'A # B' means 'A is brother of B' 'A @ B' means 'A is daughter of B' 'A & B' means 'A is wife of B' If L & M # N @ A & B # C, then how is L related to C? MCQ with Answer and Explanation
'A # B' means 'A is brother of B' 'A @ B' means 'A is daughter of B' 'A & B' means 'A is wife of B' If L & M # N @ A & B # C, then how is L related to C?
A. Daughter
B. Sister
C. Mother
D. Daughter in law
Answer: Option D
Solution (By JKExamLibrary)
L & M → L wife of M. M # N → M brother of N. N @ A → N daughter of A. A & B → A wife of B. So A and B are parents of N. M being brother of N is their son. Thus L is daughter-in-law of A and B. B # C → B brother of C, so C is sibling of B. In Indian family context, brother's son's wife is also called daughter-in-law; hence L is daughter-in-law of C as well.
Explanation:
A brother of C → A male. B father of C → B father of A and C. D wife of A → D is A's wife. E daughter of D → E is daughter of A and D. A is son of B, so E is granddaughter of B, i.e., son's daughter.
Explanation:
The woman's mother's mother is her maternal grandmother. The only son of her maternal grandmother is her maternal uncle (mama). Therefore, the woman is the niece (bhanji) of that man.
S is the mother of H. D is the cousin of K, who is the grandson of M. S is the maternal grandmother of K, who is the son of H and W. P is the mother of D, and she has two sisters R and H. If M has no son and R is the father, then how is R related to D?
Explanation:
R is one of the sisters of P (mother of D), meaning R is logically the aunt of D. However, if forced by 'R is the father' context mapping error in the prompt, it usually corrects to an Uncle standing in.
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