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| Question 198485:  Thank you so much this teacher is picking me a part with these problem please help.
 
 ) In a survey of 100 consumers, 33 indicated that they were going to buy a new car, 18 said they were going to buy a new refrigerator, and 34 said they were going to buy a new washer. Of these, 7 were going to buy both a car and a refrigerator, 15 were going to buy a car and a washer, and 9 were going to buy a washer and a refrigerator. Three consumers indicated that they were going to buy all three items.
 Construct a Venn diagram, label your diagram clearly.
 Use your diagram to answer the following questions:
 (a)	How many were going to buy only a car?
 (b)	How many were going to buy only a washer?
 (c)	How many were going to buy only a refrigerator
 (d)	How many were going to buy a car and a washer but not a refrigerator?
 (e)	How many were going to buy none of these items
 
 
 thank you so much
 Answer by josmiceli(19441)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! (1) Draw a circle that represents the consumers that are going to buy a new car. What I do sometimes to avoid confusion is to label the
 circle right in the center with a "c"
 Don't even worry about numbers at this point.
 (2) Some consumers are going to buy a refrigerator, and, reading
 ahead, some of these are also buying a new car. So, now draw a
 circle that intersects the refrigerator circle, and label it in the center
 with a small "r" Where the circle intersects the new car circle,
 label that intersection with "c x r"
 Make sure you leave some room for other circles. Don't worry about numbers.
 (3) This is the tricky part. A third circle will represent the
 washing machine buyers. Some of these are new car buyers also, and
 some are refrigerator buyers, so this new circle will intersect both
 the "c" circle and the "r" circle. Label the new circle "w"
 Label the intersection with "c", "c x w"
 Label the intersection with "r", "r + w"
 (4) There is one last bit of information: some of the washing machine
 buyers are buying all three things. This is the small intersection of
 the three circles. If your picture doesn't have this small intersection,
 redraw it. It will be "w + c + r". I just draw an arrow pointing to
 it and put this label outside the circles.
 (5) If the drawing is right, and you can make sense of it, then you
 can proceed with the numbers and answer any question about it.
 The labels you have are:
 "c" ALL the new car buyers
 "r" ALL the refrigerator buyers
 "c x r" ALL those who will buy both car and refrigerator
 "w x c" ALL those who will buy washing machine and car
 "w x r" ALL those who will buy washing machine and refrigerator
 "w x c x r" those who will buy all three things
 The really tricky part is to realize that intersections like
 "c x r" also INCLUDE the ones that buy all three.
 Try to see the circles two at a time, ignoring the third.
 I hope this helps:
 (A)  How many were going to buy only a car? That means no washer, no frige
 I'm told that 7 will buy "c x r" and 15 will buy "c x w"
 
   Tricky part: I an subtracting the "c x r x w = 3" group
 they are being subtracted twice, so to subtract them once, I need to add
 back
  so,  14 will buy only a car
 -------------------------
 (B) Those only buying a washer will not buy car or frige.
 I need to subtract from
  the intersections "w x c" and "w x r", so I get
  , but remember, by subtracting these two groups, I am subtracting "w x c x r" twice
 so, I'll add back 3 once
 
  13 will buy only a washer
 ---------------------------
 (C) How many were going to buy only a refrigerator?
 I need to subtract from "r" the intersections "r x w" and "r x c"
 
  , again, I am subtracting "c x r x w" twice, so I'll add it back once.
  5 will buy only a frige
 ---------------------------
 (D) How many were going to buy a car and a washer but not a refrigerator?
 "c x w = 15", but some of those will buy friges. How many? It's
 the ones who will buy "c x r x w", so subtract 3
 
  12 will buy "c x w" but not "r"
 ----------------------------
 (E) How many were going to buy none of these items?
 Not an easy question. What I have to do is add up the contents
 of the three circles WITHOUT overlaps, that is not counting
 anything twice.
 I can make use of the questions I've answered.
 ONLY "c" plus ONLY "w" plus ONLY "r" =
  OK, but this ignores all the intersections, so I have to add in
 "c x w" PLUS "c x r" PLUS "r x w" =
  , but by doing this, I have added "c x r x w" three times, so I need to
 subtract it twice.
  And
  so, there are 57 buyers without counting anyone twice. There were 100 consumers surveyed, so
  43 will buy none of the items
 ----------------------------
 Chcking my answer, If I add up
 ONLY "c" PLUS "r" PLUS ONLY "w" PLUS "c x w" MINUS "c x r x w", then I
 should get the result
  ONLY "c" = 14
 "r" = 18
 ONLY "w" = 13
 "c x w" = 15
 "c x r x w = 3
 
  OK
 
 
 
 
 
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