Free GMAT Practice Questions

Question 1 of 1
ID: GMAT-DSQ-9
Section: Quantitative Reasoning - Data Sufficiency
Topics: Probability; Balls; Logical Deduction; Word to math translation
Difficulty level: Hard

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A box has at least one ball of each of the colors red, green, and blue and no balls of any other color. If one ball is drawn randomly from the box, is the probability that the drawn ball is red same as the probability that the drawn ball is blue but NOT the same as the probability that the drawn ball is green?

  • (1) There are 5 balls in the box.
  • (2) The number of green balls is greater than the number of blue balls.
AStatement (1) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (2) ALONE is not sufficient to answer the question asked.
BStatement (2) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (1) ALONE is not sufficient to answer the question asked.
CBOTH statements (1) and (2) TOGETHER are sufficient to answer the question asked, but NEITHER statement ALONE is sufficient to answer the question asked.
DEACH statement ALONE is sufficient to answer the question asked.
EStatements (1) and (2) TOGETHER are NOT sufficient to answer the question asked, and additional data specific to the problem are needed.
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