Thursday, April 20, 2006

Family affairs

Five couples each have one child.
Each child is a different age than any of the other children.
Each child has a favorite toy which is different from any of the other children's favorite toys.
Each family eats at only one fast food restaurant.
No two women have the same name and no two men have the same name.
The children's names are not known.

The child who plays with trains is the youngest.
Bill's child plays with GI Joe.
Julie's child likes Pokeman.
Mike's family eats at Taco Bell.
The family of the 4 year old likes Kentucky Fried Chicken.
The oldest child is four years older than Marie's child.
The child who plays with Barbie is 8 years old.
The child with the age is in the middle, has a mother named Marie.
The child in the family that eats at McDonalds has a two year age difference with Larry's child.
Carol is the mother in the family that eats at Dairy Queen.
The child that plays Nintendo likes Burger King.
Steve's child is two years apart in age from the child of the family that eats at Kentucky Fried Chicken.
The child that plays with trains is two years apart from the 6 year old.
The child that eats at McDonalds is two years older or younger than Regina's child.
Lisa's child is 10.

Who is married to George?

4 comments:

  1. Lisa, if i filled my grid out right.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Lisa is married to George, and their 10 year old plays with Nintendo. They like to eat at Burger King.

    The associations are:

    Child age 4, mother Regina, Father Larry, trains, KFC
    Child age 6, mother Julie, Father Steve, Pokeman, McDonalds
    Child age 8, mother Marie, Father Mike, Barbie, Taco Bell
    Child age 10, mother Lisa, Father George, Nintendo, Burger King
    Child age 12, mother Carol, Father Bill, GI Joe, Dairy Queen

    To solve, draw a grid with five rows and five columns. Across the top, above the columns, write Age, Mother, Father, Toy and Food.

    Figure out the known ages and write them in order in the first column.

    One child's age is unknown at first. However, once the youngest child is discovered (the one who plays with trains) it is then known that the oldest child is the child with the unknown age.
    Through additional clues, it is possible to determine that the oldest child is age 12.

    Take the clue, Lisa’s child is 10. In the mother column corresponding to the age 10, you would write LISA (Maybe circle it, because it is the correct answer.) In the mother column for every other age, write "not Lisa". Do this for each clue. If you know the answer because of a clue, write it in the appropriate column, and then be sure to write "not such and such" in all the other rows for that clue.

    For example, "The youngest child plays with trains", would result in "not trains" for any child you can tell isn’t the youngest, but you can’t write "trains" for any child, because you don’t
    know which child is the youngest at first.

    Eventually, you may find that "mother not Marie" is on every line except one, and then you would know that Marie is the mother on the empty line.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Exactly how i figured it out... Spreadsheet.

    ReplyDelete

Leave your answer or, if you want to post a question of your own, send me an e-mail. Look in the about section to find my e-mail address. If it's new, I'll post it soon.

Please don't leave spam or 'Awesome blog, come visit mine' messages. I'll delete them soon after.

Enter your Email and join hundreds of others who get their Question of the Day sent right to their mailbox


Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz


The Lamplight Manor Puzz 3-D
Are you looking for a particular puzzle, riddle, question, etc? Or do you want to find the answer today rather than wait till tomorrow!
Google