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Directions: Study the information given below carefully and answer the questions given below. Ten people sitting in two parallel rows. Row 1 consist of A, B, C, D, E, all the person sitting in row 1 are facing south. Row 2 consist of F, G, H, I, J, all of them are facing north.
All ten people have a different number of chocolates with them. The number of chocolates they have are 6, 1, 11, 12, 9, 10, 8, 4, 2 and 7.
Neither D nor C is sitting at the extreme ends. F has an odd number of chocolates. E is sitting opposite to J who is sitting second to one of the extreme ends. J has the highest number of chocolates. H is sitting second to the left of J and is facing the one who has 6 chocolates. The one who is sitting third to the left end of the first row has a prime number of chocolates. E has more number of chocolates than I. B who is sitting at the left end has 11 number of chocolates, 9 more than the one who is sitting at the right end of the same row. A is sitting diagonally opposite to I who has even number of chocolates. D is sitting at the right side of C. The number of people sitting to the right side of G is equal to the number of people sitting at the left side of G. Addition of the number of chocolates owned by F and H makes a perfect square and that addition is less than the number of chocolates owned by G.
How many chocolates does G have?
12
1
8
10
9
- B has 11 chocolates and sits at the left end of Row 1.
- J having 12 chocolates sits opposite E and is at the second position from one of the extreme ends in Row 2.
- F has an odd number of chocolates.
- H sits second to the left of J and faces the person who has 6 chocolates.
- The person in Row 1, third from the left, has a prime number of chocolates.
- E has more chocolates than I.
- A, sitting diagonally opposite I, hints that I sits at a different relative position in Row 2.
- D and C are neither at the extreme ends, with D to the right of C.
- The balance around G indicates their middle position in Row 2.
- F and H's chocolate total is a perfect square, less than G's chocolates.
From these statements, analyzing and placing them shows that G has 10 chocolates.
- Correct answer: Option 4, 10
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