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My pound has vanished
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From the builders merchant the other day 3 of us purchased a washbasin for the flat each paying �10 - a total of �30. Later the merchant found he had overcharged us by �5 and sent his driver round with it. The driver stole �2 and gave us back �3, which meant we had each paid �9. Three times �9 = �27, plus the �2 the driver pinched = �29. Where is the other �1?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes, Elle, this is just - as you say - the old USA bellboy problem in a new guise. Three men pay a hotel-bill of $30.00, giving $10.00 each. The desk-clerk realises he has overcharged by $5.00 and sends the bellboy back with that amount. He, however, steals $2.00 and gives the men just $1.00 each. Thus, they've paid $9.00 each = $27.00 and the bellboy's got $2.00, so where's the supposedly 'missing' $1.00?
This is really a 'problem' with the way the situation is worded, not a problem of arithmetic. The three men paid 27 for the room, but only if you add in the 2 the bell boy kept. That 2 should be subtracted from - not added to - the 27, which gives the room cost of 25. Looked at another way, the desk-man has 25, the bell boy has 2 and the men have 3, which equals 30, which is exactly where you started. The same applies to the washbasin situation.
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