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Each question is followed by two statements, I and II. Mark the answer:
1.If the question can be answered by using one of the statements alone, but cannot be answered using the other statement alone.
2.If the question can be answered by using either statement alone.
3.If the question can be answered by using both statements together, but cannot be answered using either statement alone.
4.If the question cannot be answered even by using both statements together.
Mike has some silver coins and some bronze cons in his pocket. How many coins does he have?
I. The total value of the coins in Mike’s pocket is Rs. 32.
II.Mike has more silver coins than bronze coins in his pocket.
1
2
3
4
Let’s break it down:
- The question: How many coins does Mike have?
- Statement I: The total value of the coins is Rs. 32.
- By itself, this doesn’t tell us the count—just their combined worth. There could be loads of mixes between silver and bronze that hit Rs. 32.
- Statement II: Mike has more silver coins than bronze coins.
- This only gives us a comparison, not actual numbers. He could have 2 silver and 1 bronze, 10 silver and 9 bronze, whatever.
- If you put both together:
- You still don’t know the denominations or the value of a single coin. Even knowing “more silver than bronze” plus total value isn’t enough—because multiple combinations could fit both rules.
So, your options:
- Option 1: One statement works, other doesn’t.
- Option 2: Either alone is enough.
- Option 3: Both together, but not alone.
- Option 4: Even together, you can’t answer it.
The answer is option 4.
By: Sandeep Dubey ProfileResourcesReport error
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