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Bunuel
In how many ways can 4 consonants and 3 vowels be arranged in a row so that the 3 vowels are always together?

(b) so that the first and the last places are occupied by consonants.

A. 360
B. 720
C. 900
D. 1080
E. 1440

stne


I thought there were two restrictions :
a) All vowels must be together
b) First and last must be consonants


I could interpret the question in about five different ways, so I really don't know what it's asking. For one thing, it's not clear if we're arranging any three vowels and any four consonants (in which case you'd have 21 choices for each consonant, for example), or if we're arranging four given consonants, and three given vowels. We also don't know if the vowels and consonants are distinct, which matters a lot -- if our vowels and consonants are A, A, A, B, B, B, B, for example, and the three vowels need to be together, there are only five possible arrangements in total, and only three if the 'word' must begin and end with a consonant.

And of course, as you point out, it's not even clear what restrictions we're meant to observe here. Your work is perfectly correct if you interpret the question as you did - the answer is 432 if we're given three different vowels, four different consonants, and if we need to arrange all of them so the three vowels appear together and a consonant comes first and last.
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Bunuel
In how many ways can 4 consonants and 3 vowels be arranged in a row so that the 3 vowels are always together?

(b) so that the first and the last places are occupied by consonants.

A. 360
B. 720
C. 900
D. 1080
E. 1440

stne


I thought there were two restrictions :
a) All vowels must be together
b) First and last must be consonants


I could interpret the question in about five different ways, so I really don't know what it's asking. For one thing, it's not clear if we're arranging any three vowels and any four consonants (in which case you'd have 21 choices for each consonant, for example), or if we're arranging four given consonants, and three given vowels. We also don't know if the vowels and consonants are distinct, which matters a lot -- if our vowels and consonants are A, A, A, B, B, B, B, for example, and the three vowels need to be together, there are only five possible arrangements in total, and only three if the 'word' must begin and end with a consonant.

And of course, as you point out, it's not even clear what restrictions we're meant to observe here. Your work is perfectly correct if you interpret the question as you did - the answer is 432 if we're given three different vowels, four different consonants, and if we need to arrange all of them so the three vowels appear together and a consonant comes first and last.

Thank you sir, means a lot, it seems moderator has modified the question to make it clear.
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I got the answer in attempting few different approaches.
But i want to know, why are we not considering the selection of vowels and consonants.
Coz ideally first we have to select 4 consonants from 21 and then 3 vowels out of 5.
So it would be 21c4 x 5c3 x 5! x 3!.
can anyone tell me why are we not using this approach.
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Amity007
I got the answer in attempting few different approaches.
But i want to know, why are we not considering the selection of vowels and consonants.
Coz ideally first we have to select 4 consonants from 21 and then 3 vowels out of 5.
So it would be 21c4 x 5c3 x 5! x 3!.
can anyone tell me why are we not using this approach.
Because the problem doesn’t ask you to choose letters. You already have 4 consonants and 3 vowels. You only need to arrange them, not select them.
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