Challenging questions in the Quantitative Section may 
        test your ability to cut through dense information to get to the heart 
        of what often turns out to be a relatively simple matter. Why does the 
        Exam do this? To see whether you have the ability to whittle complex language 
        down to an easy solution. In these problems, the important thing is to 
        find the "question behind the question." That is, to find what 
        the question is really asking. Here’s an example:
                At the end of every hour a culture of bacteria becomes some 
                  number of times larger than it was the previous hour. If the 
                  number of bacteria was originally greater than 1 and if the 
                  rate of growth also increases every hour, what was the original 
                  number of bacteria?
                  1)  of 
                    the original culture would have resulted in a total of 385 
                    bacteria after 3 hours.
of 
                    the original culture would have resulted in a total of 385 
                    bacteria after 3 hours.
                  2)	The original number of bacteria was less than 4.
         
                This problem is really about  
                
                  . 
                       1)  of 
                        the original culture would have resulted in a total of 
                        385 bacteria after 3 hours.?
 of 
                        the original culture would have resulted in a total of 
                        385 bacteria after 3 hours.? 
                    
                 
                  |  |  | Sufficient |  | Insufficient |  |  | 
             
        
                      2) The original number of bacteria was less than 4.
                   
  
        
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Test Prep Lessons With Video Lessons and Explained MCQ