🀯Totes Facts
← Back to all categories
πŸ”’

Math & Numbers Facts for Kids

Mind-bending number facts

πŸ”’

Ancient Egyptians did multiplication by doubling and adding β€” a clever system that's similar to how computers calculate today.

Math & NumbersSource: Smithsonian
πŸ”’

In 1736, mathematician Euler proved it was impossible to walk through the city of KΓΆnigsberg crossing each of its seven bridges exactly once.

Math & NumbersSource: Britannica
πŸ”’

Here's a cool trick: 8% of 25 is the same as 25% of 8. You can always swap the numbers!

Math & NumbersSource: Scientific American
πŸ”’

As you add more sides to a regular polygon, it looks more and more like a circle β€” a circle is like a polygon with infinite sides.

Math & NumbersSource: Britannica
πŸ”’

Many mathematicians consider Euler's identity (e^iΟ€ + 1 = 0) the most beautiful equation ever because it links five fundamental numbers.

Math & NumbersSource: Scientific American
πŸ”’

You only need four colours to colour any map so that no two neighbouring regions share the same colour.

Math & NumbersSource: Scientific American
πŸ”’

On a standard die, opposite sides always add up to 7: the 1 is across from 6, 2 across from 5, and 3 across from 4.

Math & NumbersSource: Britannica
πŸ”’

The word "algebra" comes from the Arabic word "al-jabr," from a 9th-century math book by the scholar al-Khwarizmi.

Math & NumbersSource: Britannica
πŸ”’

People in different countries count on their fingers differently β€” in Germany, counting starts with the thumb, not the index finger.

Math & NumbersSource: BBC
πŸ”’

The Sierpinski triangle is a fractal made by cutting out smaller and smaller triangles β€” it has infinite detail but zero area.

Math & NumbersSource: Scientific American