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5 Hard Riddles With Simple Answers 👉 Tricky Hardest Riddles with Answers || Episode #5

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  • čas přidán 15. 08. 2024
  • 5 Most frequently asked quick and tricky JOB INTERVIEW RIDDLES based on lateral logic and presence of mind. Quick and Tricky Puzzles that will surely surprise you. This is the fifth episode of the interview Puzzles and Riddles series.
    Below is the list of the Riddles covered in this Episode #3.
    Timestamp
    0:03 - What's the next picture in the series
    0:53 - Circular chain puzzle
    1:59 - 6 shot revolver puzzle (cowboy gun puzzle)
    3:00 - Car and tyres puzzle
    4:24 - Very confusing shopping riddle (shopkeeper puzzle)
    The video explains the solution to all the Puzzles and the Logic behind.
    Also watch:
    10 interview riddles || Episode #1 :
    • 10 Interview RIDDLES |...
    5 interview Puzzles || Episode #2 :
    • 5 Interview PUZZLES ||...
    10 Interview RIDDLES || Episode #3 || Intelligence Test
    • 10 Interview RIDDLES |...
    10 Interview RIDDLES || Episode #4 || Quick & Tricky
    • 10 Interview RIDDLES |...
    Make sure you pause the video after every puzzle statement, and try to solve it yourself.
    You can find Interview Puzzles and difficult logical puzzles frequently asked in Puzzle competitions, on my channel.
    If you're interested to learn about hard riddles with simple answers topic , please visit: 👉 / @logicallyyours
    This video is presenting "hard riddles with simple answers" subject but we try to cover the subjects:
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    Please take 4 minutes to inspect out our video and learn why we are the finest choice regarding hardest riddles...
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Komentáře • 2,8K

  • @sachinkumarbit07
    @sachinkumarbit07 Před 4 lety +36

    For question number 4... We can say that....we have 5 tyres each with 20000km running capacity...total 100000km running capacity...but we need 4 tyres at a time...so it's 100000/4= 25000kms

  • @passion8040
    @passion8040 Před 5 lety +255

    In first riddle, there is another logic may also apply. Logic:-
    dice-1 = 3 dots
    dice-2 = 3 dots again
    dice-3 = 5 dots (which comes next after 4)
    dice-4 = 4 dots
    dice-5 = 4 dots again
    dice-6 = Next No. comes after 5 i.e. 6
    So from this logic answer is 6 dots.

    • @Singh_itis
      @Singh_itis Před 5 lety +13

      Mine was the same 😂

    • @passion8040
      @passion8040 Před 5 lety +36

      @@manojselvan
      That's was one logic, I had given my logic which is also has a unique pattern.
      LOL now hope you understand.

    • @minajaiswal4321
      @minajaiswal4321 Před 5 lety +3

      Answer is 6

    • @prajwalguptacr5012
      @prajwalguptacr5012 Před 5 lety +5

      My logic was also the same

    • @hariharanb3253
      @hariharanb3253 Před 5 lety +9

      @@Singh_itis thats the problem with sequences like this with small samples. It can be a part of literally any sequence. Had he done this for say maybe first 20 numbers the solution would've been unique.
      You can also think of it as
      3 3 5 3+1 3+1 5 3+2 3+2 5 3+3 3+3 5 3+4 3+4 5 3+5 3+5 5... You get the point
      I.e n is a multiple of 3 then term is 3
      Else it is double repetition of increasing digits

  • @Dalesmanable
    @Dalesmanable Před 3 lety +22

    The answer to Q1 is not three spots - it is just the poster’s preferred one from several possible answers. For example, four spots is equally valid as an answer: the dice are in sets of 3, the third being the first rotated through 90 degrees then superimposed on the second, giving the answer as 4 spots rotated onto 4 spots, the superimposed image being four spots. There may be other languages where the letters match up for 1-5 but not the sixth.

    • @gauravmaheshwari1807
      @gauravmaheshwari1807 Před 3 lety +9

      There's also a possible scenario that numbers are like 3 3 5 4 4, so the next number can even be a 6

    • @tinahalder8416
      @tinahalder8416 Před 2 lety +1

      I also thought that super imposing answer

    • @Le-Cardinal
      @Le-Cardinal Před 2 lety

      Occams Razor says that you ignore complex answers in favour of simple answers

  • @you123321uoy
    @you123321uoy Před 4 lety +89

    he lost his faith in indian rupee notes

  • @jacoboribilik3253
    @jacoboribilik3253 Před rokem +8

    The last problem is not confusing as long as we define properly what we mean by loss. I'm no accountant but in cash terms the shopkeeper lost 800 and in terms of goods the bag. If we covert everything into cash he lost 1000. In terms of bags: 5 bags. There's really no mistery to it once you are clear as to what you are refering to.

    • @justfrankjustdank2538
      @justfrankjustdank2538 Před 10 měsíci +1

      was bouta leave the same exact comment basically, good job hitting the nail on the head lol

  • @ankitsurolia8692
    @ankitsurolia8692 Před 5 lety +21

    Yeah 1000, u can easily understand this if u assume that the shopkeeper already had the change

    • @smj735
      @smj735 Před 5 lety +2

      Ankit Surolia bro you are forgetting about the 800 which he gave to lady and the total will be 1800

    • @HarinathSrinivas
      @HarinathSrinivas Před 4 lety +5

      @@smj735 that is not his loss, he cheated the next shop by giving fake rs and getting money. So his loss is only 1000. With a 1000 fake note u can only lose 1000 rs if you don't have any profit for ur items.

    • @rohitbasutkar8888
      @rohitbasutkar8888 Před 3 lety

      U guys are forgetting about the bag which he gave....it was worth 200

    • @nitingupta7105
      @nitingupta7105 Před 3 lety +1

      The total loss is 1000 Rs , because he returned 800Rs to the lady and 200 Rs for the item that she bought.Total loss- 800+200=1000..........

  • @jafarraza669
    @jafarraza669 Před 4 lety +4

    Its Rs 2000 as the shopkeeper gave a bag of 200 and 800 cash to the lady and now he will return 1000 to other shopkeeper
    If my answer is correct pls reply sir

  • @hewazangana
    @hewazangana Před 5 lety +11

    Q4) Can be solved easier. 100,000 is the distance can be covered by all tires. 4 is the number of tires you can use at any time.
    100,000/4 = 25,000

    • @jharealisticfantastic5112
      @jharealisticfantastic5112 Před 5 lety

      this answer is useful if you are going to use your car with just 1 tire at a time.

    • @hewazangana
      @hewazangana Před 5 lety +2

      Jarell Ibabao No, that would be 100,000

    • @jharealisticfantastic5112
      @jharealisticfantastic5112 Před 5 lety

      Hahaha, you can't use your car with just one tire, so you need to use 4 tires at the same time.

    • @hewazangana
      @hewazangana Před 5 lety +2

      Jarell Ibabao Exactly, could you explain to me how my answer is wrong?
      My answer goes:
      20,000 (Maximum distance per tire) * 5 = 100,000 (Total distance covered by all tires)
      100,000 / 4 (Maximum allowable tires) = 25,000 (Maximum distance covered by the five tires)

    • @arjunbadhan2685
      @arjunbadhan2685 Před 4 lety

      Nice explaination hewa..

  • @robrazzano9168
    @robrazzano9168 Před 5 lety +8

    The answer to the first question is 6 based on the arithmetic pattern. In order for three to be an acceptable answer, you have to assume that the interviewee speaks English.The answer to the second question could be 1 if you consider the "number of cuts" to be the number of times I squeeze the bolt cutter, as I could stack the four small chains atop one another and make one cut simultaneously through the end of all four chains.

  • @freddymintarja2186
    @freddymintarja2186 Před rokem +5

    The Q1 has multiple correct & logical answers even if options aren't offered, depending on how people looked at it. One: just like in the video. Two: pattern, 3,3,5,4,4,6. Three: opposite dice. In dice, the opposite dots should equal to 7, so the last one could also be a 2.

  • @JeramyRG
    @JeramyRG Před 4 lety +4

    Question 1-
    Entirely inconclusive.
    You can't just say your solution is right if there is multiple logical solutions.
    That's not the way this works.
    Question 2 -
    You're wrong. it's 2 cuts.
    Cut two pieces in half in one cut and make them completely new smaller links.
    Didn't say specify the links had to be equal length, nor did you specify the length of a cut - but you did allow for the parameters of bending and welding with no limit specifications.
    I. E.
    Ø (x2) = o o o o
    Question 3 -
    The answer is actually no logical answer exists.
    There is only one "6 shot revolver".. Even if all "6 shots" were fired, it would still only be one shot.
    No specification was made to the bullets within the revolver. I. E. Your answer is not properly formatted, but instead based on an assumption.
    Question 4 could've been explained much easier.
    Add all the tires maximum capacity, divide by the number of tires used at once.
    There is many ways to arrange the tires to reach maximum capacity - You failed to understand your own question.
    Question 5 -
    Has no logical response.
    We cannot determine the wholesale price of the bag or what he would've ultimately sold it for in any possible circumstance.
    Example: "Going out of business sale"
    We also do not know if he could've offloaded the bill to someone for a certain price.
    Basically the best answer with no assumptions is - The boy got 1,000 rps. Out of him, the woman got 800 and a indeterminately priced bag out of him while he received a fake 1,000 rps and possibly sold it for unknown amounts.

    • @saynn9134
      @saynn9134 Před 4 lety

      Too try hard :D

    • @JeramyRG
      @JeramyRG Před 4 lety +1

      @@saynn9134 I.E. Correct. Lol

    • @samuelwilliams9371
      @samuelwilliams9371 Před 2 lety

      Then would Q2 be 1 cut? Cut one link straight down the middle length-ways to result in 6 halves, which can be used to link the other three together.

  • @eatstreet8074
    @eatstreet8074 Před 4 lety +28

    1)Bag loss=200rs
    2)Lady taken away cash = 800rs
    3)He return 1000rs with adding 200 he had after change given to lady tha means =800
    200+800+800=1800

    • @69Turnips
      @69Turnips Před 4 lety +9

      Just 1000. At the end of the day that's all he has to pay back. The bag was paid for when he got the change

    • @mikkomahonen5050
      @mikkomahonen5050 Před 4 lety +5

      As John said, 1000.
      Lady got 200rs bag and 800rs cash = 1000
      Next door shop keeper lost nothing.
      So the shop keeper could not lose more than 1000rs
      Starting point: Shop keeper has a bag = 200rs
      after purchase they have 200rs
      After returning 1000rs they have -800rs and since they doesn't have bag anymore it adds up -200rs
      =-1000rs = loss of 1000rs.

    • @Bitsar
      @Bitsar Před 4 lety +2

      I think answer is 2000......because shopkeeper gives 800 ruppees to lady + 200 ruppee bag+ exchange of 1000 ruppee

    • @Talemir
      @Talemir Před 4 lety +2

      @@Bitsar but he gives 800 rp to woman and takes 200rp to pocket thats why 1800

    • @muhitislam1939
      @muhitislam1939 Před 4 lety

      Idiot

  • @FireWingsNoLeadsNoLimits
    @FireWingsNoLeadsNoLimits Před 4 lety +5

    I would say 1000 is the correct answer
    Explaination:-
    1. Let's count what he received
    1000rs fake note - Value 0rs
    1000rs change - value 1000rs
    Iska pocket mai 1000rs hai abhi
    2. Let's count what he lost
    200rs bag
    800rs change
    1000rs change to next shopkeeper for fake note
    Total amt - 2000rs
    So let's count the total loss
    1000-2000= 1000rs

    • @taarezameenpar3832
      @taarezameenpar3832 Před 3 lety

      Why you subtract 1000

    • @FireWingsNoLeadsNoLimits
      @FireWingsNoLeadsNoLimits Před 3 lety +2

      @@taarezameenpar3832 See bro, I will simplify for you. Jo change dusra shopkeeper se leke aaya wo settlement ho gaya, So there no profit, no loss.
      Whatever he lost was only to that lady which was value of 1000(200rs bag+800rs change).
      So loss is 1000 - Simple
      Wo fake note ka value 0 hai, so wo fake note ka baat dimag se hatado

  • @Susanmugen
    @Susanmugen Před 5 lety +34

    He lost 1000.
    200 rupee bag and 800 rupee change in exchange for worthless 1000 rupee note = 1000 lost.
    Some people are confused, saying he had to give the 1000 back to the neighbor, so therefore he lost both the 1000 he gave back to the neighbor and the 1000 in bag plus change he gave to the customer, but this doesn't factor in that the neighbor actually gave him 1000 in exchange for that counterfeit note to begin with. So the money he got from the neighbor and the money he then returned to the neighbor cancel out. There would be no profits or losses for anyone if the note was genuine. It's just a 1000 rupee loss because the shopkeeper ends up with a worthless 1000 rupee note.

    • @pandu2749
      @pandu2749 Před 5 lety

      Correct

    • @josefstalin3755
      @josefstalin3755 Před 5 lety

      I was thinking the same thing.
      (3 months late, I know)
      Also, this one got a heart, so I’m assuming that 1000 is correct.

    • @Wurschtbi3b
      @Wurschtbi3b Před 4 lety

      So,for example, instead of a 1.000 rupee Bill it was a 5.000, 10.000 or 100.000 rupee Bill (just for the sake of argument) no matter what Bill he gets, that would be is lose?

    • @gurmeetaashat1453
      @gurmeetaashat1453 Před 4 lety

      Wurschtbieb 1800rs loss

  • @SarathRoyal777
    @SarathRoyal777 Před 4 lety +1

    200 as a asset , 800 as change and 1000 as money for the fake note

  • @l.w.paradis2108
    @l.w.paradis2108 Před 2 lety +2

    Look at the last problem this way: forget the lady. You ask your friend to give you five $20 bills in exchange for a $100 bill. Your friend obliges, then finds out the $100 bill is counterfeit. You give him the five $20 bills back. Your loss is $100. You had what you thought was $100, and it turned out to be worthless. By the same logic: your loss is 1000 rupees, the friend's loss is zero, and the lady's gain is 1000 rupees in money and merchandise, assuming the bill originated with her. If not, then she presumably earned the money in some way, and her loss is zero as well. The counterfeiter gained 1000 rupees, whoever he may be.

  • @pappuprasad1986
    @pappuprasad1986 Před 5 lety +5

    The total loss is Rs.1800.
    Breakdown:
    1) Loss of the bag, price : Rs.200.
    2) Loss of money given to lady : Rs.800.
    3) Loss of money given to other shopkeeper for fake money : Rs.800.
    I think point 1 & 2 must be clear.
    Let's discussed point 3.
    It is told that "Shopkeeper keeps Rs. 200 for himself", which was real valued note.
    So if he gave Rs. 1000 note back to the boy from next shop, in net worth, he gave Rs. 800 to the boy

  • @wouterdobbelaere
    @wouterdobbelaere Před 3 lety +22

    He basically gave away the bag + 800 to the lady. So that makes 1000 loss. From the next shop he received 1000 and gave back 1000 eventually. So no net loss there.
    So the answer is 1000

    • @noodle_fc
      @noodle_fc Před 3 lety

      No, because the 800 he gave in change was never his. He exchanged a 1000-rupee note (which wasn't his and cost him nothing) for smaller notes. He kept 200 and the counterfeiter took the other 800.
      When the shop next door came to take back their money, the shopkeeper only has Rs. 200 to give. The other 800 is riding in the purse of the counterfeiter. The shopkeeper suffers the loss of Rs. 200 which he received as payment for the bag. The shop next door suffers a loss of Rs. 800, unless they can catch the crook.

    • @davidhitchen5369
      @davidhitchen5369 Před 3 lety +2

      @@noodle_fc But It says that the other shopkeeper took his money back. I think we are supposed to assume it came out of the till of the shopkeeper who took the phony bill.

    • @noodle_fc
      @noodle_fc Před 3 lety +2

      @@davidhitchen5369 If he had 800 already in his till why go next door to break the 1000? "His money"-800 of which the customer has carried away.
      I dunno, it seems to me if the answer is 1000 it's nothing but a math problem, and not a difficult one, either. Why call that a riddle when it's indistinguishable from any word problem in a 10-year-old's textbook?
      Have you heard the riddle about the bus that picked up four passengers at the first stop, then picked up another three while one got off at the second? It's a real brain-melter. :/

    • @michaelwarren2391
      @michaelwarren2391 Před 3 lety +1

      Except that he gave the lady Rs. 800 of that. (Edit) - I was wrong. Got fooled by the zero sum transaction with the neighboring shop.

    • @davidhitchen5369
      @davidhitchen5369 Před 3 lety +2

      @@noodle_fc Suppose he only had 1000's. I think you bring up a good point though. The question is somewhat ambiguous because it doesn't say how this is handled. I free very confident saying the net loss is $1,000. I'm not confident how it is disbursed among the victims. The net gain for the thief was $800 cash + $200 merchandise.

  • @ivomollov3073
    @ivomollov3073 Před 3 lety +9

    Answer to the last question:
    Let's disregard the interaction between the two shopkeepers because the boy gave 1000$ and later took them back so no difference in capital. Since we know the note the lady gives is fake, we can assume she gives 0$. On the other hand, the shopkeeper gives her 1000$ real money, 200 in the form of the bag and 800 as "change" to the note that he received from her. The equation looks like this:
    0 - 1000 = -1000

  • @bharatvishalsharma354
    @bharatvishalsharma354 Před 5 lety +6

    The money he took from other shop for change.. he returns that money back.. so that cancel each other.. so only loss in bag and 800 rupees..
    -200 for bag
    +1000 from another shop
    -800 return to lady
    -1000 return to another shop
    *So Ans is 1000 rupees loss*

    • @anerva8376
      @anerva8376 Před 4 lety

      dumbass it’s 1200, he already lost 200 on the profit of the bag, then another 1000 on the fake note

    • @bakchodgamer2882
      @bakchodgamer2882 Před 4 lety

      Actual loss is 800 i was solved this problem in class ans is 800 rs loss to the shop keeper

    • @Player_not_found
      @Player_not_found Před 4 lety

      @@bakchodgamer2882 If that's true you need a new teacher. He received 1000 from the other shop and gave 1000 back, so overall he lost both the 800 he gave the shopper and the bag, netting a total loss of 1000.

    • @RDSingh-xc1ln
      @RDSingh-xc1ln Před 4 lety +1

      कुल नुकसान = ?
      बैग की कीमत = -200
      औरत को दिए = -800
      पडोसी दुकानदार को दिए = -1000
      नकली नोट की कीमत = 0000
      कुल नुकसान = 2000

    • @ramki9731
      @ramki9731 Před 3 lety +1

      The loss is 2000 for the shopkeeper

  • @wayne3340
    @wayne3340 Před 4 lety +53

    He got 1000 from the shop owner, who demanded it back, so he paid him back 1000. He gave the Lady a 200 bag, and 800 change. He is out, $1000.

    • @wayne3340
      @wayne3340 Před 4 lety +1

      @@sirn. wrong Syed, it's 1000

    • @wayne3340
      @wayne3340 Před 4 lety +1

      @@sirn. don't call people names Syed, respect for all. Of course it is his bag, it's stated in the beginning of the video.

    • @sunilkumarg484
      @sunilkumarg484 Před 4 lety +5

      @@sirn.
      The answer is 1000
      Because,
      When shop keeper recieved a fake currency, then he has -1000 (since it's fake means it's loss for him) with him
      When he exchanged with next shop keeper now he has 1000(real bill) (and next Shop keeper now has lost -1000 ) , he will return 800 to customer then he has 200 with him, then next shop keeper came back and ask 1000 back so now he has 200-1000= -800 and -200 for selling a bag by taking fake bill and he got no profit at all
      So total loss is 1000

    • @debasismuduli5010
      @debasismuduli5010 Před 4 lety +12

      No, the answer will be 1200

    • @debajyotichanda4741
      @debajyotichanda4741 Před 4 lety +5

      Ans is 1000 INR.
      Reason:
      After the shopkeeper exchanged the fake 1000 money, he had 1000 real note, then he returned 800 to the lady. So, his earning was 1000-800=200 real note. After the boy next shop demanded 1000 real note for the fake one, the shopkeeper had to take the fake 1000 note back and give back 200 real note (his earning from selling the bag) + 800 real note from his own pocket. So, his total loss = 200(earning from the bag) + 800 = 1000

  • @KrishnaDas-je3bz
    @KrishnaDas-je3bz Před 5 lety +11

    Total loss for shopkeeper is 2000.
    How?
    Lady carried a 1000 fake note and purchased 200 bag + in return taken 800 amount, total she benefited of 1000.
    The other shopkeeper came and said its a fake note and return back same to shopkeeper and taken the original note. There is no loss for the other shopkeeper.
    The shopkeeper sell 200 bag + 800 returned the remaining amount and given 1000 rupees to another shopkeeper.
    If my guess is correct the overall loss to the shopkeeper was 2000.

    • @afzalkhan5312
      @afzalkhan5312 Před 5 lety +3

      Wrong. He loss only 1000 thousand.
      Because another shopkeeper just give him 1000 as change and take his money 1000. So involvement of that shopkeeper is zero. Another shopkeeper is no profit no loss condition. So shopkeeper total loss is 1000.

  • @timelapse4989
    @timelapse4989 Před 3 lety +17

    The shopkeeper tracks down the lady and took matters at his own hands and got the bag back with some blood stains plus the 800 with interest.

  • @gblargg
    @gblargg Před 3 lety +14

    3:17 For Q.4, just imagine rotating the tires every km. Clearly they'll all fail at basically the same time. So 20,000*5 tires divided by the four driven on = 25,000.

    • @Faizan-Shafaqat
      @Faizan-Shafaqat Před 7 měsíci

      but that is impossible because if all tires fails at one times the cars can not move on a single tyre. we have to replace first tyre on by one to all tiers within 20,000 km.

  • @ahmadaldulaie7604
    @ahmadaldulaie7604 Před 4 lety +23

    He lost 1000, Here's how:
    - He gave the lady a bag worth 200 (-200)
    His net money = -200
    - She gave him fake notes (+0)
    His net money = -200
    - He gave the shopkeeper the fake money (-0) and got 1000 (+1000)
    His net money = 800
    - He gave the lady 800 in cash (-800)
    His net money = 0
    - The shopkeeper demanded his 1000 back (-1000)
    His net money = -1000
    So, his net loss is 1000
    Another way to think about it:
    - He took 1000 from the shopkeeper and gave it back:
    net gain/loss from shopkeeper = 1000 - 1000 = 0
    - He gave the lady 200 as a bag, and 800 in cash.
    net gain/loss from the lady = -200 - 800 = -1000
    So his net gain/loss = -0 (from shopkeeper) - 1000 (from the lady) = -1000

    • @dannybenalcazar2625
      @dannybenalcazar2625 Před 4 lety

      i'm pretty sure is 1800, first -200 from the bag, then -800 from the change, then he is left with 200 but those 200 go towards the 1000 but he still needs 800 to give those 1000 back. so in retrospect -200, -800, -800 = -1800

    • @ahmadaldulaie7604
      @ahmadaldulaie7604 Před 4 lety

      @@dannybenalcazar2625 I already calculated the -800, along with with the bag (-200) it becomes -1000.
      You calculated the -800 twice.
      Yes, you gave him back 1000 and gave the lady 800 in cash so thats 1800. but don't forget that he gave you 1000 in cash. so -1000 + 1000 cancel out.
      and you are left with -800 and -200 from the bag

    • @rockerscrew6212
      @rockerscrew6212 Před 4 lety

      He gave the lady Rs200 bag and Rs800 return for a fake note i.e for free.It means he lost Rs1000 there.
      Now he has 200 but he has to give 1000 back to beside shopkeeper i.e he added his own 800 with 200 he has.
      Totally 1800.
      I think so....if it was wrong plz correct me guys

    • @ahmadaldulaie7604
      @ahmadaldulaie7604 Před 4 lety

      @@rockerscrew6212 You didn't take into account that he gained 1000 from the shopkeeper, when he gave him fake notes (he lost 0).
      in your comment, you said "i.e he added his own 800..." so you answered yourself here. he only added his "own" 800 (he lost only 800 in cash). and you said "with 200 he has". well how did he magically get that 200?
      Because he gained 1000 from the shopkeeper, and lost 800 to the lady, thats why he has 200. the 800 was deducted from the shopkeeper money, not from his own.
      he only lost 800 from his own cash + lost 200 as a bag.
      therefore, he lost 1000 in total

    • @rockerscrew6212
      @rockerscrew6212 Před 4 lety

      Aaaaaaaaa....s..I got it...tq bro...

  • @ajaykharb1284
    @ajaykharb1284 Před 3 lety +4

    Here we apply law of conservation of money
    The another shopkeeper remain neutral as he had taken his money back. Lady get profit of 1000rs (200rs bag, 800rs returns). So loss of shopkeeper will be 1000rs equal to gain of lady

    • @johnmcnair8854
      @johnmcnair8854 Před 3 lety

      No because the lady walked away with 200+800 then he had to give next door back his 1000 so he lost 2000

    • @joepiazza3756
      @joepiazza3756 Před 2 lety

      @@johnmcnair8854 John, the amount he lost is that 1000 he had to give back and only that. If that is hard to understand then assume the guy next door never noticed it was fake. In that case the guy who sold the bag does his normal transaction and at this time he breaks even since he sold the $200 bag at cost and has real $200 from the shop next door. The lady is +$1000 from the $200 bag plus $800 in real money she got in change. The shop next door is -$1000 because they gave the seller $1000 in real money for a fake. So seller is at $0 and Next door at -$1000 (And lady at +$1000). When the seller gives the shop $1000 for the counterfeit it's $1000 loss total, not $2000.

  • @yashomani
    @yashomani Před 11 měsíci +1

    Chain riddle was the best

  • @saisushma3199
    @saisushma3199 Před 4 lety +1

    Option c. 1000 is the right answer
    Cuz she gave him 1000 rupees note for the product worth 200 rupees and he returns 800 rupees to her ,so the product amount and the amount which he returned is 200+800=1000...

  • @ganesh55507
    @ganesh55507 Před 5 lety +7

    Lady gain 1000 rs profit, indirectly shop keeper loss 1000 rs

  • @sainitin9625
    @sainitin9625 Před 5 lety +6

    Total loss would be ₹2000, shopkeeper has to return ₹1000 for his neighbour because the note which he gave was a fake note and the lady ran off with ₹200 worth bag and ₹800 change.So totally it's₹2000.

    • @pryo2460
      @pryo2460 Před 3 lety +1

      It's 1800 coz he kept 200 with him

    • @maheshnaidulalam4703
      @maheshnaidulalam4703 Před 3 lety

      1000 is not given to boy for free that get only this 1000back ....so only 1000with a women is loss for shopkeeper

  • @laurancetantony6265
    @laurancetantony6265 Před 4 lety +1

    Simple
    Forget the fake bill and reframe the case as this.
    A 'lady' came in and took off with a bag worth Rs 200 and Rs 800 from the shelf.
    The spellbound keeper (shop) failed to react. Then what is his loss ?
    In the case of tyres, though each tyre runs 20000km, as four tyres are working together the effective efficiency of four tyres together is 20000km That means effective efficiency of a tyre is 5000km only. So five tyres gives an efficiency of 5 times 5000 means 25000

    • @LOGICALLYYOURS
      @LOGICALLYYOURS  Před 4 lety

      Your reasoning for Fake note is perfect.
      However, for the car tyre problem, the approach of replacing tyres would be needed as a proof..... (of course, if the same is asked in an aptitude test, where you just need to tick an option, then your explanation is perfect.)

    • @laurancetantony6265
      @laurancetantony6265 Před 4 lety +1

      @@LOGICALLYYOURS than q

  • @jaygreen7494
    @jaygreen7494 Před 4 lety +3

    For those saying 2000 or 1800. If your solution is correct, you are saying he would have lost money even if the note was real. Does this make sense?

  • @notski777notski3
    @notski777notski3 Před 4 lety +7

    At firts I tought it was 1800, then I remembered tht I had forgot the loss of 200 rs worth bag so I thought 2000. Then I realized that 1000 counterfeit was basically like a loan so it doesn't count. So the answer is -800 + -200 worth bag = 1000

    • @educational2164
      @educational2164 Před 4 lety

      The loan was not returnable so that would be considered as loss

    • @notski777notski3
      @notski777notski3 Před 4 lety

      @@educational2164 And probably is in the billionaires club, but in concrete fact after the whole incident, he was down 1000 and no more.

  • @lankapatiravan89
    @lankapatiravan89 Před 4 lety +8

    I supposed the answer to be 4...! Reason is if I overlap the first dice on second dice like a page of book the final image formed will be like the third dice.. similarly if overlap the 4th and 5th dice final image should be a 4 on dice...!

    • @smfinch99
      @smfinch99 Před 4 lety

      I had the same thinking

    • @satyamraj4378
      @satyamraj4378 Před 4 lety

      & I supposed it to be 6..
      3 dots(odd) , 3 dots(odd) , 5 dots (3+2)(odd) , then 4 dots (even) , 4 dots (even), 4+2= 6 dots (even)

  • @ankitbisht4123
    @ankitbisht4123 Před 4 lety +6

    The answer is 1000/- because a person given amt to other shopkeeper 1000/- , & his 200/- cost of bag was recovered by getting 200/- back.

  • @stevewilliams4239
    @stevewilliams4239 Před 3 lety +30

    Real question is, how is the shopkeeper in business if he's not going to make a profit from selling a bag? 😂

  • @Anonymous-un8nl
    @Anonymous-un8nl Před 5 lety +5

    It is very simple.{Ans: 1000}
    There are three people: shopkeeper 1(s1) shopkeeper 2(s2) and the woman.
    If we come to the later part then, first s1 takes 1000 from s2 for the fake note and makes a profit of 1000. After that s2 takes his money back . Therefore total profit/loss of s1 till this is 0.
    Now since only two people remains , therefore the profit of one will be the loss for another .
    As we know that s1 faces a loss, therefore his loss = woman's profit.
    WOMAN'S PROFIT=200(bag)+800(the money that s1 returned)=1000

  • @HeroicJay
    @HeroicJay Před 5 lety +6

    A sale isn't a loss, no matter how the change is divvied out. If the 1000 note were real, there would have been no loss at all. So the answer is 1000, no more.
    "But the bag--" came out of the 1000.
    "But the 800 change--" also came out of the 1000.
    "But when the neighboring shop--" that was the 1000 he lost!
    If it's not intuitive to you, focus not on what the shopkeeper did and didn't give away; focus instead on what the counterfeiter got out of it: a bag worth 200, and 800 in legitimate change. What's 200 + 800? Why, 1000!
    What did the neighboring shop gain or lose? Ultimately, nothing. They traded 1000 for 1000, realized the new 1000 was fake, and took 1000 back. They wound up with exactly what they started with.
    So the counterfeiter gained 1000. The neighboring shop broke even. If the shopkeeper lost more than 1000, where did the rest of it go? The answer is nowhere: he lost 1000 even.

  • @oaktree1290
    @oaktree1290 Před 4 lety +1

    Ok shopkeeper sold bag for 200. Gets 1,000. Gave 800 in change. Up 200 minus 200 he paid for bag. Now at zero. Then gives 1000 back for fake money. 1,000 is his loss.

  • @sehwagmass5245
    @sehwagmass5245 Před 5 lety +10

    Simple... Loss to the shopkeeper = Profit to that Lady
    She took 200 worth goods & also she received 800 rs change... So the Loss to shopkeeper is Rs. 1,000

    • @kostream2577
      @kostream2577 Před 5 lety

      Plus another person take 1000 Rs that also lose

    • @eashanjindal
      @eashanjindal Před 5 lety +1

      No he also earned 200₹ from the lady

    • @gurmeetaashat1453
      @gurmeetaashat1453 Před 4 lety

      Eashan Jindal that's why shopkeeper lost 1800rs only

    • @bigSwigsofGuinness
      @bigSwigsofGuinness Před 4 lety

      Eashan Jindal no, he can’t earn 200 if the note was fake. The lady gave him zero, he gave the shop keeper zero, the shop keeper gave him 1000. He gave 800 to Lady 200 to self. But hasn’t cost him anything at this stage as he got the 1000 for free. He gave the neighbor a 1000. So he’s 1000 down, plus cost of bag... 1200

    • @KemosabeTBC
      @KemosabeTBC Před 2 lety

      @@bigSwigsofGuinness He did earn 200 from the bag because that was real money from the other shopkeeper. He gave a bag worth 200 to the lady plus 800 from the other shopkeeper. He now has to give back the 200 he earned (effectively losing the bag) plus 800 from his own pocket. Total loss of 1000

  • @bibekaryal8390
    @bibekaryal8390 Před 3 lety +7

    A loss of Rs. 1000 !!
    Let's condense the equation this way -
    The one who's neutral, the one who's on profit and the one who's on loss
    1. The other shopkeeper gave the first shopkeeper 1000, then took back his 1000. So he's neutral.
    2. The lady gave a fake note (Rs. 0) and took away Rs. 1000 (200bag + 1000). She got on profit of Rs. 1000.
    3. The shopkeeper got no money from the lady, and gave goods worth Rs. 1000. A loss of Rs. 1000.
    To the other shopkeeper, he gave the money which he asked for earlier. Nothing tough

  • @jajwarehouse1
    @jajwarehouse1 Před 3 lety +17

    For question 1, A was a possible answer, but not "the correct answer" as D would be a more logical answer.

    • @somewhatblankpaper1423
      @somewhatblankpaper1423 Před 2 lety +2

      I wouldn't call it one is more logical than another, but rather, one "seems more obvious" to us than others. That being said, we haven't strictly proven that A, B or C are invalid predictions. While I chose D since I justify it by observing that 3 + 3 + 5 = 11, 3 + 5 + 4 = 12, 5 + 4 + 4 =13, so we'd have 4 + 4 + 6 = 14 to complete the pattern. That's one possible pattern, but there can be other patterns that can lead to D too. As long as if an answer is justified, and it can be generalized beyond what is observed, it is acceptable imo. There doesn't seem to be a unique answer to this question anyways; else, prove that there is.

    • @somewhatblankpaper1423
      @somewhatblankpaper1423 Před 2 lety +1

      To top it off, to say that the answer is unique because you aren't able to figure out other patterns is not a valid reasoning by the following premise: "If you are not able to figure out something, it is not a factor that determines whether something exists or not.".

    • @judahlowe1636
      @judahlowe1636 Před 2 lety

      @@somewhatblankpaper1423 yeah except he’s right. It’s not just the more logical or more sensible. It actually has a pattern. And the pattern actually makes WAY more sense than any of the other options. Now, you’re probably one of those people that went to collage thinking you’re actually smart now (which is falsified information for your edification) but you’re just plain wrong here. You see, I don’t care if you were homeschooled, or went to Yale… you’re wrong and everybody knows it.😂😂

    • @somewhatblankpaper1423
      @somewhatblankpaper1423 Před 2 lety

      @@judahlowe1636 ??? You haven't really disproven any of my statement logically and you just asserted that you are right. Sure buddy. I guess it's better to assume ignorance when one doesn't know what to say.

    • @somewhatblankpaper1423
      @somewhatblankpaper1423 Před 2 lety

      "makes more sense" is literally a subjective statement in itself. Suppose a person who has never perceived a lighter. Hence, that person doesn't really know it works, what it is prior to seeing it. If one gives that person a lighter, that person would literally be clueless of what that object is and what it can be used for until he/she decides to investigate the object. On top of that, a lighter can be used for various purposes and not just to light fire, just as those "patterns" can go one way or another way. I don't know why does it necessarily have to imply that sequence. Maybe if one doesn't try to explore other possible patterns, one thinks that this is the only one that makes sense. But anyways, since u haven't provided any scientific evidence as to why the pattern "makes more sense", your opinion is discarded until you find any.

  • @vishnubhagavath6494
    @vishnubhagavath6494 Před 5 lety +1

    2000rs loss,
    Because 1000rs is given to the boy from next shop.
    800rs is given to the lady as balance.
    And a bag cost of 200rs (as in question says the shopkeeper sells with zero profit)
    Totally 2000rs loss.

  • @kajolshah6982
    @kajolshah6982 Před 5 lety +6

    Loss of 2000
    200 bag
    800 given to lady
    1000 to shopkeeper

    • @viralvideos3764
      @viralvideos3764 Před 5 lety +1

      No the first thousand wasn't his money . Loss is 1000

    • @dannyhendron2903
      @dannyhendron2903 Před 5 lety

      kajol shah but of the thousand he gave to the shopkeeper, he'd already pocketed two hundred - so he lost eighteen hundred

  • @aryanaheriit-kgp5200
    @aryanaheriit-kgp5200 Před 5 lety +6

    Well Actually the Answer to the 1st question Can even be "B" by a different approach...:___
    If pattern of 2 is rotated clockwise by 90° and merged in 1,the the resultant Pattern will be 3..in this manner if we perform The same with 4 and 5 then the Resultant Will the answer b..

    • @stephenhousman6975
      @stephenhousman6975 Před 4 lety

      Based on that logic, wouldn't the orientation between 1 and 2 be different? I was thinking of a different rotation pattern and got D then realized that it couldn't be that because the 3 dots would be in a different orientation.

    • @johnmcmunn5698
      @johnmcmunn5698 Před 4 lety

      The most simplistic answer to the dice problem is 6. 5 is 2 more than the pair of 3s so 2 more than the pair of 4s would be 6 (D).

  • @stefdutoit8267
    @stefdutoit8267 Před 4 lety +6

    Loss of a 1000 rupees. After the initial transaction there was no movement in his asset level since he did not sell it for a profit. But then he had to repay a 1000 rupees to the neighbour.
    But if you continue the story, he then hired an assassin for 500 rupees to track down the woman and reclaim the initial 1000 rupees as well as the handbag so all in all he would have lost 300 rupees.
    +1000 - 200 - 800 - 1000 - 500 + 1000 + 200 = -300

    • @Ugarimpty
      @Ugarimpty Před 4 lety

      T'as oublié que c'est le jour où il paye son loyer et qu'il dois racheter du sopalin.

    • @MohdAadilMalik-sj5kd
      @MohdAadilMalik-sj5kd Před 4 lety

      Assassin for 500 rs only !!!!!! Oh god it's so cheap gimme the contact no of him 😎

  • @fizzy9226
    @fizzy9226 Před 3 lety +5

    Questions like #1 are just nonsense. There are several different patterns to be detected there, and one is arbitrarily chosen to be "the correct one".

  • @lyrsoothing9325
    @lyrsoothing9325 Před 3 lety +5

    He loses 800 to the lady and 1000 to the nhb shopkeeper + the bag = 2000rs

    • @Araqius
      @Araqius Před 3 lety +1

      The correct answer is 1000.
      The lady gains 1000.
      The next shop gains/loses nothing.
      The shopkeeper can only lose 1000.

    • @Araqius
      @Araqius Před 3 lety +1

      imgur.com/a/gvLqnUx
      At the start, the shopkeeper has a bag worth 200.
      At the end, he has 200 and a debt of 1000.

    • @KemosabeTBC
      @KemosabeTBC Před 2 lety

      Nope. He loses only 200 to the lady (the bag), the other 800 was money from the 2nd shopkeeper not his. Then he loses another 800 to the other shopkeeper, he gives him back the 200 he had kept from the sale, and since that is not enough he also has to give 800 of his own money.

  • @andril0019
    @andril0019 Před 5 lety +5

    1st question my answer is right with the solution

  • @tharindus.wijesinghe2109
    @tharindus.wijesinghe2109 Před 5 lety +4

    If that 1000 rs is not a fake, nothing any losses, if it is fake that 1000 only loss

  • @Appathas
    @Appathas Před 4 lety +6

    last one:
    shopkeeper sells an item worth 200. (-200)
    shopkeeper receives fake 1000 bill (+0)
    shopkeeper goes to get change for fake bill (+1000)
    shopkeeper gives woman her change (-800)
    neighboring shopkeeper comes back for full value of counterfeit bill (-1000)
    so, totaling it all up, (-200) + (0) + (1000) + (-800) + (-1000) = (-1000)
    at least, that's how i think it works...

  • @goguhu
    @goguhu Před 3 lety +3

    First is ‘4’ because adding the pips on the first two with one rotated 90 degree will be a ‘5’, but since ‘4’ are symmetric it will remain a ‘4’.

    • @jdrenwick57
      @jdrenwick57 Před 3 lety

      But by that logic rotating the second and third dice then merging would give you 5 again so dice 4 should have been 5, and so would the 5th dice and so one for infinite.

  • @zebakhan5936
    @zebakhan5936 Před 5 lety +7

    2000 is the correct answer

    • @pandu2749
      @pandu2749 Před 5 lety

      Wrong

    • @aenzardion
      @aenzardion Před 4 lety

      -200 bag
      +1000 from boy
      -800 change
      -1000 back to boy
      -200+1000-800-1000=-1000
      1000 is the loss

    • @satwik_dash
      @satwik_dash Před 3 lety

      @@aenzardion The +1000 that u wrote is the fake note

  • @Torq123
    @Torq123 Před 5 lety +9

    Rs 1000 is the correct answer. Consider the note was real then his profit is Rs 0. As the 1000 rupees note is fake, so he needs to compensate the this from his pocket.. So the compensation is Rs 1000 which interprets that the total loss is Rs 1000...

    • @muralidharanm2005
      @muralidharanm2005 Před 5 lety

      What about his bag.. so +200

    • @KemosabeTBC
      @KemosabeTBC Před 2 lety

      @@muralidharanm2005 He got payed with real money for the bag, he has to give back that money (200) plus 800 from his own money. So he loses the bag and 800 = 1000

  • @chethann5470
    @chethann5470 Před 4 lety +2

    ANSWER is 1000 how means let us consider
    Women stole 1000 from shopkeeper(800 +200 bag)
    Shopkeeper left with -1000
    Again shopkeeper borrowed 1000 from neighbour and returned it .
    So he is still left with that same -1000 only so answer is 1000.

  • @educational2164
    @educational2164 Před 4 lety +1

    Answer is ₹2000:
    (Bag worth ₹200)+(Shopkeeper need to give ₹1000 to next shop)+(₹800 that shopkeeper gave to the lady)

    • @mikekong5904
      @mikekong5904 Před 3 lety

      800 given to lady are from the other shop.

  • @marvinkitfox3386
    @marvinkitfox3386 Před 5 lety +28

    4:54 "The boy from the shop comes , saying its a fake note"
    Report the boy to the police, he obviously pocketed the real one, and substituted one of his own fakes!
    It the note was fake, then he would have seen it during the exchange. As would the bag shopkeeper, they always keep a very good eye out for fake notes.

  • @ishanparikh
    @ishanparikh Před 5 lety +4

    1200 would be the right answer...
    200 goods loss. Plus need to give 1000 to next shopkeeper...that's it....if you think it by ignoring the next shopkeeper it will be more easier.

    • @nambi9249
      @nambi9249 Před 5 lety

      Even i was thinking the same thing bro

  • @ashishpradhan173
    @ashishpradhan173 Před 5 lety +7

    1000rps...bag worth 200+800 which he has to give to the next shop keeper

    • @amazingfactsindia1740
      @amazingfactsindia1740 Před 4 lety

      The answer is, loss of 800.. actually the the shopkeper kept 200 rupees and when the other shopkepeer came he gavy fair note of 1000 so....logically.
      1000-200= 800👍👍

  • @PR-fk5yb
    @PR-fk5yb Před 4 lety +2

    The dice test is a lateral thinking test. As with all lateral thinking tests one can solve using other ways of thinking. I say "C" is also a correct answer. Sequence TTFFF... (three three five four four...) look on the QWERTY keyboard... TT is twice the fifth on 1st row F three times the fourth on second row... C the third on third row! ... sequence would need to be CCCC... lateral thinking needs imagination... in a way many possible answer... and yes the arithmetic answer 6 is also correct...

  • @kavitasingh2312
    @kavitasingh2312 Před 5 lety +6

    loss is 1000rs as he gave the the lady 800rs+200rs bag
    since 800rs was of the boy from another shop and he has to return that 800rs to the boy and he has the 200rs,so the loss for him is only 800rs
    but he also lost a bag of 200rs therefore total loss is 800+200
    which is 1000rs

  • @jesseliverless9811
    @jesseliverless9811 Před 3 lety +8

    Last puzzle: In a normal situation, the shopkeeper would have 1 less bag, and 200$(or R) in profit. But here, he still has 1 less bag, has lost 800$ for the money he gave back to the lady, and didn't get the 200$ profit. So overall a 1000$ loss.

  • @b-rod3333
    @b-rod3333 Před 4 lety +1

    Run through the transactions one at a time and you get a 1000 loss.
    1. Shop keep gains 1000 from the lady and gives her 200. Now he’s +800
    2. Shop keeper gives 1000 to the other store and gets 1000 back so he is still +800
    3. He gives 800 back to the lady putting back to 0.
    4. Other shop keeper comes and takes the 1000 back making him -1000
    What makes this tricky is more than one transaction is being done at once making it easy to double count money. Scammers actually use this principle to trick shop keepers into giving them more money for their change.

    • @johnmcnair8854
      @johnmcnair8854 Před 3 lety

      No he gives the lady 200 bag plus 800 = 1000 then he has to give next door back 1000 so in total it's 2000. I know it's tricky but that's why it's called a brain teaser

    • @b-rod3333
      @b-rod3333 Před 3 lety

      @@johnmcnair8854 but the other shop keep previously gave him $1000. You haven’t taken that into consideration. Read my comment again as I explain exactly what money moves when.
      Another way to look at it is considered the total money he receives and how much he gives always.
      Received:
      1. $0 from the lady since the note was fake
      2. $1000 from the other shop keeper
      Total: $1000
      Gives away:
      1. $200 bag to the lady
      2. $800 change to the lady
      3. $1000 to the other shop keeper. This includes the fake bill worth $0 and the real $1000 he has to pay back
      Total: $2000
      Yes he gives away $2000 but the question asked for his total loss. That’s what he received minus what he gave away. $1000 - $2000 = -$1000 so his total loss is $1000.

  • @FJT1978
    @FJT1978 Před 4 lety +28

    The answer to the last one is R1000. He lost no money in the change swap with the neighbor’s shop.
    He lost R200 goods and R800 cash to the lady.
    This is perfectly played out if you imagine the shop keeper started with R1000 cash in the drawer and R1000 goods. By the end the shopkeeper has $800 goods and R200 cash. Leaving him less by R1000 which is his total loss. (Which should be obvious since that’s the value of the counterfeit bill which the shopkeeper suffered the loss of )

    • @koitsgaming2769
      @koitsgaming2769 Před 4 lety +2

      Its 1000, he starts with 200 and ends with a debt of 800, the difference is 1000

    • @kuls43
      @kuls43 Před 4 lety +3

      It's not a math question, it's a logical question.
      Transaction would have been fair only unfair was the 1000 rupee note. And shopkeeper had to keep that note in the end. Therefore total loss of shop keeper will be 1000.

    • @hina_rauf
      @hina_rauf Před 4 lety +1

      What about the money the boy from next shop takes ?? He takes his 1000 RS back.

    • @hina_rauf
      @hina_rauf Před 4 lety +1

      Imagine shopkeeper starts with 1000 RS and 200 worth bag. He takes fake note and come back with real 1000 RS change gives 800 to lady and 200 worth of bag.So he loses 1000 here but he also gets to keep 200Rs change so his loss is of 800rs uptil now. But when the boy from next shop takes his 1000 RS back. So the total loss is 1800.Correct answer is E.1800

    • @Araqius
      @Araqius Před 4 lety +1

      @@hina_rauf
      The correct answer is 1000.

  • @jenarajalaxmi640
    @jenarajalaxmi640 Před 5 lety +9

    800 of own and 200 on bag

  • @abhidesai3599
    @abhidesai3599 Před 5 lety +5

    Well, I think the correct answer is he lost 1000.
    Explanation:-
    As mentioned in question, he gave the bags for zero profit. So he was even. 1000 fake note was given by the lady to him, he took the same note nd gave it to the another shopkeeper. Got the change he took his share( ₹200) nd returned the remaining ₹800 to the lady. At ths point he was at zero profit zero loss. Next day he said the other shopkeeper ₹1000. Now he gave that money from his own pocket. So the total lost he made was ₹1000.

    • @mdraquib4081
      @mdraquib4081 Před 5 lety

      Right bro👌

    • @EricSchwartz02
      @EricSchwartz02 Před 4 lety

      yatish kumar That is incorrect. “At that point he is having an useless 1000 rupee note...” this is where most people get confused (I did as well until I tracked it on paper). At this point HE has a 200 rupee note (zero profit, zero loss). It is the OTHER shop keeper that has a useless 1000 rupee note (for a 1000 rupee loss). When the other shop keeper demands the money back he returned the 200 rupee he had plus an additional 800 rupee from his own pocket. This is a loss of 800 rupee in cash plus the 200 rupee of bags that he started with, for a total of 1000 rupee.

  • @garryhahn7577
    @garryhahn7577 Před 4 lety +2

    In money he is out 1800. If you include the goods it is 2000. He gives the change and the product to the lady, that is 1000. He now has to give the 1000 back to the shopkeeper next door

  • @shamalvaidya1196
    @shamalvaidya1196 Před 4 lety +15

    An analogy of the principle of conservation can be used to solve the last question. The buyer came with a fake note, so it can be considered as 0 rupees, and she left with a bag as well as 800 rupees. So she gained 1000 rupees worth in total. The second shopkeeper gave 1000 rupees and received 1000 rupees at the end. So he can be considered as the neutral observer. So the gain of the buyer must be equal to the loss of tge shopkeeper.
    Loss= 1000

    • @harshshah1100
      @harshshah1100 Před 4 lety +4

      The lady got 1000 benifit (200 RS bag and change of 800) it means shopkeeper gave 1000 rs to lady and he have to give 1000 Rs to the next shop against the fake 1000Rs not, so Shopkeeper actual loss is 2000 Rs

    • @9adam4
      @9adam4 Před 4 lety +3

      You're double-counting the money. The original 200 and 800 bills didn't come from the shopkeeper, so he doesn't lose them twice.

    • @lawerenceburch6650
      @lawerenceburch6650 Před 4 lety +1

      Shopkeeper bought the bag for -200, exchanged 1000 for +200 and 800 change so net 0 profit. Reimburses other shopkeeper for -1000 loss, and so -200 cost of bag plus -800 the change given, is all the shopkeeper lost

    • @debasismuduli5010
      @debasismuduli5010 Před 4 lety

      The shopkeeper will have a total loss of 1200
      200+800 to pay the another shopkeeper
      And the bag worth 200

    • @KemosabeTBC
      @KemosabeTBC Před 2 lety +1

      @@debasismuduli5010 He only lost 1000, he did not pay the other shopkeeper with his money

  • @sanaraja8099
    @sanaraja8099 Před 5 lety +4

    Now as for my perspective first of all the shopkeeper had made no profit from the bag he sold to the lady instead he took the fake note of 1000 rupees and got exchanged
    From the nearby shop where the shop man gave the shopkeeper 1000 rupees exchanged from his own money in small amounts
    Later the former sold the bag to the lady for 200 and gave her away 800 rupees thus he got no profit at all till this point and also no loss also but when the shop man came and asked for his 1000 rupee on account of the fake note thereby the bag shopkeeper having made no profit at all sadly had to pay 1000 rupees from his own pocket to the shop man
    Thus he incurred a total loss of 1000 rupees for himself
    Please like and comment about my explanational theory ☺☺

    • @gouravchandel8107
      @gouravchandel8107 Před 5 lety

      Brilliant ...👍

    • @a7f229
      @a7f229 Před 5 lety

      lady came with fake 1000 and got profit of worth1000 (Rs 800 and some shopping bag worth 200) shopkeeper brought change to1000Rs from another shopkeeper and later had to pay him from his pocket his 1000Rs that means he actually got a loss of -1800 (because he keeps real 200Rs of change and give the lady 800 i.e -800 and had to pay another shopkeeper 1000 i.e -1800 total.
      correct me if I'm wrong please.

    • @RoderickEtheria
      @RoderickEtheria Před 5 lety +1

      @@a7f229 You are wrong. The fake 1000 can never account for more than a 1000 loss. The loss moved to the second shop when the first merchant exchanged it for a real 1000. When the second shop came to collect, it moved the loss back onto the first shop.

    • @deshbhaktdeshwasi2975
      @deshbhaktdeshwasi2975 Před 3 lety

      @@a7f229 yes. U r right. According to me shop keeper incurred loss of Rs. 1800.
      This can be explained in another way.
      (1) lady took away from shop keeper : ( forget fake note for a moment) : Rs. 800 cash real notes and a bag worth Rs. 200 ( remember that Rs. 200 notes are still with shopkeeper.
      (2) now shop keeper has to repay Rs. 1000 in lieu of fake note. He pays that Rs. 200 which he got as selling price of bag + 800 from his pocket to nearby shopkeeper.
      Now what original shop keeper loses ?
      Rs. 200 bag price
      Rs. 800 paid to lady real
      .notes
      Rs. 800 paid to another
      Shopkeeper
      in lieu of fake
      note. Here, Rs.
      800 , bcoz he
      already had Rs.
      200 in his cash :
      Cost of bag sold.
      ___________
      Rs. 1800 Total loss.

    • @KemosabeTBC
      @KemosabeTBC Před 2 lety

      @@deshbhaktdeshwasi2975 Total loss is 1000 not 1800

  • @H13an5hu
    @H13an5hu Před 5 lety +10

    1. First , shoperkeeper goes to his next shopkeeper.(still think no lose).
    2. He sell bag . ( Still think no profit / lose ).
    3. Next shopkeeper came and get his original 1000 rupees (now lose 1000).
    4. Coz he gives lady 1800 ruppee ( lose 1000+800= 1800).
    5. He also gives to lady bag worth 200. ( Lose 1800 + 200 = 2000)
    So
    " lose = 2000"

  • @shahjamilohi8059
    @shahjamilohi8059 Před 4 lety +3

    He lost 1800
    As the note was fake he gave the lady extra 800 from his pocket
    Again the other shopkeeper took 1000 from him
    The only thing he got was that 200 which is actually the price of the bag so this is not any of his profit or loss
    Therefore ultimately he lost 1800

    • @hemant__lifts
      @hemant__lifts Před 3 lety +1

      Ans is 2000, he also gave the bag worth rs 200 to the lady, that is also his loss..

    • @johnmcnair8854
      @johnmcnair8854 Před 3 lety

      @@hemant__liftsyou're dead right. there's a lot of really bad shopkeepers commenting on here. I wouldnt want to be their bank manager

    • @KemosabeTBC
      @KemosabeTBC Před 2 lety

      @@johnmcnair8854 Yes, there are a lot of bad shopkeepers commenting that the answer is anywhere between 1200-2000. The answer is 1000

  • @Dtmdeman
    @Dtmdeman Před 4 lety +1

    Shop keeper loses 1800 in cash +200 in goods. 1k in cash back to shop with change +800 cash and 200 in goods to the shyster.

    • @Frie_Jemi
      @Frie_Jemi Před 3 lety

      The lady got a $200 bag from the shopkeeper, and she got 800 change from the other store the shopkeeper got 200 from the other store and a fake note the other store gave back the fake note and got a thousand back so the other store never lost anything and the shopkeeper only had to make up 800 to give back to the other store so he's out the $200 bag and the $800 he had to repay. That is all

  • @asithalder9920
    @asithalder9920 Před 5 lety +3

    Actually the lady gains 1000 rupees , and she gains it from the shopkeeper.So actually he losses 1000 rupees.actually it is followed by the conservation of total amount of rupee.

    • @vcvartak7111
      @vcvartak7111 Před 3 lety

      I think shopkeeper lost 2000rs. Since the money returned to lady is real(assumption) 800+200 lost a lady also 1000rs to return to shopkeeper

    • @joepiazza3756
      @joepiazza3756 Před 2 lety

      @@vcvartak7111 You are counting the same money twice.

  • @rajshrir3000
    @rajshrir3000 Před 4 lety +5

    Loss of ₹2000... 800 given to the lady, 1000 given to other shopkeeper and the purse worth 200

    • @Frie_Jemi
      @Frie_Jemi Před 3 lety

      Since the boy in the neighbor shop gave a thousand for the fake note and was giving back a thousand in repayment after. he lost nothing. The shopkeeper lost a $200 bag and $800 he gave to the neighboring shop boy the other 200 he gave the shop boy was from the thousand shop boy gave him and the other 800 he spent was given to the lady so he's out the 800 he gave the lady and the $200 bag

  • @sorsocksfake
    @sorsocksfake Před rokem +1

    Q5: $1000 . He had to pay $1k out of pocket and kept a $200 note, for $800. On top of that he has to replace the bag for $200, for $1000 total. Apologies for using $.
    Exception case: if the bag was unsellable anyway and he doesn't wish to replace it, then he only lost $800 and the personal use of that bag (which presumably he wouldn't want to use either).

  • @ArshadKhan-dt7km
    @ArshadKhan-dt7km Před 5 lety +1

    Let's think it this way folks, If I'm a shopkeeper then I gave a bag worth Rs200+Rs800 to that lady on top of that Rs1000 to the neighboring shopkeeper, that makes it Rs2000 for me. In return i got a 1000 rupee note which is fake, so no compensation at all. To me the total loss is Rs2000.

    • @kingavalon9998
      @kingavalon9998 Před 3 lety

      You forgot that he also receives Rs1000 from the neighboring shop keeper.
      The neighboring shop keeper is actually only there to confuse people. If you keep it separate it's clear. At first you give him a fake note and you get Rs1000, but in the second transaction the exact opposite happens, making the transactions with the neighboring shopkeeper irrelevant.

    • @ArshadKhan-dt7km
      @ArshadKhan-dt7km Před 3 lety

      @@kingavalon9998 aisa kuch na h, jake answer check kr google pe iska. Vohi h jo mai bol rha hu

  • @adityaramteke7741
    @adityaramteke7741 Před 5 lety +8

    2000
    He had to return all money taken from neighbor i.e. 1000
    Then he gave money to lady i.e. 800
    Then he also lost the money which he would have earned from bag i.e 200

    • @TheSkepticSkwerl
      @TheSkepticSkwerl Před 5 lety

      That would be 1800. But he didn't produce the original 800. So he lost 1000.

    • @adityaramteke7741
      @adityaramteke7741 Před 5 lety

      @@TheSkepticSkwerl I don't think so buddy !!!

    • @jeroen5928
      @jeroen5928 Před 4 lety

      But first he gained 1000 by exchanging the fake note for 1000 rs

    • @muhitislam1939
      @muhitislam1939 Před 4 lety +1

      Go to School to learn math

    • @neosildrake
      @neosildrake Před 4 lety +1

      He also lost the bag, that had a worth of 200. So 1200 would be correct, if the bag is seen as monetary asset. He had to either produce (resources, work hours) or buy that bag himself, after all.
      And if the womam is still in the shop, then his loss will be zero.

  • @unstableme02
    @unstableme02 Před rokem

    Shopkeeper puzzle best explanation ever= Imagine shopkeeper has nothing intially with him except bags($200) suppose bag is in container( for future easy calculation), now lady buys it so shopkeeper has nothing now she gives him $1000 and shopkeeper gives it to next shopkeeper and returns $200+$800 in which he put 200 in that container(now money is replaced with bag..equivalent) and gives 800 to lady. So at this time the only thing happened to shopkeeper is that bag is replaced with money in the container(no loss no again till now), suddenly next shopkeeper arrives and says that $1000 was fake i need real money . so Now, Shopkeeper has to give 1000. So actual loss here is 1000. Hope you understand it, if so leave a like!!

  • @sammy9453
    @sammy9453 Před 5 lety +2

    He had a bag of 200
    He gets change from next shop
    Keeps 200 and returns rest to the lady
    So he has his 200
    If shipkeeper is to return the fake money with real one then he is in 1000loss
    Else no loss

  • @saurabhmiskin6254
    @saurabhmiskin6254 Před 5 lety +5

    Total Loss=200(Bag Cost)+800(Return to lady)+1000(neighbor)=Rs.2000

    • @johandaun874
      @johandaun874 Před 5 lety +3

      But he got 1000 from the boy before. Its a closed loop. The lady got 1000 (200 + 800) the boy didnt get anything (1000-1000) so the keeper lost 1000 ((200+800)+(1000-1000))

  • @aakashvaidya1350
    @aakashvaidya1350 Před 5 lety +5

    2000
    200 bag given to lady
    800 change given to lady
    Kept 200 for him self
    And then te bot came
    Gave back the fake 1000 rs note
    Took 1000 back

  • @davidjames1684
    @davidjames1684 Před 3 lety +2

    1st puzzle... 3,3,5 4,4,6 (wait for a pair, then next die is +2)

  • @voiceofraisin241
    @voiceofraisin241 Před 4 lety +1

    The dice answer can also be four. Rotate one of the three dot dice and superimpose it on the next three dot dice which makes it a five dot. Now rotate a four dot dice and superimpose it on the second four dot dice , which gives you a four dot dice.

    • @anenome
      @anenome Před 2 lety

      that was my deduction as well

  • @SixEightLiftsWeight
    @SixEightLiftsWeight Před 5 lety +4

    The thief stole 200 in goods and 800 in real money received in change. The loss of any party in this situation has to be equal to the theft. The answer is 1000.

    • @DarekKoczwara
      @DarekKoczwara Před 4 lety

      How about the merchandise. It's gone, too.

    • @yuvarajgowda7940
      @yuvarajgowda7940 Před 3 lety

      But he gave shopkeeper 1000 soo it's 2000 total

    • @SixEightLiftsWeight
      @SixEightLiftsWeight Před 3 lety

      @@yuvarajgowda7940 No it’s not. The thief stole 200 in merchandise and 800 of the real money received from the boy next door. The boy comes back and collects the 200 of the real dollars left over and the shopkeeper needs to give 800 of his own money to the boy. The shop keep at the end of the day is -200 for merchandise and -800 for the portion of his money that he had to give the next door shop.

  • @Scrollitnext
    @Scrollitnext Před 5 lety +12

    1000
    Shopkeeper had no loss or profit from the lady
    But gave 1000 from his own pocket😊

    • @a7f229
      @a7f229 Před 5 lety

      1800 loss dude

    • @pandu2749
      @pandu2749 Před 5 lety +1

      Yes correct

    • @vibhavwariku4280
      @vibhavwariku4280 Před 5 lety +1

      Sarthak Aggrawal correct. 1000 rs loss, as even after selling the bag he got 200 rs in return with no profit made on that exchange meaning simple exchange of goods (i.e. selling of bag doesn’t count for any profit or loss). But he had to give 1000 rs from his own pocket. Lady got a profit of 800 rs, shopkeeper got a loss of 1000 rs n the remaining 200 balance is what is the cash the shopkeeper got for the bag

    • @shumbathkumar
      @shumbathkumar Před 4 lety +1

      @@a7f229 1000 is the correct

  • @kiranvootori8101
    @kiranvootori8101 Před 3 lety +2

    Solution for 4th question is easier in another method.
    Each tyre can travel 20,000 km. 5 tyres can travel 1,00,000 km. But car runs on 4 tyres at any given time. So, the answer is 1,00,000/4 = 25,000 km

  • @v.i.psuraj6912
    @v.i.psuraj6912 Před 5 lety +10

    Shop-1000
    Lady-800
    Bag-200
    Total-2000

  • @vianneydubois2927
    @vianneydubois2927 Před 3 lety +5

    Total loss = 1000: Transactions are:
    -200 Cost of buying the bag
    +0 (effectively what the lady gave him)
    -0 (effectively what he gave the other shopkeeper)
    +1000 (what the other shopkeeper gave him)
    -800 (what he gave the lady)
    -1000 (what he gave the other shopkeeper back)
    Total = -1000

  • @RahulKumar-re9er
    @RahulKumar-re9er Před 4 lety +13

    I would say 1000.
    800 rupees loss of having to pay the other shopkeeper.
    And 200 rupees loss on the bag!

    • @Anilkumar-ms4qy
      @Anilkumar-ms4qy Před 4 lety

      What do u think if i say 1200 he loses

    • @Anilkumar-ms4qy
      @Anilkumar-ms4qy Před 4 lety

      I mean 1000 from th shop man and 200 bag...

    • @harikrishna-cy1dt
      @harikrishna-cy1dt Před 4 lety

      K

    • @neteesan7053
      @neteesan7053 Před 4 lety +2

      Right. See frm the ladys perspective. She simply exchanged her fake 1000 rs for bag and 800 rs cash which is her profit. Her profit is equal to sales mans loss. Answer is 1000 rs

    • @petrkarlik6142
      @petrkarlik6142 Před 4 lety +2

      His loss is 2000. He gave the lady bag worth 200. He gave the lady back 800. The boy took 1000.

  • @ramkrish2603
    @ramkrish2603 Před 5 lety +1

    Solve this riddle by without get 1000 from neighbour shop.....
    Loss of money was only 1000 which fake note's cost

  • @akshitchoudhary8089
    @akshitchoudhary8089 Před 5 lety +2

    1000 is the correct answer. Loss to shopkeeper = profit to women

  • @JD-uh9od
    @JD-uh9od Před 5 lety +5

    800. Rupee plus the bag. That’s the loss

  • @dskushwaha
    @dskushwaha Před 5 lety +23

    Loss of just 1000.
    For the sake of simplicity let's assume the Shopkeeper initially had just 5 such bags and nothing else, not even any money. So the net worth of the Shopkeeper was 1000.
    The lady came and bought the bag, gave 1000 fake note, Shopkeeper exchanged it with real currency from another Shopkeeper, gave 800 to the lady and kept 200 with him. Now the Shopkeeper's net worth is still 200+4 bags =1000.
    Then the another Shopkeeper came and gave fake note of 1000 and took 200 and 4 bags worth 800 as security as the Shopkeeper didn't had any money left. Now the net worth of the Shopkeeper was 0.
    So the net worth of the Shopkeeper changed in the story from 1000 to 0. So the loss to Shopkeeper is 1000.
    Similarly the lady's net worth changed from 0 to 1000 (1 bag + 800).
    And the another Shopkeeper's net worth saw no change, he initially had 1000 and at the end he had 4 bags and 200.

  • @gminds7926
    @gminds7926 Před 3 lety +1

    Loss of bag(200)+the change given to the lady(800)......the debt taken by shopkeeper has to be paid........That will result to nill loss from that side.....
    In short,lady has taken the bag and 800 for free....that is the loss of the shopkeeper😉

  • @aum1040
    @aum1040 Před 6 měsíci

    It only takes one cut to make the loop. Just line up the four chains together, and cut the top loops of all four with a single cut.

  • @GameBoy-ft8xn
    @GameBoy-ft8xn Před 4 lety +3

    Last one answer is Rs. 1000
    Just imagine if shopkeeper has changes... He just give to the lady a 200rs worth of bag and 800rs change... Lady gains 1000.. now shopkeeper goes to another shop for getting changes... Now he realized that this note was fake..
    So 1000rs loss for shopkeeper

    • @jashanmahal2321
      @jashanmahal2321 Před 3 lety +2

      Nope he already gave 1000 to another shop kipper now another want his money back so he gets loss of 2000

    • @johnmcnair8854
      @johnmcnair8854 Před 3 lety

      @@jashanmahal2321 hah I was just about to post that and then I saw your post. I'd like to do business with a lot of the commenters on here, they'd never know why they were hella short at the end of the day every day.

    • @KemosabeTBC
      @KemosabeTBC Před 2 lety

      @@johnmcnair8854 He only loses 1000, He gets 1000 from the other shopkeeper, *which was not his money to begin with*. He gives away the other shopkeeper's money, not his, then he has to give it back.

  • @kalindamandade1234
    @kalindamandade1234 Před 4 lety +6

    Answer is F. 2000
    Explaination:-
    1. Bag worth 200 rupees
    2. 1000 back to the boy
    3. Gave 800 to lady
    = 200 + 1000 + 800 = 2000

    • @kuls43
      @kuls43 Před 4 lety +2

      Hahaha, great IQ level. Transaction would have been fair only unfair was the 1000 rupee note. And shopkeeper had to keep that note in the end. Therefore total loss of shop keeper will be 1000.

    • @kalindamandade1234
      @kalindamandade1234 Před 4 lety +1

      @@kuls43 yes but he gave 800 to the lady as a change but if the note is fake so this was loss of 800 as well as the loss of bag which is the loss of 200 and giving the 1000 rupee note back so the total loss will be 800 + 200 + 1000 = 2000

    • @kalindamandade1234
      @kalindamandade1234 Před 4 lety

      @@kuls43 so it's better to check your IQ level first

    • @kanishkmakkar6746
      @kanishkmakkar6746 Před 4 lety +1

      He exchanged 1000 rs from shopkeeper so at that time there was no loss no gain after that he returned 800 back to women not from his pocket and got 200
      After that he returned 1000 rs shopkeeper by adding 800 and at that time he lost 800 rs but the lady also purchased the purse so 800+200 =1000

    • @kalindamandade1234
      @kalindamandade1234 Před 4 lety

      @@kanishkmakkar6746 when the shopkeeper gave the change to the man, he returned 800rs back to the lady and kept 200 with him after that they got to know that the note is fake Now the 800 he gave is a loss and the 200 which he kept with him were of the bag she purchased and now he has to give 1000rs to another shopkeeper which is a loss of 1000rs (1000rs include the 200rs as it was not his ) and he lost a 200 rs bag. So, at last his loss was of 2000 rupees

  • @aeryagaserghwhe5yagd
    @aeryagaserghwhe5yagd Před 4 lety +3

    1200. The boy took the money back (1000) and he lost stock to the value of whatever he sold (200).

    • @amogh708
      @amogh708 Před 4 lety

      800 also that he gave to the lady as change

    • @amogh708
      @amogh708 Před 4 lety

      @Taiyabali Ujjainwala The note was fake that the lady gave, so he gave real 1000 to the guy who came to take his money back.

    • @Cyberlisk
      @Cyberlisk Před 4 lety

      @@amogh708 Yea after the guy gave him real 1000 in change before, he just takes it back.
      The balance with the other shopkeeper is +/- 0 in the end, and he gave the lady the articles and 800 in change for "free", so it's 1000 loss total.

  • @SapnaSharma-xx9gz
    @SapnaSharma-xx9gz Před 4 lety +2

    The shopkeeper loses Rs. 1000 to the lady (Rs. 800 in cash + Rs. 200 for the bag).. The mention of another shopkeeper is just to confuse...

  • @shankarjeje
    @shankarjeje Před 5 lety +8

    Hey Ammar, plz complete all the puzzles with answer. We understand getting comnent is important and may be profitable for you but it seems unprofessional to do so and more over hurts the subdcribers. We are in confusion....

    • @devendraparmar8390
      @devendraparmar8390 Před 5 lety +1

      He is right ammar. We dont like those puzzles which r said to answer in comments

    • @LOGICALLYYOURS
      @LOGICALLYYOURS  Před 5 lety

      Hi Shankar and Devendra... I will post the solution tomorrow specifically for the last puzzle... I purposely kept it unsolved just for fun. Your feedback are always highly appreciated :)

    • @sibgathassan6281
      @sibgathassan6281 Před 5 lety

      1000 is correct answer