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By Karen Schweitzer, About.com Guide to Business School since 2005

GMAT Question #21

Monday September 22, 2008
There have been 20 GMAT practice questions posted on the blog so far.

Here is question #21 (from Integrated Learning.)

GMAT Practice Question:

J, K, and M are positive integers. K is the remainder when J is divided by 6. M is the remainder when J is divided by 4. Which of the following could be the value of K+M?

I. 0
II. 3
III. 9

Your choices:

A) None
B) I
C) II
D) I and III
E) II and III

What do you think? Is the answer A, B, C, D or E? You can register your guess in the comments (see below) or discuss the question in the Business School Community Forum.

Don't forget to check back tomorrow for the answer and explanation!

Interested in seeing more on the GMAT? Check out Integrated Learning on Facebook.

Comments

September 22, 2008 at 4:51 pm
(1) Producer says:

A. None
-Two positive integers cannot sum to zero.
-A positive integer divided by 4 and 6 cannot yield one odd and one even remainder.

September 23, 2008 at 6:36 am
(2) vandana sharma says:

1.none. Smallest integer divided by 4 and 6 and having reminder is 7. when divided by 4, reminder is 3 and divided by 7 reminder is 1. more than 3

September 25, 2008 at 7:27 am
(3) Ra,z says:

What is J=24 or J=36
..K=0, M=0
Answer should be “B”

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