There are five competitor A, B, C, D, and E and they enter a running race that awards gold, silver, and bronze medals. Each of the following compound statements about the race is false, although one of the two clauses in each may be true.
1. A didn't win the gold, and B didn't win the silver.
2. D didn't win the silver, and E didn't win the bronze.
3. C won a medal, and D didn't.
4. A won a medal, and C didn't.
5. D and E both won medals.
Who won each of the medals?
Thanks in advance. Any help would be appreciated. :)
Let's look at statement 3 and 4, in particular we hypothesis that C loses. This implies that the second half of statement 4 is true, so this means that the first half is false: A didn't win a medal.
In statement 1 A didn't win the gold and that is true, this implies that is false that B didn't win silver, in other words B won the silver medal.
Now in statement 2, D didn't win the silver and that is true, because we know that it was actually B who won it, so again the second half is necessarily false: E won the bronze.
Now only D is left and he necessarily won the gold metal, but this is in contradiction with statement 5.
So in the end we can say that C won a medal.
Then because of statement 3, D won a medal.
Because of statement 5, E didn't won a medal.
Because of statement 2, D won a silver.
Because of statement 1, A won a gold.
We know that C won a medal, but because of the last 2 statement, we know he won a bronze medal
B necessarily lost