it is not.koolkartin wrote:Folks,
All math , logic aside. I believe its 1/2;
A basket has 5 apples
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Ron has been teaching various standardized tests for 20 years.
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Quand on se sent bien dans un vêtement, tout peut arriver. Un bon vêtement, c'est un passeport pour le bonheur.
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Pueden hacerle preguntas a Ron en castellano
Potete chiedere domande a Ron in italiano
On peut poser des questions à Ron en français
Voit esittää kysymyksiä Ron:lle myös suomeksi
--
Quand on se sent bien dans un vêtement, tout peut arriver. Un bon vêtement, c'est un passeport pour le bonheur.
Yves Saint-Laurent
--
Learn more about ron
I got stuck on this so I just used a bit of intuition and process of elimination.
First two answer choices are the same probability. GMAT would never give you two correct (same) answers in different formats. Eliminate A and B.
1/2 is 50% probability. 50% seemed like quite a high chance of getting a rotten one considering there is only 1 in the basket. Eliminate D. and then eliminate E because 3/5 is an even higher probability.
Not the best approach but worked for me since I was stuck and time was ticking.
First two answer choices are the same probability. GMAT would never give you two correct (same) answers in different formats. Eliminate A and B.
1/2 is 50% probability. 50% seemed like quite a high chance of getting a rotten one considering there is only 1 in the basket. Eliminate D. and then eliminate E because 3/5 is an even higher probability.
Not the best approach but worked for me since I was stuck and time was ticking.












