The 94-multiplication table is a table that displays every possible product value. Both multiplication and adding 94 to the specified number of times are valid methods for obtaining the 94 times table. For instance, 94 x 2 can be calculated as 94 + 94 = 108, which is 94 x 3 can be calculated as 94 + 94 + 94 = 282 and so on.
Table of 94 up to 10
94 x 1 = 94 | 94 x 6 = 564 |
94 x 2 = 188 | 94 x 7 = 658 |
94 x 3 = 282 | 94 x 8 = 752 |
94 x 4 = 376 | 94 x 9 = 846 |
94 x 5 = 470 | 94 x 10 = 940 |
Table of 94 up to 20
94 x 11 = 1034 | 94 x 16 = 1504 |
94 x 12 = 1128 | 94 x 17 = 1598 |
94 x 13 = 1222 | 94 x 18 = 1692 |
94 x 14 = 1316 | 94 x 19 = 1786 |
94 x 15 = 1410 | 94 x 20 = 1880 |
Tips to Memorise Table of 94
- The effortless method of memorising the table of 94 is to note down the table from 1 to 20, like 94 times 6 is 564, 94 times 7 is 658 etc.
- Another easy way of learning the table is recurrently adding the number 94 to the previous sum, such as 94 + 94 = 188, represented as 94 x 2. For the following product, we add 94 to 188, which equals 288 and represents 94 x 3.
- A quick tip for memorising the table of 94 is as follows:
- Firstly, make two tables and fill in the ones place with even numbers as shown.
4 | 8 |
2 | 6 |
0 |
4 | 8 |
2 | 6 |
0 |
- Then fill in the tens place from 9 to 4, repeating in each row as shown.
9 4 | 8 8 |
8 2 | 7 6 |
7 0 |
6 4 | 5 8 |
5 2 | 4 6 |
4 0 |
- Lastly, we fill up the hundreds places from 0 to 9, as shown.
0 9 4 | 1 8 8 |
2 8 2 | 3 7 6 |
4 7 0 |
5 6 4 | 6 5 8 |
7 5 2 | 8 4 6 |
9 4 0 |
From this, we formed the table of 94 easily.
Solved Examples
1. Sara earns $15 a day on her job. What will be her gross income if she works for 94 days?
Solution:
Sara’s earnings in a day = $15.
Gross income after 94 days can be calculated as 19 x 94, which comes out to be $1410.
2. John bakes 14 muffins in a day. Predict the number of muffins he can bake in 94 days.
Solution:
The number of muffins in a day = 14.
The total number of muffins after 94 days will be 94 x 14, which equals 1316 muffins.
3. 1880 mangoes are to be packed in boxes. It is given that one box can hold 94 mangoes. Find the number of boxes it will take to pack all the mangoes.
Solution:
We use the table of 94 to predict the number of boxes required. Here, 94 x 20 is 1880. Therefore it would take 20 boxes to pack all the mangoes.
4. Find the multiple of 94; that is the third part of its sixth multiple.
Solution:
The sixth multiple of 94 is 564.
Dividing by 3 to find the third part gives us 564/3 = 188. By observing the table of 94, we find that 2 times 94 is 188. Hence, the second multiple is the third part of its sixth multiple.