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Sub 505 Level|   Number Properties|               
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Bunuel
If r and s are positive integers, is r + s even?

(1) r is even.
(2) s is even.


Given: r and s are positive integers

Target question: Is r + s even?

Statement 1: r is even.
Since we have no information about s, we cannot determine whether r + s is even
Since we cannot answer the target question with certainty, statement 1 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: s is even
Since we have no information about r, we cannot determine whether r + s is even
Since we cannot answer the target question with certainty, statement 2 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Statements 1 and 2 combined
Statement 1 tells us that r is EVEN
Statement 2 tells us that s is EVEN
Since EVEN + EVEN = EVEN, we know that r + s is EVEN
Since we can answer the target question with certainty, the combined statements are SUFFICIENT

Answer: C

Cheers,
Brent
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Hi All,

We're told that R and S are POSITIVE INTEGERS. We're asked if R+S is EVEN. This is a YES/NO question and can be solved with Number Properties and/or by TESTing VALUES. To start, you might find it helpful to write down a few Number Property rules:

(Even) + (Even) = Even
(Even) + (Odd) = Odd
(Odd) + (Odd) = Even

Since R and S are both INTEGERS, to end up with a sum that is EVEN, then BOTH numbers must either be EVEN or ODD. Otherwise, the sum will be ODD.

1) R is EVEN.

IF...
S = EVEN, then R+S will be EVEN.
S = ODD, then R+S will be ODD.
Fact 1 is INSUFFICIENT

2) S is EVEN.

IF...
R = EVEN, then R+S will be EVEN.
R = ODD, then R+S will be ODD.
Fact 2 is INSUFFICIENT

Combined, we know...
R is EVEN.
S is EVEN.
Thus, R+S must be EVEN and the answer to the question is ALWAYS YES.
Combined, SUFFICIENT

Final Answer:

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
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Bunuel
If r and s are positive integers, is r + s even?

(1) r is even.
(2) s is even.


DS76502.01
OG2020 NEW QUESTION

r and s are positive integers.

(1) r is even.

s could be even or odd.

Insufficient

(2) s is even.

r could be even or odd.

Insufficient

Combine 1 & 2

r and s are positive EVEN integers. So r + s = even

Sufficient

Answer: C
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Bunuel
If r and s are positive integers, is r + s even?

(1) r is even.
(2) s is even.


DS76502.01
OG2020 NEW QUESTION


We need to determine whether r + s is even. We may recall that either odd + odd = even or even + even = even.

Statement One Alone:

r is even

Statement one alone is not sufficient. If s is even, then r + s is even; however, if s is odd, then r + s is odd.

Statement Two Alone:

s is even

Statement two alone is not sufficient. If r is even, then r + s is even; however, if r is odd, then r + s is odd.

Statements One and Two Together

Since we know that both r and s are even, so r + s is even.

Answer: C
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Bunuel
If r and s are positive integers, is r + s even?

(1) r is even.
(2) s is even.


DS76502.01
OG2020 NEW QUESTION

O+O=E and E+E=E, Whereas O+E=O. To find whether the sum of two numbers is even or not, we need to know E/O property of both the numbers. Since 1) and 2) gives E/O property of one number each, they are individually insufficient to answer the question. However, combining 1) and 2), we know the E/O property of both the numbers, therefore sufficient. Ans is C.
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Bunuel
If r and s are positive integers, is r + s even?

(1) r is even.
(2) s is even.


DS76502.01
OG2020 NEW QUESTION

Wanna make solving the Official Questions interesting???


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Answer: Option C

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Bunuel
If r and s are positive integers, is r + seven?

(1) r is even.
(2) s is even.


DS76502.01
OG2020 NEW QUESTION

The key is to be able to work out what combinations would satisfy the question stem. Pick up any simple combinations to test out and shouldn't take more than a couple of seconds.
5+3= 8= even? (combination of 2 odds)
2+2=4= even? (combination of 2 evens)
3+4=7=even? no. (Even+odd=odd)

With that logic, A and B individually don't tell us much, but C resolves the question at hand.

Final answer: C
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Video solution from Quant Reasoning:
Subscribe for more: https://www.youtube.com/QuantReasoning? ... irmation=1
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