In a code, CAT = 123. What word does 213 stand for?
Show worked explanation
From CAT = 123: C=1, A=2, T=3. So 2=A, 1=C, 3=T and 213 = A,C,T = ACT. Tip: When decoding, write the letter under each digit before reading the word. ✓
Number word codes turn the GL Assessment 11+ Verbal Reasoning paper into a secret cipher. Each letter is given a number, and your child has to work out the hidden mapping from the clues provided, then use it to code a new word or decode a number back into letters. The catch that trips children up is that the numbers are assigned arbitrarily, never by alphabet position, so every question set has its own private code that must be deduced from scratch.
These questions sit among the coding and logic types in a GL Verbal Reasoning paper, with answers marked A to E on a separate answer sheet. Our research estimate, drawn from analysing GL practice papers, is that number and letter coding questions together make up somewhere around 8 to 12 per cent of a paper, though GL rotates its types and the exact share varies between sittings. When the type appears it usually comes as a short block, so getting the method right pays off several times in a row.
On this page your child practises the genuine article: a worked code such as "SPOT is 1234", a target to convert, and five tightly built options where the wrong answers are deliberately near misses. Every question is explained step by step, including how to build a letter-equals-number table and check the answer by substituting it back.
GL presents number word codes in a few recognisable shapes. GL does not publish exact frequencies, so the order below is our research estimate from practice papers, easier formats first:
Difficulty rises from a single explicit pair on a three-letter word, through scrambled codes that need cross-referencing, up to longer words with no repeated letters where the wrong answers are simply the right digits in the wrong order.
Five questions drawn from PrepStep’s number word codes bank, spanning Foundation to Challenging. Tap “Show worked explanation” to see the full method after you’ve had a go. The correct answer is highlighted on each question so you can check immediately.
In a code, CAT = 123. What word does 213 stand for?
From CAT = 123: C=1, A=2, T=3. So 2=A, 1=C, 3=T and 213 = A,C,T = ACT. Tip: When decoding, write the letter under each digit before reading the word. ✓
In a code, STAR = 1234. What word does 4321 stand for?
From STAR = 1234: S=1, T=2, A=3, R=4. So 4=R, 3=A, 2=T, 1=S and 4321 = R,A,T,S = RATS. Tip: Many anagrams of STAR are real words, so check the digit order carefully. ✓
In a code, SLOW = 5712. What word does 1275 stand for?
From SLOW = 5712: S=5, L=7, O=1, W=2. So 1=O, 2=W, 7=L, 5=S and 1275 = O,W,L,S = OWLS. Tip: Look at the digits and find which letter each one represents before reading the word. ✓
In a code, SHARE = 72843 and SHEAR = 72384. What word does 23847 stand for?
From SHARE = 72843: S=7, H=2, A=8, R=4, E=3. Verify SHEAR = S(7) H(2) E(3) A(8) R(4) = 72384 ✓. So 2=H, 3=E, 8=A, 4=R, 7=S and 23847 = H,E,A,R,S = HEARS. Tip: Verify the mappings work for BOTH clue words before decoding. ✓
In a code, FROST = 12345 and CLOUD = 67389. What is the code for COURT?
From FROST = 12345: F=1, R=2, O=3, S=4, T=5. From CLOUD = 67389: C=6, L=7, U=8, D=9 (O=3 matches both clues). So COURT = C(6) O(3) U(8) R(2) T(5) = 63825. Tip: Build the mapping table from BOTH clues before encoding the target word. ✓
Common mistake 1 of 4
Assuming the code follows the order of the word.
Tip: GL often scrambles the code so it does not line up with the letters left to right. Teach your child to match each letter to its number deliberately rather than reading straight across, especially when two coded words are given to cross-check.
Common mistake 2 of 4
Being fooled by near-identical number options.
Tip: Wrong answers are frequently the correct digits in a slightly different order, such as 346 against 364. Your child should write out their answer digit by digit and compare each position, not just glance at the shape of the number.
Common mistake 3 of 4
Decoding more of the word than the question needs.
Tip: There is no prize for cracking every letter. Train your child to find only the mappings for the letters in the target word, which saves time and reduces the chance of a copying slip.
Common mistake 4 of 4
Forgetting to verify with a second clue.
Tip: When two coded words are supplied, the second one is a built-in checker. Encourage your child to confirm every mapping against both words before committing, since a value that fits one word may be contradicted by the other.
They are questions where each letter of a word is given a number, and your child works out the hidden code from the clues, then uses it to write the code for a new word or to decode a number back into a word. The numbers are arbitrary, not based on alphabet position, so the mapping has to be deduced fresh for every question set.
Through multiple choice with five options (A to E) on a separate answer sheet. The questions ask in two directions: "what is the code for this word?" and "what letter does this number stand for?" They usually appear as a short block of the same type within the Verbal Reasoning paper.
Letter shift codes move each letter a fixed number of places along the alphabet, so they are calculated. Number word codes use an arbitrary substitution that has to be deduced by cross-referencing the given words. They look similar on the page but use entirely different thinking, so it helps to know which one you are facing before you start.
Look first for a repeated letter that shows up as a repeated digit, because that pins a mapping instantly. After that, find letters shared between the given words and match them to the shared digits in the codes, building a small letter-equals-number table as you go. Then decode only the letters your target word actually needs.
Regular short practice that drills the build-a-table-and-check-it routine is what turns these from slow puzzles into reliable marks. Free PrepStep practice offers one coded set at a time in the real five-option format, with explanations that show the cross-referencing step by step, so the deduction habit sticks.
PrepStep has 155 number word codes questions in GL Assessment format: five options, instant feedback, and step-by-step explanations. Free to start.
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