First qtn on my Gmat prep test: relatively simple, and I got it correct, but I think i spent a little more time on it than I should have (I timed myself) because I tried to use factorization in some way, but didn't succeed. Is there any other solution other than working it out and guesstimating the result with the answer choices, coz thats what I did.
1. 2^5 + 2^5 + 3^5 + 3^5 +3^5 =
a. 5^6 b. 13^5 c. 2^6+3^6 d. 2^7 + 3^8 e. 4^5 + 9^5
2. If the two-digit integers M&N are positive and have digits but in reverse order, which of the following CANNOT be the sum of M & N?
a. 181 b. 165 c. 121 d. 99 e. 44
Qtn: According to a formula in the flashcards, which I was hoping to use says
AB
BA
CDC
But, the explanation solves this differently. Is there a way to solve this with the use of the formula above? Thanks.
1. 2^5 + 2^5 + 3^5 + 3^5 +3^5 =
a. 5^6 b. 13^5 c. 2^6+3^6 d. 2^7 + 3^8 e. 4^5 + 9^5
2. If the two-digit integers M&N are positive and have digits but in reverse order, which of the following CANNOT be the sum of M & N?
a. 181 b. 165 c. 121 d. 99 e. 44
Qtn: According to a formula in the flashcards, which I was hoping to use says
AB
BA
CDC
But, the explanation solves this differently. Is there a way to solve this with the use of the formula above? Thanks.













