by rachelhong2012 Fri Jan 20, 2012 1:59 pm
When I looked at the bigger figure, I see three smaller rectangles coming together to form the bigger rectangles.
If we're talking in terms of the smaller rectangle, then then longer line is the length and the shorter line is the width. Let's call these smaller rectangles A, B and C The two on the top being A and B from left to right, and the one on the bottom being C
ratio KN/MN?
(length of smaller rectangle C)/ (length of smaller rectangle B + width of smaller rectangle C)
Hope you see that statement 1 is clearly insufficent because knowing perimeter doesn't help us determine the exact dimension of lengths and widths.
Statement 2 is sufficient because:
All three rectangles have the same dimensions,
in other words, combine this with my equation, I now know that:
(length of smaller rectangle C)/ (length of smaller rectangle B + width of smaller rectangle C)
is the same as
(length of smaller rectangle C)/ (length of smaller rectangle c + width of smaller rectangle C)
IF you rewrite the equation, it becomes:
length/length + length/width = ?
1 + length/width = ?
The real question disguised is what is the proportion between the length and width of the smaller rectangle?
Look at line segments LM and KN and you will see that the length is made up of two widths, so we know their proportion.
Sufficient.