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Where did the other pound go?

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RJUKL | 01:41 Mon 01st Mar 2010 | ChatterBank
19 Answers
Three students spend £30 (£10 each) on pizza. When the pizza boy returns to the restaurant, his boss points out they should only have paid £25 between them. He takes £5 back, but helps himself to £2 and gives the students back £1 each. The students have now paid £9 each making a total of £27. If the boy has kept £2, where did the extra pound go because £27 + £2 = £29
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it never went anywhere.
Shop gets £25
Boy get £2
Students get £3

Total = £30
Garlic Bread?
Students... £30... on Pizza... yeah right!
lol@ snags
Exactly could feed a family of four for a week on that!!
Question Author
Yes, Mamyalynne but each student had handed over a ten pound note to the pizza lad (£30) and when they were handed back £1 each they had each coughed up £9 which makes £27 plus the £2 tip equals £29. Am I as thick as I well? The restaurant only got £25 so I am still puzzled.
the three students each paid 9, total of 27, of which 25 went to the restaurant and 2 went to the pizza boy. 27=27.
neither 30 or 29 are relevant to the explanation.
You have to work backwards with these types of puzzles.
Question Author
Thanks dr b. Mr brother (a dr G) once explained this to me but I still found it puzzling.
Yes I am cr@p at puzzles sorry
The fallacy here is that the students did not pay £9 each for the pizza. They paid £8.33 each to the nearest penny, with the delivery boy pocketing the extra due to them. 3 x £8.33 + £3 change + £2 kept by the boy = £29.99. When I first came across this puzzle in the early 60's, prior to the decimalisation of our currency, the solution was much neater, in that each student paid £8 - 6s - 4d which when multiplied by three and adding the £2 and £3 comes to exactly £30. By the way, at the time I first heard it they were not students but rich businessmen having the full works at a posh restaurant. This was a time when £8 per week was a very good wage for a well-educated school-leaver.

Ah! Nostalgia isn't what it used to be!
Erratum: In my previous reply I should have given the pre-decimal price as £8 - 6s - 8d rather than 4d, otherwise that would leave me a shilling short and the risk of incurring the wrath of my maths teacher.
the students paid £9 = £27
£25 for the pizza £2 that the guy took =£27
each student got £1 back = £3 = £30
This is older than me and I am nearly 70!!
Question Author
This is for Mike 11111. I am afraid your answer is incorrect. Each student paid £9 (after they had receiived a refund of £1 each).The tip kept by the delivery boy was £2, the restaurant £25, totalling £29 in all. The figure of £30 was misleading.
I regret to have to disagree. The £30 cannot be misleading as it was the amount handed over in the first place. The fallacy is that each paid £9 for the pizza, which they didn't. The £9 each covers the cost of the pizzas + the £2 taken by the delivery boy, which together with the £3 refund comes to exactly £30. Quod erat demonstrandum!
Question Author
I still disagree. The three students paid only £9 each for the pizzas (from out of which came the £2 tip). The amount of £30 is misleading since what they spent did not amount to £30 (although they had thought it would).If thatwere the case there would have been no £2 tip.

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