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| Question 602214:  An English reading list ha 8 American novels and 6 English novels.  A student must read 4 from the list and at least 2 must be American novels.  In how many different ways can the four books be selected?
 {This answer is 836.  I'm obviously not doing it with the correct functions.  It seems logical the C(8,2) are part of this problem.  My answer is 1050 when I tried C(8,4)*C(6,4)
 Any explanation for the correct way to do the work is greatly appreciated!
 Answer by jim_thompson5910(35256)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! There are C(8,2)*C(6,2) = 28*15 = 420 different ways to have exactly 2 American novels (and exactly two English novels) 
 There are C(8,3)*C(6,1) = 56*6 = 336 different ways to have exactly 3 American novels (and exactly one English novel)
 
 and finally,
 
 There are C(8,4)*C(6,0) = 70*1 = 70 different ways to have exactly 4 American novels (and no English novels)
 
 Add these counts up to get
 
 
 420+336+70 = 826
 
 So there are 826 ways.
 Please make sure that the answer you typed is not a typo (since the numbers look very close)
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