8Harshitsharma
Still unanswered, why haven't you considered choice B) hutch and sideboard. That is where I don't agree. It is given EXACTLY two of 4 items are made of the same wood, so if you take hutch and sideboard to be same then according to the first combination that I stated f, h, s, t - f & t as well as h & s will be made of the same wood. This ALSO violates the given condition. Don't you think?
That's the thing - you cannot take H and S to be the same as per Combination 1. In Combination 1, as per the stated rules, only F and T will be made of the same wood. That automatically eliminates "H and S being of the same wood" from the equation.
Note: You mustn't violate the stated rules.
Hope this helps.
-Abhishek
Quote:
Still unanswered, why haven't you considered choice B) hutch and sideboard. That is where I don't agree. It is given EXACTLY two of 4 items are made of the same wood, so if you take hutch and sideboard to be same then according to the first combination that I stated f, h, s, t - f & t as well as h & s will be made of the same wood. This ALSO violates the given condition. Don't you think?
That's the thing - you cannot take H and S to be the same as per Combination 1. In Combination 1, as per the stated rules, only F and T will be made of the same wood. That automatically eliminates "H and S being of the same wood" from the equation.
Note: You mustn't violate the stated rules.
Hope this helps.
-Abhishek
Statistics : Posted by egmat • on 29 Apr 2024, 10:15 • Replies 6 • Views 364



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