Did I translate correct ?

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Did I translate correct ?

by Thephu » Fri Jan 25, 2008 12:44 am
I am not sure if I translate correct. I am a bit confuse if there are wording like " as many.......as"

Please help me to clarify this...


1) There are 3 times as many people aged twenty-one or under as there are people over twenty one.


Translate as : 3B = A

given that ..
A : people aged twenty-one or under
B : people aged over twenty one



2)

1/3 as many violets as carnation


Translate as : 1/3 x C = V


Many thanks. :)
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by Stuart@KaplanGMAT » Fri Jan 25, 2008 5:57 am
Both of your translations are correct.

When you're not sure how to translate, plugging in numbers that you understand is often a good way to figure out where to place the variables.

For example:

"There are 3 times as many people aged twenty-one or under as there are people over twenty one."

or, to simplify:

"There are 3 times as many X as Y."

OK.. so if we had 6 Xs, and there are 3 times as many X as Y, we should have 2 Ys.

So if X=6 and Y=2, the relationship is:

X = 3Y

Similarly for the second example:

"1/3 as many violets as carnation"

If we translated that as:

(1/3)V = C and picked numbers, we'd get something like V=9 and C=3. But that's not 1/3 as many violets as carnations, that's three times as many violets as carnations... clearly we've gotten the variables backwards.

(1/3)C = V, that would be C=9 and V=3... yup, that's 1/3 as many violets as carnations, so it must be the correc translation.
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by Jason11 » Mon Sep 22, 2008 8:33 am
All I understand is,

A : people aged twenty-one
C : people aged under twenty-one
B : people aged over twenty one

A: 3x
C: 3X
B: x

C/(A+B+C) or A/(A+B+C)
C=A, then C/(A+B+C) = A/(A+B+C)

But what if it said, there are 3 times as many
people aged twenty-one and under as there are people
over twenty-one, then the answer...?(not actually asking the answer)