Add 1 is like giving something one more piece to make it bigger.
Imagine you have 3 blocks stacked up on a table. If you add 1, that means you put one more block on top, now you have 4 blocks! That’s what adding 1 does: it makes the number go from what it was to one more than that.
How It Works
When you add 1, you’re just counting up by one. Like when you count your fingers:
- You start with 1 finger.
- Then you add 1, and now you have 2 fingers.
- Keep going, add 1 again, and it becomes 3, then 4, all the way to 5!
It’s like climbing stairs. Each step is one more. If you're on the 2nd step, and you go up one more, you’re now on the 3rd step.
So whether it's blocks, fingers, or steps, adding 1 means you're just making things a little bigger, one at a time.
Examples
- Adding 1 to 2 cookies makes you have 3 cookies.
- If you're on step 4 of a staircase and take one more step, you're now on step 5.
- You had 5 apples. You bought one more. Now you have 6.
Ask a question
See also
- Why Do Numbers Behave So Oddly Sometimes?
- What are shapes?
- Why Do Numbers Behave So Weirdly?
- Why Do Numbers Feel So Familiar?
- Who is Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic?