Mo2men wrote:Anthony can purchase bagels at $1.99 for a specialty bagel and $15.99 for a package of one dozen plain bagels. If Anthony can purchase only specialty bagels or packages of plain bagels, did Anthony purchase any plain bagels?
(1) Anthony spent less than $32.00
(2) Anthony spent more than $31.90
Source: Veritas
OA: C
Hi Mo2men,
We are given that the price of a specialty bagel = $1.99 and the price of 12 plain bagels = $15.99
Let us see each statement one by one.
S1: Anthony spent less than $32.00.
You may test a couple of extreme values.
If Anthony bought only few specialty bagels, the answer is NO.
If Anthony bought only two packages of plain bagels, the answer is YES. Insufficient.
S2: Anthony spent more than $31.90.
As with statement 1, statement 2 is also not sufficient.
S1 & S2:
We have: 31.90 < AMOUNT < 32.00
Let's test some values, assuming that Anthony did not buy a package of plain bagels.
We have the price of a specialty bagel = $1.99. Let's take it $2 for the time being. So, if he buys 16 specialty bagels, the amount < $32. Since '31.90 < AMOUNT < 32.00' is too close, we must get the value of actual amount, which is 1.99*16 = $31.84. Since 31.84 < the MINIMUM sum Anthony spent (31.90), he must not have bought 16 specialty bagels.
Let's see if he bought 17 specialty bagels. The amount would be 31.84 + 1.99 = 32.83. This is also not possible since 32.83 > the MAXIMUM amount Anthony spent (32).
This implies that Anthony must have bought at least one package of plain bagels. Sufficient.
C[/quote]
He may do the following.
1. Buy one dozen plain + 8 specialty bagels: Amount = 15.99 + 8*1.99 = $31.91.
OR
2. Buy two dozen plain bagels: Amount = 2*15.99 = $31.98.
Hope this helps!
Relevant book:
Manhattan Review GMAT Data Sufficiency Guide
-Jay
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