Master Number Properties - Beginner Level Problems Number Properties BEGINNER

Excel in competitive exams with this skill builder ⚡ worksheet on Number Properties. Worksheet 3 of 10 contains 20 beginner-level problems. Target your step-by-step problem solving skills while practicing number properties practice, number properties for competitive exams, and how to solve number properties.

📝 Worksheet 3 of 10 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Beginner level

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Worksheet 3 of 10 (22% complete)

Question 1

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 2

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 3

Question: Is integer n divisible by 6? Statement (1): n is divisible by 2. Statement (2): n is divisible by 3.
For divisibility by 6, n must be divisible by both 2 and 3. Statement (1) alone: n could be 2,4,6,8,... not all divisible by 6. Statement (2) alone: n could be 3,6,9,12,... not all divisible by 6. Together: n divisible by both 2 and 3 → divisible by LCM(2,3)=6. SUFFICIENT together.

Question 4

Question: Is integer n divisible by 6? Statement (1): n is divisible by 2. Statement (2): n is divisible by 3.
For divisibility by 6, n must be divisible by both 2 and 3. Statement (1) alone: n could be 2,4,6,8,... not all divisible by 6. Statement (2) alone: n could be 3,6,9,12,... not all divisible by 6. Together: n divisible by both 2 and 3 → divisible by LCM(2,3)=6. SUFFICIENT together.

Question 5

Question: Is integer n divisible by 6? Statement (1): n is divisible by 2. Statement (2): n is divisible by 3.
For divisibility by 6, n must be divisible by both 2 and 3. Statement (1) alone: n could be 2,4,6,8,... not all divisible by 6. Statement (2) alone: n could be 3,6,9,12,... not all divisible by 6. Together: n divisible by both 2 and 3 → divisible by LCM(2,3)=6. SUFFICIENT together.

Question 6

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 7

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 8

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 9

Question: Is integer n divisible by 6? Statement (1): n is divisible by 2. Statement (2): n is divisible by 3.
For divisibility by 6, n must be divisible by both 2 and 3. Statement (1) alone: n could be 2,4,6,8,... not all divisible by 6. Statement (2) alone: n could be 3,6,9,12,... not all divisible by 6. Together: n divisible by both 2 and 3 → divisible by LCM(2,3)=6. SUFFICIENT together.

Question 10

Question: Is integer n divisible by 6? Statement (1): n is divisible by 2. Statement (2): n is divisible by 3.
For divisibility by 6, n must be divisible by both 2 and 3. Statement (1) alone: n could be 2,4,6,8,... not all divisible by 6. Statement (2) alone: n could be 3,6,9,12,... not all divisible by 6. Together: n divisible by both 2 and 3 → divisible by LCM(2,3)=6. SUFFICIENT together.

Question 11

Question: Is integer n divisible by 6? Statement (1): n is divisible by 2. Statement (2): n is divisible by 3.
For divisibility by 6, n must be divisible by both 2 and 3. Statement (1) alone: n could be 2,4,6,8,... not all divisible by 6. Statement (2) alone: n could be 3,6,9,12,... not all divisible by 6. Together: n divisible by both 2 and 3 → divisible by LCM(2,3)=6. SUFFICIENT together.

Question 12

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 13

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 14

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 15

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 16

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 17

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 18

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 19

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.

Question 20

Question: Is integer n a prime number? Statement (1): n > 10 Statement (2): n < 20 and n is odd
Statement (1): n > 10 could be prime (11,13,17,19) or composite (12,14,15,16,18) - NOT sufficient. Statement (2): n is odd between 10 and 20: possibilities are 11,13,15,17,19. Among these, 15 is composite - NOT sufficient. Together: Same as statement (2) alone - still ambiguous (15 is composite, others prime). NOT sufficient even together.
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