Here are 40 Olympiad-style questions based on the structure and difficulty level of the provided paper, covering number names, place value, face value, comparison, expanded form, successor/predecessor, and arithmetic reasoning.
Olympiad Practice Questions (Based on Class 3โ5 Level)
1. Choose the correct number for the number name:
Seventy-five thousand three hundred and twenty-four
(a) 75,324
(b) 57,324
(c) 75,234
(d) 57,234
2. Find the smallest four-digit number from the following:
4,321 2,987 3,456 1,234 5,678
(a) 4,321
(b) 1,234
(c) 2,987
(d) 3,456
3. What is the place value of the underlined digit in 94,362? (Underlined digit: 4)
(a) Hundred
(b) Thousand
(c) Ten thousand
(d) Tens
4. Choose the correct comparison:
(a) 5,678 < 5,687 (b) 4,321 > 4,567
(c) 3,210 = 3,201
(d) 2,345 > 2,456
5. Find the successor of:
256 + 8 ร 7
(a) 313
(b) 312
(c) 311
(d) 314
6. Find the largest four-digit number from the following:
2,345 3,456 4,567 5,678 6,543
(a) 6,543
(b) 5,678
(c) 4,567
(d) 3,456
7. What is the expanded form of 63,204?
(a) 63,000 + 200 + 4
(b) 60,000 + 3,000 + 200 + 4
(c) 60,000 + 3,200 + 4
(d) 63 + 200 + 4
8. Choose the correct number name for 94,057:
(a) Ninety-four thousand fifty-seven
(b) Ninety-four thousand five hundred seven
(c) Ninety-four thousand five hundred seventy
(d) Ninety-four thousand fifty-seven hundred
9. What is the face value of the underlined digit in 86,427? (Underlined digit: 2)
(a) 2
(b) 20
(c) 200
(d) 2,000
10. How many thousands are there in the sum of 3,425, 2,876, and 1,699?
(a) 8
(b) 7
(c) 9
(d) 6
11. Write the smallest number using digits 7, 0, 3, 5 (without repetition):
(a) 3,057
(b) 3,507
(c) 3,075
(d) 3,570
12. What is the difference between the place values of 5 and 3 in 53,482?
(a) 50,000 โ 3,000 = 47,000
(b) 50,000 โ 300 = 49,700
(c) 5,000 โ 300 = 4,700
(d) 50,000 โ 30 = 49,970
13. Which of the following is equal to 8,000 + 700 + 40 + 9?
(a) 8,749
(b) 8,709
(c) 8,749
(d) 8,704
14. Predecessor of 8,000 is:
(a) 7,999
(b) 8,001
(c) 7,990
(d) 8,010
15. Arrange in ascending order: 4,567; 4,576; 4,657; 4,675
Which is the second smallest?
(a) 4,567
(b) 4,576
(c) 4,657
(d) 4,675
16. How many hundreds are there in the smallest five-digit number?
(a) 100
(b) 10
(c) 1,000
(d) 10,000
17. Which number has a face value of 6 and place value of 600?
(a) 6,342
(b) 3,642
(c) 3,462
(d) 3,246
18. Round 27,896 to the nearest thousand:
(a) 27,000
(b) 28,000
(c) 27,900
(d) 28,900
19. 1 lakh = _ thousand?
(a) 10
(b) 100
(c) 1,000
(d) 10,000
20. Find the missing number: 45,678 = 40,000 + 5,000 + 600 + __ + 8
(a) 7
(b) 70
(c) 700
(d) 70,000
Here are 20 additional Olympiad-style questions based on sweet distribution, addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and real-life word problems, matching the difficulty level of your original paper.
Sweet Distribution & Arithmetic Word Problems (Olympiad Style)
1. Riya has 245 sweets. She gives 98 sweets to her friends. How many sweets are left with her?
(a) 147
(b) 157
(c) 137
(d) 167
2. A box contains 1,250 sweets. If 375 sweets are eaten, how many sweets remain?
(a) 875
(b) 825
(c) 885
(d) 925
3. There are 48 students in a class. If each student gets 5 sweets, how many sweets are needed in total?
(a) 230
(b) 240
(c) 250
(d) 260
4. A sweet shop sells 1,875 sweets on Monday and 2,250 sweets on Tuesday. How many sweets were sold in total over the two days?
(a) 4,025
(b) 4,115
(c) 4,125
(d) 4,225
5. 3,420 sweets are to be packed equally into 6 boxes. How many sweets will each box contain?
(a) 560
(b) 570
(c) 580
(d) 590
6. In a school festival, 2,568 sweets were distributed among 8 classes equally. How many sweets did each class get?
(a) 311
(b) 321
(c) 331
(d) 341
7. Rohit had 567 sweets. He gave 128 sweets to his sister and 95 sweets to his brother. How many sweets does he have now?
(a) 334
(b) 344
(c) 354
(d) 364
8. A sweet maker produced 4,500 laddoos. He packed them in boxes of 25 laddoos each. How many boxes did he need?
(a) 160
(b) 170
(c) 180
(d) 190
9. There are 15 rows of sweets in a shop. Each row has 24 sweets. How many sweets are there in total?
(a) 350
(b) 360
(c) 370
(d) 380
10. Neha bought 3 packets of sweets. Each packet contains 125 sweets. She ate 45 sweets. How many sweets are left?
(a) 320
(b) 325
(c) 330
(d) 335
11. In a wedding, 2,350 sweets were kept. Guests ate 1,875 sweets. How many sweets were left?
(a) 455
(b) 465
(c) 475
(d) 485
12. 1,800 sweets are to be shared equally among 45 children. How many sweets will each child get?
(a) 30
(b) 40
(c) 50
(d) 60
13. Sita has 725 sweets. She wants to divide them equally into 25 gift boxes. How many sweets will each box have?
(a) 27
(b) 28
(c) 29
(d) 30
14. A sweet shop had 3,215 sweets in the morning. By evening, only 1,098 sweets were left. How many sweets were sold during the day?
(a) 2,107
(b) 2,117
(c) 2,127
(d) 2,137
15. In a competition, 8 winners got 56 sweets each. How many sweets were distributed in total?
(a) 440
(b) 448
(c) 456
(d) 464
16. There are 1,500 sweets in a jar. If 7 such jars are filled, how many sweets are there in total?
(a) 9,500
(b) 10,000
(c) 10,500
(d) 11,000
17. A teacher distributed 3,960 sweets among 66 students equally. How many sweets did each student get?
(a) 50
(b) 55
(c) 60
(d) 65
18. One sweet costs โน12. How much will 225 sweets cost?
(a) โน2,500
(b) โน2,600
(c) โน2,700
(d) โน2,800
19. 4,500 sweets were packed equally into 50 cartons. How many sweets were packed in each carton?
(a) 80
(b) 85
(c) 90
(d) 95




