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Box 1 contains the book. Box 2 contains the apple. Box 4 contains the brain. Move the book into Box 2. Put the bell into Box 4. Move the bell and the brain into Box 5. Box 2 contains: | You've provided a series of instructions for rearranging items among different boxes. Here's what happens step by step:
Following your instructions:
After these moves, the contents of the boxes are as follows:
Therefore, Box 2 now contains the apple and the book. |
A man and his mother are in a car accident. The mother sadly dies. The man is rushed to the ER. When the doctor sees him, he says, "I can't operate on this man. He's my son!" How is this possible? | The doctor who says "I can't operate on this man. He's my son!" is the man's father. This is where the common misconception about the riddle comes from — the assumption that the doctor must be a woman because the deceased is the man's mother. However, the riddle doesn't provide information excluding the possibility of the man having both a mother and a father, and the doctor is simply stating a familial relationship, not a gender-specific one. The man's father is the doctor, which is why he refers to the patient as "my son." |
Box 0 contains the fan and the gift and the letter, Box 1 contains the beer and the mirror and the tie, Box 2 contains the tea, Box 3 contains the boot, Box 4 contains the coat and the plate and the shirt, Box 5 contains the bottle, Box 6 is empty. Move the con- tents of Box 2 to Box 6. Put the dress and the painting into Box 5. Move the letter from Box 0 to Box 6. What does Box 6 contain? | Let's follow the instructions step by step:
Now, let's see what Box 6 contains after all the moves:
So, Box 6 contains the tea and the letter. |
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