Stage 10 · Linear Equations & Systems

10.6  Applying Systems and Extending to Three Unknowns

When two things are unknown, name two letters — and the idea scales to three.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 5 in this lesson: 10.6.1 Solving word problems with systems

10.6.1 Solving word problems with systems

Back in Lesson 10.3 you met the five-step frame for word problems: read, name, translate, solve, check. Nothing about that frame changes here. The only difference is what happens at the name step. When a story has two unknown quantities tangled together by two equal-quantity relationships, forcing everything onto a single letter is like tying one shoe with the other foot. Give each unknown its own letter, write the two facts as two equations, and let the system do the work.

How do you spot a two-unknown story? Listen for two separate "totals" or "amounts" you do not know, joined by two sentences that each say this equals that. Tickets are the classic case: you don't know the number of adults or the number of children, and you're told two things — a total count and a total cost.

One story, two facts. The count ties the two unknowns together; the cost weighs them differently. Two facts, two equations.
Worked example — the tickets

The story. Adult tickets cost $8, children's tickets cost $5. A booth sold 20 tickets for a total of $139. How many of each were sold?

Name. Let a = number of adult tickets and c = number of children's tickets.

Translate. The count gives a + c = 20. The money gives 8a + 5c = 139 — eight dollars per adult, five per child.

Either method from Lesson 10.5 works. Substitution is tidy here because the count equation rearranges to a = 20 − c with no fractions. Put that into the money equation:

8a + 5c = 139the cost equation
8(20 − c) + 5c = 139replace a with 20 − c
160 − 8c + 5c = 139distribute the 8
160 − 3c = 139combine the c-terms
−3c = −21subtract 160 from both sides
c = 7divide both sides by −3

Then back-substitute: a = 20 − 7 = 13. So 13 adult tickets and 7 children's tickets.

Check — and always check against the original story, not your own equations. Count: 13 + 7 = 20 ✓. Cost: 8·13 + 5·7 = 104 + 35 = 139 ✓. Both facts hold, so the answer is solid.

Key idea

Two unknowns deserve two letters. The five-step frame is unchanged — you simply translate two relationships into two equations and solve the system.

🎮 Try itBuild the tickets system and watch it solve

Set the two prices and the totals. The widget writes the system and solves it — but only whole, non-negative ticket counts make sense, so watch when an answer turns red.

Adult price $ 8
Child price $ 5
Tickets sold 20
Total $ 139
eastmath.com · 10.6 Applying Systems and Extending to Three Unknowns · 10.6.1 Solving word problems with systems