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Byrne and some of his friends go out to dinner and spend

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Princeton Review

Byrne and some of his friends go out to dinner and spend $111, excluding tax and tip. If the group included both men and women, how many men were in the group?

1) There are a total of five people at the table, including Byrne.
2) The women order meals that cost an average of $19 and the men order meals that cost an average of $27.

OA B
Source: — Data Sufficiency |

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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Sat Jul 20, 2019 7:09 am

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AAPL wrote:Princeton Review

Byrne and some of his friends go out to dinner and spend $111, excluding tax and tip. If the group included both men and women, how many men were in the group?

1) There are a total of five people at the table, including Byrne.
2) The women order meals that cost an average of $19 and the men order meals that cost an average of $27.

OA B
Given: Byrne and some of his friends go out to dinner and spend $111, excluding tax and tip.

Target question: How many men were in the group?

Statement 1: There are a total of five people at the table, including Byrne.
No idea how many of these 5 people are men.
Statement 1 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: The women order meals that cost an average of $19 and the men order meals that cost an average of $27.
Let M = # of men in the group
Let W = # of women in the group
Since the total cost is $111, we can write: 19W + 27M = 111
Since W and M must be POSITIVE INTEGERS, we can see that there aren't many possible solutions to the red equation above.
Since we're told there's at least 1 woman, let's start there.

If W = 1, we get: 19(1) + 27M = 111
Simplify: 27M = 92
So, M = 92/27, which does NOT simplify to be a POSITIVE INTEGER.
So, it cannot be the case that there is 1 woman

If W = 2, we get: 19(2) + 27M = 111
Simplify: 27M = 73
So, M = 73/27, which does NOT simplify to be a POSITIVE INTEGER.
So, it cannot be the case that there are 2 women

If W = 3, we get: 19(3) + 27M = 111
Simplify: 27M = 73
So, M = 54/27 = 2
So, it's POSSIBLE that the group has 3 women and 2 men

If W = 4, we get: 19(4) + 27M = 111
Simplify: 27M = 35
So, M = 35/27, which does NOT simplify to be a POSITIVE INTEGER.
So, it cannot be the case that there are 4 women

If W = 5, we get: 19(5) + 27M = 111
Simplify: 27M = 16
So, M = 16/27, which does NOT simplify to be a POSITIVE INTEGER.
So, it cannot be the case that there are 5 women

If W = 6, we get: 19(6) + 27M = 111
Simplify: 27M = -3
At this point, we can STOP, since all integer values of W greater than 5 will result in a negative number of men (which is impossible).

Since there was only ONE CASE in which W and M are POSITIVE INTEGERS, we can be certain that the answer to the target question is there are 2 men in the group
Since we can answer the target question with certainty, statement 2 is SUFFICIENT

Answer: B

Cheers,
Brent
Brent Hanneson - Creator of GMATPrepNow.com
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