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Donna Ferentes
23-08-2006, 13:00
A man walks into a pub and orders a pint and a half of orange juice and lemonade. He is charged a total of £3.90. How much did each of the two drinks cost?

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:01
£2.60 £1.30

Donna Ferentes
23-08-2006, 13:04
Ha! You fell for it! Wrong!

gaijingirl
23-08-2006, 13:06
If it's 50% orange juice and 50% lemonade is it £1.95 each?

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:06
Must be poorly worded then.:p

Donna Ferentes
23-08-2006, 13:07
If it's 50% orange juice and 50% lemonade is it £1.95 each?Eh?

ivebeenhigh
23-08-2006, 13:08
£2.50 and £1.40.

He is charged more for the half pint.

Yossarian
23-08-2006, 13:08
He's getting robbed as well - £2.50 for an orange juice?!

Minnie_the_Minx
23-08-2006, 13:08
So is it ONE PINT

+ 1/2 pint of orange and lemonade?


And what exactly is in the pint, a pint of Guinness or a pint of water?

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:10
Is it a pint of X and a half pint of a lemonade/orange mixture?

If so, it must be impossible to tell, if the drinks are different.

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:10
So is it ONE PINT

+ 1/2 pint of orange and lemonade?


And what exactly is in the pint, a pint of Guinness or a pint of water?


Thats what I said.

gaijingirl
23-08-2006, 13:11
Eh?

I thought he wanted a pint and a half of "orange juice and lemonade". If it comes to £3.90 and 50% of the 1.5 pints is orange juice and the other 50% of the 1.5 pints is lemonade then the orange juice would cost 0.5 of £3.90 as would the lemonade. No?

(Obviously not the answer you're looking for though - my interpretation of the question must be wrong).

rennie
23-08-2006, 13:19
Who goes to a pub n order orange juice?

Donna Ferentes
23-08-2006, 13:19
I thought he wanted a pint and a half of "orange juice and lemonade". If it comes to £3.90 and 50% of the 1.5 pints is orange juice and the other 50% of the 1.5 pints is lemonade then the orange juice would cost 0.5 of £3.90 as would the lemonade. No?Surely that would only be the case if the two substances cost the same?

It's not a trick question, by the way. The aforementioned order was made at about 8.35 last night.

Bonfirelight
23-08-2006, 13:21
i dont fucking know.

1.23 and 2.67?

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:23
Surely that would only be the case if the two substances cost the same?

It's not a trick question, by the way. The aforementioned order was made at about 8.35 last night.


Is the point that the soft drink cost more than a pint of alcoholic beverage?

I bought j2o and an alcopop once.

The j2o cost £2.50 the alcopop £1.50 very strange.

Donna Ferentes
23-08-2006, 13:25
i dont fucking know.

1.23 and 2.67?You're going in the wrong direction.

In fact the correct answer was £2.30 and £1.60.

Bonfirelight
23-08-2006, 13:30
cool.

i brought a sandwich and a pack of polos at lunchtime. the total came to 2.93. how much was each item?

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:30
You're going in the wrong direction.

In fact the correct answer was £2.30 and £1.60.


The Swines

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:31
cool.

i brought a sandwich and a pack of polos at lunchtime. the total came to 2.93. how much was each item?

£2.60 and £0.33 ?

Donna Ferentes
23-08-2006, 13:34
Further enquiries failed to eludicate much useful information as to how this seemingly eccentric calculation had been made. Mind you I don't think the chap had ever been asked for an orange juice and lemonade before. I have a suspicion that he actually charged me for the orange plus a pint of lemonade and a half of lemonade respectively.

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:34
A man goes to a car boot sale and buys a brass bell and a nest of three wooden coffee tables. He pays the vendor £42. How much does each item cost?

Bonfirelight
23-08-2006, 13:34
£2.60 and £0.33 ?

way off.

0 and 0

i brought* the sandwich and the packet of polos. i spent 2.93 on the busfare home

* as donna would no doubt have picked up on

Donna Ferentes
23-08-2006, 13:35
I wonder if you are not missing the point that I expected the item twice the size of the other to cost twice as much?

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:36
way off.

0 and 0

i brought* the sandwich and the packet of polos. i spent 2.93 on the busfare home

* as donna would no doubt have picked up on


I thought that was a typo which I was being too polite to highlight.

Minnie_the_Minx
23-08-2006, 13:36
Thats what I said.


we posted same time :p

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:38
I wonder if you are not missing the point that I expected the item twice the size of the other to cost twice as much?


Generally speaking if a half of something costs £1.00 then a pint of it would normally be slightly less than twice that amount i.e £1.90

Bonfirelight
23-08-2006, 13:39
I thought that was a typo which I was being too polite to highlight.

it was to be fair. nice recovery though eh?

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:39
we posted same time :p


I know and we both out and out wronguns about it. Far too lateral we are.

Crispy
23-08-2006, 13:39
Surely though, the effective service charge is included in each drink and is a flat time rate + sundries for drink complexities etc. therefore making the smaller drink slightly more expensive. After all, you could ask the barman for 1000 0.5ml pippettes of orange juice but you would expect the total cost to be more than that of 500ml of OJ in mug. So there.

Donna Ferentes
23-08-2006, 13:39
Generally speaking if a half of something costs £1.00 then a pint of it would normally be slightly less than twice that amount i.e £1.90
It might be slightly less than twice (though in fact I checked this with the beer prices and a pint costs twice as much as a half) but not, I think, less than fifty per cent more.

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:40
it was to be fair. nice recovery though eh?


Seamless I could not see a single joining stitch.:)

Minnie_the_Minx
23-08-2006, 13:41
Further enquiries failed to eludicate much useful information as to how this seemingly eccentric calculation had been made. Mind you I don't think the chap had ever been asked for an orange juice and lemonade before. I have a suspicion that he actually charged me for the orange plus a pint of lemonade and a half of lemonade respectively.


Well I've been drinking PINTS of orange and lemonade for the last 2 months and it only costs £1.50 for a PINT in my local, but costs £1 for a HALF.

However, I was charged £2.40 the other day in another pub :mad:

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:42
Surely though, the effective service charge is included in each drink and is a flat time rate + sundries for drink complexities etc. therefore making the smaller drink slightly more expensive. After all, you could ask the barman for 1000 0.5ml pippettes of orange juice but you would expect the total cost to be more than that of 500ml of OJ in mug. So there.


Have you ever asked for a pipette measure in a boozer?

Minnie_the_Minx
23-08-2006, 13:44
A man goes to a car boot sale and buys a brass bell and a nest of three wooden coffee tables. He pays the vendor £42. How much does each item cost?


That's simple. The tables were £40 and the brass bell was £2 ;)

Crispy
23-08-2006, 13:45
The question was hypothetical, naturally. I suppose you could substitute 25ml shot glasses, which wouldn't be quite as dramatic. However, it would still take the barman longer to get 500ml of OJ out of the carton and into your receptacles. Therefore he should be paid a little bit more for his trouble. Stands to reason :)

Bonfirelight
23-08-2006, 13:47
I wonder if you are not missing the point that I expected the item twice the size of the other to cost twice as much?

that's assuming they were mixed to the same proportions

if orange juice costs £1.25 per 1/4 pint and lemonade 35p per 1/4 pint then if the half is evenly mixed its 1.60

The pint however if mixed 1:3 is 2.30.

perhaps a bottle of orange juice is 1.25 and the pint is just topped up with more lemonade?

exosculate
23-08-2006, 13:47
That's simple. The tables were £40 and the brass bell was £2 ;)


Were you that shifty looking woman in the corner who was tring to gazump me?

Yeah but how much did each table cost - hey hey hey?????

Donna Ferentes
23-08-2006, 13:51
that's assuming they were mixed to the same proportionsIndeed - which ought to be a reasonable assmption, no? You're basically buying different measures of the same stuff.

So either I was getting two drinks which had been produced in wildly differing proportions, or maybe they were trying to claim that a half of orange juice and lemonade consists of a half of lemonade plus some orange juice. Which is physically impossible.

boozybirdie
23-08-2006, 14:04
Were you that shifty looking woman in the corner who was tring to gazump me?

Yeah but how much did each table cost - hey hey hey?????

£20
£12
£8

:p

exosculate
23-08-2006, 14:35
£20
£12
£8

:p


Yeah - but you're the one that sold them to me so that don't count.

boozybirdie
23-08-2006, 14:41
Yeah - but you're the one that sold them to me so that don't count.

:D

twisted
23-08-2006, 16:10
That's simple. The tables were £40 and the brass bell was £2 ;)

but how much were the tables? can;t have been £13.33 each - at least one must have been £13.34 or then again the tables could have been a differennt size and as everyone knows a table twice the size of another one isn't usually twice the price

exosculate
23-08-2006, 16:13
but how much were the tables? can;t have been £13.33 each - at least one must have been £13.34 or then again the tables could have been a differennt size and as everyone knows a table twice the size of another one isn't usually twice the price


We've sorted that - read the thread before ya jump in!

:mad: ;) :D

exosculate
23-08-2006, 16:14
:D


I'm just sorry now I didn't buy the parrot cage. Is it still available?

mauvais
23-08-2006, 16:22
Economies of scale, innit. When you have enough capital to make investments in bulk purchases, such as whole pints at once, the unit price falls compared to smaller, multiple purchases.

boozybirdie
24-08-2006, 08:50
I'm just sorry now I didn't buy the parrot cage. Is it still available?

Yep but the parrot is dead :( I can supply a pigeon for an extra £20 :D

RushcroftRoader
24-08-2006, 13:54
Have you ever asked for a pipette measure in a boozer?

The pipette is actually the approved measure for gin in some bars in Brixton :eek:

RubyToogood
28-08-2006, 00:28
perhaps a bottle of orange juice is 1.25 and the pint is just topped up with more lemonade?

That might well be the answer. Did you see the drinks being mixed? I drink OJ and soda a lot, and generally when you ask for a pint, it contains the same amount of OJ as a half pint, but more ice and soda. If it's the type of pub that only does little bottles of OJ, it's one bottle regardless of whether you asked for a pint or a half. I once got given a pint consisting of TWO bottles of OJ topped up with soda, and nearly died of shock at the price.

RubyToogood
28-08-2006, 00:30
PS prices for this drink vary wildly. I reckon it should be about £1.50 max for a pint. The Albert is very reasonable about these things.

Donna Ferentes
28-08-2006, 12:09
Yes but I prefer the ambience in the Trinity.

Also my subsequent drinks were Young's (if we neglect the closing gin and tonic) and I might as well get some of that in while it's still drinkable.

RubyToogood
30-08-2006, 20:16
I had a pint of pineapple juice and soda in the Albert last night: £1.25.

:)