- input: question: | David has three sisters. Each of them has one brother. How many brothers does David have? output: "From your statement, David has three sisters, and each of them is mentioned as \nhaving one brother. However, the information is not explicitly clear if the \nbrother is shared among all three sisters or if there are multiple brothers.\n\nIf there is only one brother, and it is shared by all three sisters, then David \nhas three brothers. If there are multiple brothers, but the information is not \nspecified how many there are, then David has an unknown number of brothers.\n\nIn summary, based on the information provided, we can confirm that David has at \nleast one brother, but the exact number is not specified." - input: question: | David has three sisters. Each of them has two brothers. How many brothers does David have? output: "David has two brothers. Each of his sisters shares the same set of brothers, \nwhich includes David. Therefore, David is one of the two brothers mentioned for \neach of his sisters." - input: question: | Sally has three brothers. Each of them has one sister. How many sisters does Sally have? output: "From the information provided, we know that Sally is one of the sisters to her \nbrothers. Since each brother has only one sister, and Sally is mentioned as one \nof them, that means Sally is indeed a sister to her three brothers. Therefore, \nSally has 3 sisters in total." - input: question: | Sally has three brothers. Each of them has two sisters. How many sisters does Sally have? output: "From the information provided, we know that Sally is one of the sisters to her \nbrothers. Since each brother has two sisters, and Sally is already accounted for\nas one, that means she has one more sister. In total, Sally has 2 sisters.\n\nHere's the reasoning:\n1. We know that Sally is one of the sisters to her three brothers.\n2. Each brother has two sisters, but we need to account for the fact that Sally \nhas already been mentioned as one of them.\n3. Therefore, there is another sister, making Sally's total number of sisters 2.\n\nThis question highlights the importance of careful reasoning when analyzing \ninformation and avoiding potential double-counting errors." - input: question: | Sally has one brother and one sister. How many sisters does Sally's brother have? output: "From the information provided, Sally has one brother and one sister. Since the \nquestion asks about the number of sisters Sally's brother has, we can infer that\nSally and her brother are the only siblings sharing the same parents. Therefore,\nSally's brother has zero sisters, as he is the only brother."