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Friday, July 03, 2015
123 comments:
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Smtcheeeww!!
ReplyDelete£10.
DeleteThis is because the question was 'how much ' ie in terms of money. So £50 was taken and £50 was returned which cancels out the first £50.
then £10 was a given out as change so that's d money he is missing.
But in terms of worth...he lost £100
Sorry.
DeleteI lost £10 in cash and lost a total of £50 in all not the £100 I originally stated
£50
DeleteI dont bother my big head over this kinda Logic Reasoning or is it Quantitative R
ReplyDeleteThe store keeper lost nothing,he/she doesn't own the store. My opinion.
Delete£100 . Mhhhhh nawahhhhh
ReplyDelete£60
ReplyDelete60pounds
ReplyDelete100 pounds.
ReplyDeleteOya na Intelligent beings take over
XOXO MYSTERY
a.k.a EDWIN CHINEDU AZUBUKO said..
ReplyDelete.
£60....
.
.
***CURRENTLY IN JUPITER***
50 quid bruh!
ReplyDelete50 pounds. lol
Delete£50 only.
ReplyDelete£50 POUNDS THAT WAS ORIGINALLY STOLEN.
ReplyDeleteBIBI
You only lost £50 only.
ReplyDeleteAt least i go school, the shop keeper lost $90 dollars.
ReplyDeletefoolish anonymous i am waiting for you to talk rubbish here.
high class dullard
DeleteAm not witch hunting you oh, but hahahahaha, OK that's OK.
DeleteSaying 50 or 40 monetary could have been better.
Try again
It is still £50
ReplyDeleteab
50£ noni.
ReplyDelete50 Pounds
ReplyDelete#100 kawai
ReplyDeleteIts too simple na
ReplyDeleteThe storekeeper has lost £60. £50 That was stolen and £10 that he gave as change.
ReplyDelete60...
ReplyDeleteHehehe!
DeleteLinda u be typical Igbo woman.
So u don add the change to the loss.
You better don't sack that person you employed at your shop. :)
DeleteBwahahaha!
DeleteDis my DD get bad mouth sha
Hahahahahahahahahahahaha....
DeleteDD, beht why?
The shopkeeper lost £10 with £40 worth of items.
ReplyDelete100 bucks.
ReplyDelete£100
ReplyDeleteAm so so confused, £50 I think again
ReplyDeleteYou've lost £50
ReplyDeleteLol.....£100
ReplyDelete£50 hope am right.
ReplyDelete£50
ReplyDeleteLol....£100
ReplyDelete50 dollar
ReplyDelete€100
ReplyDeleteLol.....£100
ReplyDeleteIt is £100 oh stella.
ReplyDeletehe lost £50
ReplyDeleteYou've only lost the £50 that was stolen.
ReplyDeleteYour comment will be visible after approval
60
ReplyDeleteIt £100
ReplyDelete£100
ReplyDeleteIsn't that 100 pounds loss?
ReplyDelete£100
ReplyDelete100 pounds
ReplyDelete£50
ReplyDeleteIt depends sha. If u are calculating d monetary value of d item he bought then u lost £60 but if its money alone then u lost £10. Abeg make una no laff me. I get headache.
ReplyDelete£100 if calculating d monetary value of d good bought
DeleteBut he paid for the item bought, just imagine if another customer came with the same amount.
DeleteThe only money missing is the stolen 50 bucks.
Ermmm, 10pounds?
ReplyDelete£100
ReplyDelete100 euro
ReplyDelete60
ReplyDelete£40..
ReplyDeleteYou've lost £100
ReplyDeleteyou've lost #60
ReplyDelete100 quid
ReplyDeleteOr is it £60?
ReplyDeleteSame £50
ReplyDeleteKrix via iPhone 6 gold
The person returned d £50 n u gave him goods of£40+£10 change=£50
ReplyDelete100 quid
ReplyDeleteYou lost £50
ReplyDeleteMeant £10
ReplyDelete£50 and item are mine = £90
ReplyDeleteI ended up with £40, he ended up with item and £10 = £50.
I lost the item and the £10 = £50
lost 50 euro.....
ReplyDeletelost 50 euro.....
ReplyDelete£50
ReplyDelete50 £
ReplyDeleteI'd say you lost £50 in total value
ReplyDeleteBecause....
the stolen £50 was brought back and exchanged for £40 worth of something and £10 change.
Money laundering tinz.
£100
ReplyDelete£60... He stole £50..made a purchase of £40. Was given £10 change. £50 stolen initially plus the £10 change.
ReplyDelete50€
ReplyDelete£50. He returned the £50, collected something worth £40 and change of £10. So £40+£10=£50.
ReplyDelete£100
ReplyDelete$50
ReplyDelete£50 nah or?
ReplyDelete£50
ReplyDelete50 pounds
ReplyDelete£100?
ReplyDeleteB like na £50...*whew*
DeleteThe man stole the money and
ReplyDeletegave it back to the shop owner in
order to purchase the product, so
this cancels each other. But the
shop owner gave him the bread
which costs and change.
So, this is the extra money which
he loses. £50
Wu tell u say na bread,
DeleteSee as u expose ur self...
I sure say na agege bread u dey refer to for ur subconscious, n u r a pretty damsel for dat matter.
50 EUR0........coz wht d person stole is 50. any other person can still come and buy goods worth 40 wt 50 euro. The 10 euro is a change not a lost
ReplyDeleteyou lost the money for those items the person purchased and extra 10 pounds
ReplyDelete100 pounds when the value of the good bought is calculated coupled with the initial pay on ground and the new amount given as change. Na so I see am
ReplyDelete90pounds. 50 frm the initial theft, 40 for the sale.
ReplyDelete60 euro
ReplyDeleteHe lost 50quid. 10quid in cash he handed back as change and 40quid worth of goods. The thief gained 10quid change and 40quid worth of goods.
ReplyDeletelost 100. 50 was stolen, came to collect 40 worth of goods, collected balance of 10. all amounted to 100. thank me later
ReplyDeleteOlodo, the thief handed d shopkeeper the initial £50 stolen.
DeleteAns is £50.
ReplyDeleteThe shopkeeper lost 10pounds only
ReplyDeleteThe shopkeeper lost only £10, because the £50 which the person stole was the shopkeeper's and then he gave the thief a £10 change out of the £50 after buying something worth £40 from him.
ReplyDeleteSo he lost £10 only..
The shopkeeper lost only £10, because the £50 which the person stole was the shopkeeper's and then he gave the thief a £10 change out of the £50 after buying something worth £40 from him.
ReplyDeleteSo he lost £10 only..
£50 (original money stolen) + £10 (change) + £40 (worth of goods) = £100
ReplyDeleteThe original 50
ReplyDelete£50. Stole cash £50. Spent £40 on your shop & went away with £10 chane.
ReplyDeleteAll he stole still remains £50 and that's all shopkeeper lost.
STORIES @ ALIFEDIARY
It's £100 ooooo
ReplyDeleteThe original 50
ReplyDeleteThe original 50
ReplyDelete60
ReplyDelete£50
ReplyDeletehe lost 60
ReplyDelete50 was stolen n dsame 50 was used to buy goods worth 40 n he gave 10, d thief got away with the 50 plus goods worth 40, thereafter 50+40=90
ReplyDeleteIt's 90
ReplyDeleteI have not stolen any money.
ReplyDeleteThe shop keeper on the other hand lost 50pounds.
I fear for nigerian schools...
ReplyDeleteOver half of replies are 100, 90 and 10 pounds. How? We need to spend less time on blogs and more time developing our brains oh.
It's 50pounds.
I dey tell u.... I'm in shock reading these comments. More than 2/3rds r wrong, it shows how low our collective intelligence quotient is. It's a very sad thing indeed. Btw the answer is 50pounds
DeleteStole £50 returned £40 gave change of £10, if am nt mistaken: £50-£40=£10+(£10)=£20.
ReplyDeleteCisse.
Hmmm, I think it is 100 pounds... he used the stolen 50 pounds to buy items worth 40 pounds and still got 10 pounds back ... 50 + 40 +10 =100.
ReplyDelete100 pounds
ReplyDelete£90
ReplyDelete50 quid
ReplyDeleteIt's simple.. £50
ReplyDeleteThe answer is £50!
ReplyDeleteHe stole £50
He came to buy something worth £40 (he paid)
He collected a change of £10 (equation balanced)
He collected his change as expected
Apparently, the missing money is still the same £50.
100 dollars
ReplyDeleteMrs A
50 ponds
ReplyDelete