Walkabout wrote:
Club X has more than 10 but fewer than 40 members. Sometimes the members sit at tables with 3 members at one table and 4 members at each of the other tables, and sometimes they sit at tables with 3 members at one table and 5 members at each of the other tables. If they sit at tables with 6 members at each table except one and fewer than 6 members at that one table, how many members will be at the table that has fewer than 6 members?
(A) 1
(B) 2
(C) 3
(D) 4
(E) 5
This is a nice remainder question in disguise.
For this question, we'll use a nice rule that that says:
If N divided by D leaves remainder R, then the possible values of N are R, R+D, R+2D, R+3D,. . . etc. For example, if k divided by 5 leaves a remainder of 1, then the possible values of k are: 1, 1+5, 1+(2)(5), 1+(3)(5), 1+(4)(5), . . . etc.
Let N = the TOTAL number of members. Sometimes the members sit at tables with 3 members at one table and 4 members at each of the other tables...With 4 members at each table, then N is multiple of 4
However, we still have one more table to consider.
Since the last table has 3 members, we know that N is 3 greater than a multiple of 4
In other words,
when we divide N by 4, the remainder is 3By the above
rule, some possible values of N are:
11, 15, 19, 23, 27, etc NOTE: I started at 11, since we're told that 10 < N < 49
Sometimes they sit at tables with 3 members at one table and 5 members at each of the other tablesUsing the same logic as above, this question tells us that,
when we divide N by 5, the remainder is 3By the above
rule, some possible values of N are:
13, 18, 23, 28, 33, 38 Let's check the two results.
First we learned that N can equal
11, 15, 19, 23, 27, 31, 35, 38 Next we learned that N can equal
13, 18, 23, 28, 33, 38 Once we check the OVERLAP, we can see that N equals
23If they sit at tables with 6 members at each table except one and fewer than 6 members at that one table, how many members will be at the table that has fewer than 6 members?If N =
23, then we'll have 3 tables with 6 members and the remaining 5 members will sit at the other table.
Answer:
RELATED VIDEO