is £7. The notebook costs £2. Form an equation to find the cost of one pen.

AQA

The angles of a triangle are \( x \), \( x + 20 \), and \( x + 40 \). Form an equation.

AQA

A number is increased by 15% to give 69. Form an equation to find the original number.

AQA

The length of a rectangle is 3 cm longer than its width. The perimeter is 46 cm. Form an equation.

OCR

Exam-style questions aligned with OCR GCSE Mathematics, emphasising reasoning, multi-step problem-solving, and interpreting algebraic models.

OCR

A taxi charges a fixed fee of £3 plus £2 per mile. If the total fare is £15, form an equation to find the number of miles travelled.

OCR

The sum of three consecutive integers is 72. Form an equation to find the integers.

OCR

The area of a rectangle is 48 cm^2. Its length is \( x \) cm and its width is \( x - 2 \) cm. Form an equation.

OCR

A shop sells adult tickets for £8 and child tickets for £5. The total cost of 6 tickets is £39. Form an equation.

OCR

The sum of the interior angles of a quadrilateral is 360^\circ. The angles are \( x \), \( x + 10 \), \( x + 20 \), and \( x + 30 \). Form an equation.

Exam Checklist

Step 1

Decide what the variable represents.

Step 2

Translate the wording into algebra one phrase at a time.

Step 3

Use the equals sign in the correct place.

Step 4

Check that the equation really matches the words.

Most common exam mistakes

Wrong translation

Turning a sentence into the wrong algebraic expression.

Word order errors

Especially in phrases like “less than” and “more than”.

Expression instead of equation

Forgetting that an equation needs an equals sign.

Ignoring context

Not using the information about totals, perimeter, ages or measurements properly.

Common Mistakes

These are common mistakes students make when forming equations from word problems in GCSE Maths.

Not defining the variable clearly

Incorrect

A student uses a variable without explaining what it represents.

Correct

Always define your variable clearly at the start, for example: “Let x be the number of apples.” This avoids confusion later.

Misinterpreting word order

Incorrect

A student writes expressions incorrectly for phrases like “3 less than x”.

Correct

Pay close attention to wording. “3 less than x” means \(x - 3\), not \(3 - x\).

Missing the equals sign

Incorrect

A student writes part of the relationship but does not form a full equation.

Correct

An equation must show two expressions equal to each other. Make sure you include the equals sign to complete the statement.

Writing an expression instead of an equation

Incorrect

A student writes only one side of the relationship.

Correct

If the question asks for an equation, you must write both sides. An expression is not enough.

Solving incorrectly after forming correctly

Incorrect

A student forms the correct equation but makes errors when solving it.

Correct

After forming the equation, solve it carefully using correct algebraic steps. Always check your solution in the original context.

Try It Yourself

Practise translating word problems into algebraic equations.

Questions coming soon
Foundation

Foundation Practice

Translate simple sentences into equations.

Question 1

A number x increased by 5 is equal to 12. Which equation is correct?

Games

Practise this topic with interactive games.

Games coming soon.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is forming equations?

Turning words into algebra.

What should I look for?

Keywords like ‘sum’, ‘difference’ or ‘product’.

Why is this important?

It links maths to real-life problems.