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Operations on Rational Numbers Integers are numbers like -10, 0, 2, 5, 189.

You might know them as whole numbers or numbers that do not have decimals. Rational numbers, in contrast, are numbers that can be expressed as a/b where a and b are integers. This would include numbers such as , -4 (which you can think of as -4/1), 0 and so on. Most problem solving GMAT questions that deal with operations on rational numbers essentially require you to understand defined operations, to translate word problems into equations and to be able to do conversions. Question Defined Operations There are certain established operations. We all know that + represents addition and represents subtraction and / represents division and 2 represents squaring a number and so on. Aptitude tests often come up with their own symbols to represent a particular operation. Lets examine the operation represented by below. The question reads: let x y = x2/y for all positive values of x and y. This means that wants you to square the first number and divide that by the second number. Thus 6 9 = 62/9 = 36/9 = 4 Word Problems Word problems may look tricky but if you work through each bit of information at a time, you might find that they are not as difficult as you imagined. Lets try an algebraic word problem: Allyn has t tattoos, which is half as many as Krystal and 4 times as many as Joshua. How many tattoos do the 3 of them have together? Look at the first bit of information. Allyn has t tattoos. It is half as many as Krystals, meaning Krystal has 2t tattoos. Allyn has 4 times as many as Joshua, meaning Joshua has t/4 tattoos. Thus, they have t + 2t + t/4 = 13t/4 tattoos in total. Heres a much longer, wordier problem: In the first leg of a dog-sledding competition, the teams raced across a 120-mile route. If the Swiss team took 10 hours to finish the first leg, and the average speed of the Canadian team was 25 percent greater than the average speed of the Swiss team, how many hours did it take the Canadian team to finish the first leg of the competition? What do you know?

The Swiss team took 10 hours to complete 120 miles. So their average speed is 120miles / 10hours = 12mph

The Canadian teams average speed was 25% greater. 25% greater than 12mph is 16mph. The Canadian team traveled 120 miles at 16mph meaning they took 120miles/16mph = 7.5 hours.

You can do the same for this question involving percentages: A barrel contains 40 kilograms of syrup that is 35% sugar by weight. If 10 kilograms of sugar are added to the barrel, the resulting syrup will be what percent sugar by weight? What do you know?

35% of a 40kg of syrup is sugar. So 12kg of the syrup is sugar. 10kg of sugar is added. There is now 22kg of sugar. Overall, the syrup weighs 50kg now. So the sugar percentage is now 22/50 %

Given the choices 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 17% 28% 37% 48% 60%

you should be able to figure the answer without even calculating the precise answer of 22/50 simply by estimating. 22/50% is close to 25/50% which is 50%. Since 22/50 is less than 25/50, the answer should be choice D: 48%. Conversions One of the simplest operations on numbers is to know how to convert between units. Sometimes the GMAT will make up units such as in the following question. If 100 fnords is equal to 1 norton, then how much bigger is 53 nortons than 23 nortons in fnords? If you break this question down like you did the word problems, you would realize that it is essentially asking: how many fnords are there in 30 nortons. Since 1 norton = 100 fnords 30 nortons = 3000 fnords.

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