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arielle.bertman
 
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Are x and y both positive?

by arielle.bertman Mon Aug 03, 2009 1:41 pm

Are x and y both positive?

(1) 2x - 2y = 1
(2) x/y > 1

I quickly eliminated A and B since neither statement alone is sufficient but I am having a hard time setting up a methodical way to prove that together they are sufficient (the correct answer).

Thanks!

Arielle
Last edited by arielle.bertman on Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:10 am, edited 1 time in total.
furtadovinod
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Re: Are x and y both positive?

by furtadovinod Wed Aug 05, 2009 1:03 am

arielle.bertman Wrote:Are x and y both positive?

(1) 2x - 2y = 1
(2) x/y > 1

I quickly eliminated A and B since neither statement alone is sufficient but I am having a hard time setting up a methodical way to prove that together they are sufficient (the correct answer).

Thanks!

Arielle


Hi Areille,

I hope this can help.

Let's look at Statement (2) first

(2) x/y > 1
This statement tells me one of two things
(i) x & y are positive and x > y, OR
(ii) x & y are negative and x < y
By itself, as you have noted, its insufficient.

Statement (1) now
(1) 2x-2y=1
i.e. x - y = 0.5
i.e x = 0.5 + y
This tells me that x > y because I need to add 0.5(a positive value) to y to get x.
Again by itself insufficient.

For this statement, if you want to be sure just consider cases for variable y.
(i) y is positive: Then x is definitely a positive number greater than 1.
(ii) y is negative and greater than 0.5: Then x > y and x is also negative.
(iii) y is negative and lesser than 0.5: Then x > y and x is positive.

As you can see all the above cases show that x > y.

Taking (1) and (2) together, because (1) tells me that x > y it follows from (2) that x & y are positive.

Therefore, the answer is C.
furtadovinod
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Re: Are x and y both positive?

by furtadovinod Wed Aug 05, 2009 1:05 am

furtadovinod Wrote:
arielle.bertman Wrote:Are x and y both positive?

(1) 2x - 2y = 1
(2) x/y > 1

I quickly eliminated A and B since neither statement alone is sufficient but I am having a hard time setting up a methodical way to prove that together they are sufficient (the correct answer).

Thanks!

Arielle


Hi Areille,

I hope this can help.

Let's look at Statement (2) first

(2) x/y > 1
This statement tells me one of two things
(i) x & y are positive and x > y, OR
(ii) x & y are negative and x < y
By itself, as you have noted, its insufficient.

Statement (1) now
(1) 2x-2y=1
i.e. x - y = 0.5
i.e x = 0.5 + y
This tells me that x > y because I need to add 0.5(a positive value) to y to get x.
Again by itself insufficient.

For this statement, if you want to be sure just consider cases for variable y.
(i) y is positive: Then x is definitely a positive number greater than 1.
(ii) y is negative and greater than 0.5: Then x > y and x is also negative.
(iii) y is negative and lesser than 0.5: Then x > y and x is positive.

As you can see all the above cases show that x > y.

Taking (1) and (2) together, because (1) tells me that x > y it follows from (2) that x & y are positive.

Therefore, the answer is C.


(i) y is positive: Then x is definitely a positive number greater than 1.
should read as
(i) y is positive: Then x is definitely a positive number greater than y.
dsprashanth
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Re: Are x and y both positive?

by dsprashanth Sun Aug 09, 2009 8:24 pm

Remember to not cross multiply without knowing the sign of the X and Y.
Ben Ku
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Re: Are x and y both positive?

by Ben Ku Tue Aug 18, 2009 11:23 pm

Are x and y both positive?

(1) 2x - 2y = 1
(2) x/y > 1

Statement (1) can be rephrased: x - y = 0.5. We only know that x > y, since the difference is positive. (1) alone is insufficient.

Statement (2) has two options.
If x and y are both positive, then x must be larger than y, so x > y > 0.
If x and y are both negative, then x is more negative than y, so x < y < 0.
Because we don't know whether they are both positive or both negative, (2) alone is insufficient.

From (1), we know that x >y. The only option in (2) for this to be true is if they are both positive. (1) and (2) together are sufficient. (C) is the answer.

Hope that helps.
Ben Ku
Instructor
ManhattanGMAT
lalitkc
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Re: Are x and y both positive?

by lalitkc Sun Aug 30, 2009 11:06 am

Hi Ben,
If x= - 9.5 and y = -10 ,
x-y= 0.5 and
x/y > 1 should be equivalent to saying x > y
However, x and y are negative .
So answer should be E
anoo.anand
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Re: Are x and y both positive?

by anoo.anand Sat Sep 19, 2009 2:03 pm

answer chus be E for this.

x/y gives >> x and y either both +ve or both -ve

combining bith th options.

take x = 4 , Y = 3.5

2X-2Y = 1 ... thus both positive.

take X = -3.5 , Y = -4
2(-3.5)-2(-4) = 1 ...thus bith negative ...thus option E..
kunalv3
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Re: Are x and y both positive?

by kunalv3 Wed Sep 23, 2009 5:15 am

Hi,

can this be solved like this (is there anything wrong with this method,because this came instinctively to me)

to check for AC C: solving for 1 and 2

2x-2y=1
x=1/2+y
x/y=y/2+1

from2:x/y>1 this implies: y/2+1>1,this implies y>0

now that we know y>0,then from 2 (x/y>1)we can conclude x>0.
hence x>0 and y>0

IMO C
Ben Ku
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Re: Are x and y both positive?

by Ben Ku Sat Oct 03, 2009 5:55 pm

lalitkc and anoo.anand:
Your examples don't hold for statement (2):

Hi Ben,
If x= - 9.5 and y = -10 ,
x-y= 0.5 and
x/y > 1 should be equivalent to saying x > y
However, x and y are negative .
So answer should be E


In this example, x/y = (-9.5)/(-10) which is less than 1. This example doesn't work for statement (2).

take X = -3.5 , Y = -4
2(-3.5)-2(-4) = 1 ...thus bith negative ...thus option E..

Here, x/y = (-3.4)/(-4), which is less than 1. This example doesn't work for statement (2) either.

kunalv3:
can this be solved like this (is there anything wrong with this method,because this came instinctively to me)

to check for AC C: solving for 1 and 2

2x-2y=1
x=1/2+y
x/y=y/2+1 [this line isn't quite right]

from2:x/y>1 this implies: y/2+1>1,this implies y>0

now that we know y>0,then from 2 (x/y>1)we can conclude x>0.
hence x>0 and y>0


You approach is fine except for a small error in algebra:
2x - 2y = 1
x = (2y + 1)/2 or x = y + 1/2
x/y = (y + 1/2) / y = 1 + 1/(2y)

Since x/y > 1
1 + 1/(2y) > 1
1/(2y) > 0
y > 0

Because x/y > 1, and y > 0, therefore x > 0.
Ben Ku
Instructor
ManhattanGMAT