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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.
Average speed of a car for return journey is:
I. It traveled equal distance each time.
II.Time taken for onward and return journey was 5 mins and 47 mins respectively.
1
2
3
4
Let’s break it down:
- The question: “Average speed of a car for return journey is:"
- Statement I: Says it covered equal distances each way.
- That's nice to know, but without time or speed, it means nothing by itself.
- Statement II: Gives times for the onward journey (5 mins) and return journey (47 mins).
- We know how long both journeys took. But unless we know the distances, time alone doesn’t give us speed.
- Even together: Knowing time and the fact the distances are the same still won't help. That’s because speed = distance/time, but we don’t have the distance. No numbers to work with.
Options:
- Option 1: You can answer with one statement, but not the other.
- Option 2: Either statement alone is enough.
- Option 3: Both statements together work, but not alone.
- Option 4: Even together, you’re not there.
The correct answer is Option:4, 4.
Here’s why: Both statements together aren't enough. You're missing the distance, so you can't find the return speed.
By: Sandeep Dubey ProfileResourcesReport error
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