Last visit was: 19 Nov 2025, 12:40 It is currently 19 Nov 2025, 12:40
Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.

Customized
for You

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History

Track
Your Progress

every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance

Practice
Pays

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
605-655 Level|   Overlapping Sets|   Probability|                                 
User avatar
AJ1012
Joined: 25 Jun 2015
Last visit: 15 May 2020
Posts: 5
Own Kudos:
1,024
 [307]
Given Kudos: 142
Schools: ISB '18
Schools: ISB '18
Posts: 5
Kudos: 1,024
 [307]
24
Kudos
Add Kudos
282
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Most Helpful Reply
User avatar
chetan2u
User avatar
GMAT Expert
Joined: 02 Aug 2009
Last visit: 15 Nov 2025
Posts: 11,238
Own Kudos:
43,705
 [35]
Given Kudos: 335
Status:Math and DI Expert
Location: India
Concentration: Human Resources, General Management
GMAT Focus 1: 735 Q90 V89 DI81
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT Focus 1: 735 Q90 V89 DI81
Posts: 11,238
Kudos: 43,705
 [35]
19
Kudos
Add Kudos
16
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
User avatar
ENGRTOMBA2018
Joined: 20 Mar 2014
Last visit: 01 Dec 2021
Posts: 2,325
Own Kudos:
3,837
 [26]
Given Kudos: 816
Concentration: Finance, Strategy
GMAT 1: 750 Q49 V44
GPA: 3.7
WE:Engineering (Aerospace and Defense)
Products:
GMAT 1: 750 Q49 V44
Posts: 2,325
Kudos: 3,837
 [26]
21
Kudos
Add Kudos
5
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
General Discussion
User avatar
MathRevolution
User avatar
Math Revolution GMAT Instructor
Joined: 16 Aug 2015
Last visit: 27 Sep 2022
Posts: 10,070
Own Kudos:
19,391
 [2]
Given Kudos: 4
GMAT 1: 760 Q51 V42
GPA: 3.82
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 1: 760 Q51 V42
Posts: 10,070
Kudos: 19,391
 [2]
Kudos
Add Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
This is a 2 by 2 question that frequently appears in the GMAT Math.

Looking at the attachment, the question, if we modify, is d/45<1/2?, d<45/2=22.5?. Looking at the condition 1), we get d=15<22.5. The answer is yes and the condition is sufficient. Hence, the correct answer is B.


- Once we modify the original condition and the question according to the variable approach method 1, we can solve approximately 30% of DS questions.
Attachments

3.jpg
3.jpg [ 23.41 KiB | Viewed 64425 times ]

User avatar
Shenaz
Joined: 16 May 2016
Last visit: 02 Jun 2018
Posts: 7
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 54
Posts: 7
Kudos: 2
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
AJ1012
Q# 121 OG. Quant Review 2016

Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback.
If a book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf, is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a
paperback written in Spanish?

(1) Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback.
(2) Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.

Need help to solve this one.


Is there any further explanation on this? Not convinced at all on the OA.
Please help
User avatar
amanvermagmat
User avatar
Retired Moderator
Joined: 22 Aug 2013
Last visit: 28 Mar 2025
Posts: 1,148
Own Kudos:
2,855
 [4]
Given Kudos: 480
Location: India
Posts: 1,148
Kudos: 2,855
 [4]
4
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Shenaz
AJ1012
Q# 121 OG. Quant Review 2016

Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback.
If a book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf, is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a
paperback written in Spanish?

(1) Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback.
(2) Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.

Need help to solve this one.


Is there any further explanation on this? Not convinced at all on the OA.
Please help

Hi

Did you go through this solution:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/each-of-the- ... l#p1621801

Basically, as per second statement, only 15 books are in Spanish (15 is obviously less than half of 45). Even if all these Spanish books are paperback, then the probability of selecting a paperback Spanish book will be 15/45 = 1/3 which is < 1/2. And if some Spanish books are hardcover also, then the probability of selecing a Spanish paperback will be even lesser than 1/3 (so definitely lesser than 1/2). So, as per second statement, probability of picking a paperback Spanish book will always be < 1/2. That's why the answer is B.
User avatar
LeenaSai
Joined: 31 Mar 2019
Last visit: 11 Nov 2021
Posts: 87
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 105
Posts: 87
Kudos: 99
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
chetan2u
ajayvyavahare
Q# 121 OG. Quant Review 2016

Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback.
If a book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf, is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a
paperback written in Spanish?

(1) Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback.
(2) Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.

Need help to solve this one.

hi,
is overall prob given for paperback+spanish <1/2..
1) 30 out of 45 are paperbeck..
if all 30 are spanish too... prob>1/2..
if none of them is spanish.. prob=0<1/2..
no info ..insuff

2) 15 out of 45 are written inspanish...
if we take all as paperback.. prob =15/45=1/3, which is less than 1/2..
so at the best scenario too, the prob <1/2.. suff
ans B


Just a small correction , for statement 1) we can’t take none case bcz each book is either written in English or Spanish and each book is either a paperback or hardcover !!

We can take the last numbers like 1,2 instead of taking 0

Posted from my mobile device
User avatar
BrentGMATPrepNow
User avatar
Major Poster
Joined: 12 Sep 2015
Last visit: 31 Oct 2025
Posts: 6,739
Own Kudos:
35,352
 [9]
Given Kudos: 799
Location: Canada
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 6,739
Kudos: 35,352
 [9]
6
Kudos
Add Kudos
3
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
AJ1012
Q# 121 OG. Quant Review 2016

Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback.
If a book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf, is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a
paperback written in Spanish?

(1) Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback.
(2) Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.

Given: Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback. A book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf.

Target question: Is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a paperback written in Spanish?
This is a good candidate for rephrasing the target question

Let's use the Double Matrix Method to solve this question. This technique can be used for most questions featuring a population in which each member has two characteristics associated with it (aka overlapping sets questions).
Here, we have a population of books, and the two characteristics are:
- English or Spanish
- Hardcover or paperback

We can set up our diagram like this:


1/2 of 45 = 22.5
So in order for the probability to be less than 1/2, we need 22 or fewer books to be Spanish paperbacks.
In other words, we need 22 or fewer books in the yellow shaded region.
Let's use this information to REPHRASE the target question
REPHRASED target question: Is the number of books in the yellow shaded region 22 or less?



Statement 1: Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback
If 30 of the 45 books are paperback, then the remaining 15 books must be hardcover. We'll add this to our diagram


There are many different ways to complete this diagram so that we meet the given conditions.
For example, we could have the following situation:

In this case, the answer to the REPHRASED target question is YES, the number of books in the yellow shaded region IS 22 or less

Alternatively, we could also have this situation:

In this case, the answer to the REPHRASED target question is NO, the number of books in the yellow shaded region is NOT 22 or less

Since we cannot answer the target question with certainty, statement 1 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.
When we add this information to our diagram, we get:


IMPORTANT: This tells us that the two boxes in the bottom row, must add to 15.
So it will be impossible for the value in the yellow shaded region to be greater than 22.
In other words, the answer to the REPHRASED target question is YES, the number of books in the yellow shaded region IS 22 or less
Since we can answer the target question with certainty, statement 2 is SUFFICIENT

Answer: B

This question type is VERY COMMON on the GMAT, so be sure to master the technique.

To learn more about the Double Matrix Method, watch this video:


Cheers,
Brent
avatar
Anuragjn
Joined: 28 Jan 2019
Last visit: 27 Jan 2021
Posts: 21
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 360
Location: India
Concentration: Leadership, Strategy
Posts: 21
Kudos: 9
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
AJ1012
Q# 121 OG. Quant Review 2016

Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback.
If a book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf, is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a
paperback written in Spanish?

(1) Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback.
(2) Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.

Need help to solve this one.

I have a doubt - As per stmt 2, if we say all 45 are paperback, then probability is 1/3; However, if we say 30 are paperback, wouldn't probability be 1/2, or for that matter 15 are paperback, wouldn't it make probability as 1 ?? Why shouldn't the answer be 'C'
User avatar
CrackverbalGMAT
User avatar
Major Poster
Joined: 03 Oct 2013
Last visit: 19 Nov 2025
Posts: 4,844
Own Kudos:
8,945
 [1]
Given Kudos: 225
Affiliations: CrackVerbal
Location: India
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 4,844
Kudos: 8,945
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Anuragjn
AJ1012
Q# 121 OG. Quant Review 2016

Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback.
If a book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf, is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a
paperback written in Spanish?

(1) Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback.
(2) Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.

Need help to solve this one.

I have a doubt - As per stmt 2, if we say all 45 are paperback, then probability is 1/3; However, if we say 30 are paperback, wouldn't probability be 1/2, or for that matter 15 are paperback, wouldn't it make probability as 1 ?? Why shouldn't the answer be 'C'


Hello Anurag,

It seems like you have misinterpreted the question. The question is not about the probability of picking a Spanish paperback OF all the paperbacks.
The question asks us if the probability of picking a “Paperback written in Spanish” is less than ½ when ANY book is selected at random.
There’s as big a difference between the two as chalk from cheese.

This is a very common problem that many GMAT test takers face. They end up solving a drastically different question in their head when they have to actually solve the question they see on the screen. Look at the table given below:

Attachment:
03rd Apr 2020 - Reply 1.jpg
03rd Apr 2020 - Reply 1.jpg [ 40.53 KiB | Viewed 46594 times ]

The question says “If a BOOK is selected at random”. This means your sample space is 45 (the cell highlighted in Green) and hence should be in the denominator.
Whereas, the question that YOU solved in your head is “If a paperback is selected at random”. This means YOUR sample space was the cell highlighted in red, which is of course wrong.
I hope that clarifies your doubt.

Look at how many Spanish books are there in total, as per Statement II (the cell highlighted in blue). If there are 15 books of Spanish in total, there would be either 15 paperbacks or lesser. (the cell highlighted in yellow)
\(\frac{15}{45}\) is definitely less than ½. We can answer the question with a definite NO which is an accepted answer on a YES-NO type of DS question.

This is another common mistake I have seen test takers making on a YES-No type of DS question – forgetting that a NO is as good as a YES.
Since statement II alone is sufficient to give us a NO, the correct answer option is B.

Here’s a link to one of our articles on Data Sufficiency for your reference. This will really help you to not make such errors on a DS question.
https://bit.ly/348ndXx

Hope that helps!
User avatar
ocelot22
Joined: 16 Oct 2011
Last visit: 24 Sep 2025
Posts: 168
Own Kudos:
134
 [1]
Given Kudos: 545
GMAT 1: 640 Q38 V40
GMAT 2: 650 Q44 V36
GMAT 3: 570 Q31 V38
GMAT 4: 720 Q49 V40
GPA: 3.75
Products:
GMAT 4: 720 Q49 V40
Posts: 168
Kudos: 134
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
AJ1012
Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback. If a book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf, is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a paperback written in Spanish?


(1) Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback.

(2) Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.

This question throws just enough at you to be dangerous. This question also subtly tests your knowledge of probability. High quality question!

So all probabilities have to add to 1. Also, prob of (spanish and some other event) must be <= prob of spanish (total)

(1) of the books of the shelf 30 are PB. We know nothing of the number of Spanish or english books. if there are 0 spanish books the probability (PB and spanish) = 0 <1/2 so yes. if there are 45 spanish books, P(PB and spanish) =P(paperback) = 30/45 >1/2 so No NS

(2) Now, probability (spanish and paperback) < prob (spanish). Prob (spanish) =15/45 = 1/3 , so P(spanish and paperback) <1/3 <1/2 so Yes sufficient OA is B

IF you find my solution to be helpful, PLEASE GIVE ME KUDOS
avatar
BaskaranK25
avatar
Current Student
Joined: 31 May 2020
Last visit: 30 Mar 2022
Posts: 25
Own Kudos:
18
 [3]
Given Kudos: 74
Status:Gearing up
Location: India
Concentration: Marketing, General Management
GMAT 1: 710 Q49 V38
GPA: 4
WE:Engineering (Manufacturing)
3
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback. If a book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf, is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a paperback written in Spanish?


(1) Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback.

(2) Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.


Stem: probability (spanish AND Paperback) = p(Spanish) * p(paperback) < 1/2

S1: paperback = 30
probability (spanish AND Paperback) = p(Spanish) * p(30/45) = p(Spanish) * 0.67 --> NS

S2: spanishbooks = 15
probability (spanish AND Paperback) = p(15/45) * p(paperback) = 0.33 * p(paperback)
now we know p(paperback) is less than 1
probability (spanish AND Paperback) = 0.33 * p(paperback) < 0.33 ---> Sufficient
User avatar
Hovkial
Joined: 23 Apr 2019
Last visit: 24 Nov 2022
Posts: 803
Own Kudos:
2,409
 [1]
Given Kudos: 202
Status:PhD trained. Education research, management.
Posts: 803
Kudos: 2,409
 [1]
Kudos
Add Kudos
1
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
OFFICIAL GMAT EXPLANATION

Arithmetic Probability

(1) This indicates that 30 of the 45 books are paperbacks. Of the 30 paperbacks, 25 could be written in Spanish. In this case, the probability of randomly selecting a paperback book written in Spanish is 25/45 > 1/2. On the other hand, it is possible that only 5 of the paperback books are written in Spanish. In this case, the probability of randomly selecting a paperback book written in Spanish is 5/45 < 12; NOT sufficient.

(2) This indicates that 15 of the books are written in Spanish. Then, at most 15 of the 45 books on the shelf are paperbacks written in Spanish, and the probability of randomly selecting a paperback book written in Spanish is at most 15/45 < 1/2; SUFFICIENT.

Statement 2 alone is sufficient.
User avatar
GMATinsight
User avatar
Major Poster
Joined: 08 Jul 2010
Last visit: 19 Nov 2025
Posts: 6,839
Own Kudos:
16,354
 [1]
Given Kudos: 128
Status:GMAT/GRE Tutor l Admission Consultant l On-Demand Course creator
Location: India
GMAT: QUANT+DI EXPERT
Schools: IIM (A) ISB '24
GMAT 1: 750 Q51 V41
WE:Education (Education)
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
Schools: IIM (A) ISB '24
GMAT 1: 750 Q51 V41
Posts: 6,839
Kudos: 16,354
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
AJ1012
Each of the 45 books on a shelf is written either in English or in Spanish, and each of the books is either a hardcover book or a paperback. If a book is to be selected at random from the books on the shelf, is the probability less than 1/2 that the book selected will be a paperback written in Spanish?


(1) Of the books on the shelf, 30 are paperback.

(2) Of the books on the shelf, 15 are written in Spanish.
Answer: Option B

Video solution by GMATinsight

[you-tube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOIiwQ2wplg[/you-tube]
­
User avatar
avigutman
Joined: 17 Jul 2019
Last visit: 30 Sep 2025
Posts: 1,293
Own Kudos:
1,931
 [1]
Given Kudos: 66
Location: Canada
GMAT 1: 780 Q51 V45
GMAT 2: 780 Q50 V47
GMAT 3: 770 Q50 V45
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 3: 770 Q50 V45
Posts: 1,293
Kudos: 1,931
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Video solution from Quant Reasoning:
Subscribe for more: https://www.youtube.com/QuantReasoning? ... irmation=1
User avatar
bumpbot
User avatar
Non-Human User
Joined: 09 Sep 2013
Last visit: 04 Jan 2021
Posts: 38,588
Own Kudos:
Posts: 38,588
Kudos: 1,079
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Hello from the GMAT Club BumpBot!

Thanks to another GMAT Club member, I have just discovered this valuable topic, yet it had no discussion for over a year. I am now bumping it up - doing my job. I think you may find it valuable (esp those replies with Kudos).

Want to see all other topics I dig out? Follow me (click follow button on profile). You will receive a summary of all topics I bump in your profile area as well as via email.
Moderators:
Math Expert
105390 posts
496 posts