A card shark puzzle presents 13 cards from a single suit arranged in a row with no order. Clues are given about the positions of certain cards, including that the king and ace are separated by one card, the second and third cards equal 13, and the tenth and eleventh equal 10. The clues must be used to deduce the positions of each of the 13 cards.
A card shark puzzle presents 13 cards from a single suit arranged in a row with no order. Clues are given about the positions of certain cards, including that the king and ace are separated by one card, the second and third cards equal 13, and the tenth and eleventh equal 10. The clues must be used to deduce the positions of each of the 13 cards.
A card shark puzzle presents 13 cards from a single suit arranged in a row with no order. Clues are given about the positions of certain cards, including that the king and ace are separated by one card, the second and third cards equal 13, and the tenth and eleventh equal 10. The clues must be used to deduce the positions of each of the 13 cards.
A card shark puzzle presents 13 cards from a single suit arranged in a row with no order. Clues are given about the positions of certain cards, including that the king and ace are separated by one card, the second and third cards equal 13, and the tenth and eleventh equal 10. The clues must be used to deduce the positions of each of the 13 cards.
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Card Shark (Level 4)
By: Michael Moreci
All 13 cards in a single suit have been lined up in the row below. No 2 cards are in order. Can you discover which card is which using the clues given below?
-No court cards are at either end
-Two court cards are adjacent; the king and the ace are separated by one card -From the left, the second and third cards equal 13; the tenth and eleventh equal 10 -The 8 is two places to the left of the ace -The jack is two places the right of the 2 -The 4 is two places to the right of the 3 -The 6 is three places to the left of the ace -The 9 is somewhere right of the 4 -The 10 is two places to the right of the 5 -The third card from the right is odd, as is the third card from the left Solution:
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