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Breaking the Bank (Posted on 2004-04-07) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Zoe removes the low-denomination coins from her purse every evening and puts them in a row of piggy banks. She has acquired the piggy banks while on holiday and each of them contains coins of a different denomination. Last night Zoe counted the money in them. Here is what she found:

- There was more than £1.40 in the plastic piggy bank, which contained coins of a higher denomination than the ones Zoe keeps in the piggy bank she bought from bournemouth, which is not where she got the bank that holds her 2p pieces.
- The 5p pieces are not kept in the terracotta piggy bank, which contained less than £1.75.
- The coins in the bank made of tin were worth an even number of pence and this bank contained coins of a lower denomination than the ones in the piggy bank from Southwald.
- One of the piggy banks yielded £1.50, but not the one purchased in Weston-super-Mare. The piggy bank used to store 20p pieces contained a greater sum of money than the one containing 5p pieces.
- The china bank, which is used to store coins of one of the lowest three denominations, contained 20p more than was in the piggy bank from Margate.
- The bank that she bought in Torquay may or may not have been the one made out of wood.

Given that Zoe found totals of £1.40, £1.50, £1.60, £1.70, £1.75, and the coins she kept were in denominations of 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p and 20p (100p = £1), can you work out what she found?

See The Solution Submitted by Sam    
Rating: 4.0000 (5 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
re: A more logically understood answer for logischer Verstand | Comment 8 of 13 |
(In reply to A more logically understood answer for logischer Verstand by Penny)

Thanks.  I was confused due to its usage in "The magic Number" where it meant "divisible by 2" instead of "divisible with no remainder."

P.S. Just if you were wondering, "logischer Verstand" can also mean "a logical mind" with the "ein" implied.  That is what I inteaded it to be at least.  "More logically understood" would be around the lines of "mehr logisch verstand." However, I am using "Verstand" as a noun (meaning "mind") instead of as a simple past tense verb.  Just a side note.

Thanks again.

  Posted by logischer Verstand on 2004-04-24 19:08:56

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