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- Mike@Magoosh
- GMAT Instructor
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Suppose we have six marbles: 3 blue marbles, 2 red marbles, and one green marble. Suppose we are going to put them into three cups: a black cup, a white cup, and a purple cup. The only restriction is that the two red marbles can't be in the same cup. We could put as many as five (all except one of the reds) in any cup. We could leave one cup empty, or put some in each of the three cups. All combinations are allowed that don't involve the two red marbles in the same cup. How many combinations are possible?
(A) 90
(B) 180
(C) 360
(D) 540
(E) 720
The GMAT loves tricky counting problems such as this. For a discussion of how to approach such problems, with the OA & OE to this particular problem, see:
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2015/counting- ... -the-gmat/
Mike
(A) 90
(B) 180
(C) 360
(D) 540
(E) 720
The GMAT loves tricky counting problems such as this. For a discussion of how to approach such problems, with the OA & OE to this particular problem, see:
https://magoosh.com/gmat/2015/counting- ... -the-gmat/
Mike
Magoosh GMAT Instructor
https://gmat.magoosh.com/
https://gmat.magoosh.com/












