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Oranges and Lemons

Age 7 to 11
Challenge Level Yellow star
  • Problem
  • Getting Started
  • Student Solutions
  • Teachers' Resources

Steffi, Emma and Amelia from Girton Glebe Primary School near Cambridge. We think we have the answer:


We think that the answer is $8$ lemons, which have a mass of $60$g, and $4$ oranges.

What strategy did the girls use to arrive at that answer? They explain:

We got the answer by trial and improvement.

That last point is very important! All the people who wrote in agree with the girls. But Luke shows his calculations to prove to us that there could be more than one possible answer. Do you agree with Luke?

Luke' calculations.

Pupils at Alice Smith International School in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia also worked on the Oranges and Lemons problem. They agree with Luke. One of the pupils, Kevin, shows all of the possibilities. They prove that there are in fact two possibilities but that there are no more.

What they already know:

Weights = $1$ orange weighs $130$g. $1$ lemon weighs less than $87$g.

To make it easy to read the answers, the pupils use a table:

Number of oranges Number of lemons Right / Wrong
$1$ $2$ Wrong
$2$ $4$ Wrong
$3$ $6$ Wrong
$4$ $8$ Right
$5$ $10$ Right
$6$ $12$ Wrong
$7$ $14$ Wrong
$8$ $16$ Wrong

To show how they arrived at each of these answers, here are the calculations:

  1. $130$g + ($87$g $\times$ $2$) $87$g is max weight for Lemons = $304$g
  2. ($130$g $\times$ $2$) + ($87$g $\times$ $4$) = $608$g
  3. ($130$g $\times$ $3$) + ($87$g $\times$ $6$) = $912$g
  4. ($130$g $\times$ $4$) + ($60$g $\times$ $8$) = $1000$g or $1$kg
  5. ($130$g $\times$ $5$) + ($35$g $\times$ $10$) = $1000$g or $1$kg
  6. ($130$g $\times$ $6$) = $780$g. $1000$g - $780$g = $220$g. $220$g divided by $12$ is $18.3$ recurring. It isn't a whole number.
  7. $130$g $\times$ $7$ = $910$g. $1000$g - $910$g = $90$g. $90$ divided by $14$ equals $6.428571429$. It isn't a whole number.
  8. $130$g $\times$ $8$ = $1040$g. It is more than $1000$g or $1$kg

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The NRICH Project aims to enrich the mathematical experiences of all learners. To support this aim, members of the NRICH team work in a wide range of capacities, including providing professional development for teachers wishing to embed rich mathematical tasks into everyday classroom practice.

NRICH is part of the family of activities in the Millennium Mathematics Project.

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