Common Core Standard 1.OA.A.1
This standard covers the following:
Use addition and subtraction within 20 to solve word problems involving situations of adding to, taking from, putting together, taking apart, and comparing, with unknowns in all positions, e.g., by using objects, drawings, and equations with a symbol for the unknown number to represent the problem.
Problem: In a school competition, Aliyah correctly guesses 11 letter games and then correctly guesses 7 more games. But when she guesses the next game, she loses 6 times. What is the total number of letter games Aliyah correctly guessed in the end?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Aliyah correctly guesses 11+7 = <<11+7=18>>18 games. Aliyah correctly guesses 18-6 = <<18-6=12>>12 games in the end. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: After winning several letter games, Aliyah was feeling confident and decided to continue playing. Unfortunately, she guessed the next 4 games incorrectly. How many letter games did Aliyah correctly guess now, after her additional incorrect guesses?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Aliyah correctly guessed 12 games before her additional incorrect guesses. Aliyah correctly guessed 12-4 = <<12-4=8>>8 games now, after her additional incorrect guesses. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's go back to the beginning of the competition. Suppose Aliyah only correctly guessed 3 letter games initially instead of 11, then correctly guessed 7 more games. If she still made 6 incorrect guesses, how many letter games did Aliyah correctly guess in this scenario?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Aliyah correctly guesses 3+7 = <<3+7=10>>10 games. Aliyah correctly guesses 10-6 = <<10-6=4>>4 games in the end. ### Answer: 4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: A pilot started the day with 4 helicopters in his base. During the day, 13 more helicopters arrived. How many helicopters does the pilot have in total at his base?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The pilot started with 4 helicopters and received 13 more, so he now has 4+13 = <<4+13=17>>17 helicopters in total. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: On a farm, there were initially 18 strawberries. After a little bird came by and ate 2 of them, how many strawberries were left on the farm?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There were initially 18 strawberries on the farm. After the bird ate 2 strawberries, there were 18-2 = <<18-2=16>>16 strawberries left on the farm. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the incident with the little bird, the farmer planted 2 more strawberry plants. How many strawberries are there on the farm now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There were initially 16 strawberries on the farm. After the farmer planted 2 more strawberry plants, there were 16+2 = <<16+2=18>>18 strawberries on the farm. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of the little bird eating 2 strawberries, it actually ate 4 strawberries from the farm's initial 18. How many strawberries were left on the farm after the bird's feast?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There were initially 18 strawberries on the farm. After the bird ate 4 strawberries, there were 18-4 = <<18-4=14>>14 strawberries left on the farm. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: Isabella buys 11 toothbrushes for her family members. She then remembers that she forgot to buy some for her 2 best friends. How many total toothbrushes does Isabella need to buy?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Isabella needs to buy 11+2 = <<11+2=13>>13 toothbrushes in total. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: After buying toothbrushes for her family and friends, Isabella decides to buy 2 extra toothbrushes just in case. How many total toothbrushes does Isabella end up buying?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Isabella needs to buy 13+2 = <<13+2=15>>15 toothbrushes in total. ### Answer: 15
Expected answer: 15
Correct? Yes
Problem: If Isabella initially planned to buy toothbrushes for 10 family members instead of 11, and still kept her plan to buy for her 2 best friends, how many total toothbrushes does she need to buy now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Isabella needs to buy 10+2 = <<10+2=12>>12 toothbrushes in total. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: If the wind speed increased by 8 knots from its original speed of 12 knots, what is the new wind speed?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The new wind speed is 12+8 = <<12+8=20>>20 knots. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose the wind originally increased by 8 knots from a speed of 10 knots instead of 12 knots. What would the new wind speed be in that case?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The new wind speed would be 10+8 = <<10+8=18>>18 knots. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: Billy has 6 bars of soap. He used 2 bars to make handcrafted soap as a hobby. How many bars of soap does he have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Billy has 6-2 = <<6-2=4>>4 bars of soap left. ### Answer: 4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if Billy had actually started with 3 bars of soap instead of 6, and he still used 2 to make handcrafted soap as a hobby? How many bars of soap would he have left then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Billy has 3-2 = <<3-2=1>>1 bar of soap left. ### Answer: 1
Expected answer: 1
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sara has 17 earrings. After donating 2 of them to charity, how many earrings does she have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sara has 17-2 = <<17-2=15>>15 earrings left. ### Answer: 15
Expected answer: 15
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sara now decides to gift 12 more earrings from her remaining collection to her best friend. After doing so, how many earrings does she have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sara has 15-12 = <<15-12=3>>3 earrings left. ### Answer: 3
Expected answer: 3
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose instead, Sara originally had 17 earrings but then lost 15 of them. After losing these earrings, how many earrings does she have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sara has 17-15 = <<17-15=2>>2 earrings left. ### Answer: 2
Expected answer: 2
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mason had 1 banana and then his friend gave him 19 more. How many bananas does Mason have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mason has 1+19 = <<1+19=20>>20 bananas now. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, what if Mason originally only had 1 banana and his friend gave him 11 more instead of 19. How many bananas would Mason have in that case?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mason has 1+11 = <<1+11=12>>12 bananas now. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: Charlie has 7 dogs at home. While on a walk, he meets another dog owner who has 9 dogs. How many dogs are there in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Charlie has 7 dogs at home. Charlie meets another dog owner who has 9 dogs. There are 7+9 = <<7+9=16>>16 dogs in total. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: In addition to the dogs Charlie has at home and the ones he meets during the walk, 4 more stray dogs join in. How many dogs are there in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Charlie has 7 dogs at home. Charlie meets another dog owner who has 9 dogs. There are 7+9 = <<7+9=16>>16 dogs in total. 4 more stray dogs join in. There are 16+4 = <<16+4=20>>20 dogs in total now. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if, initially, Charlie only had 4 dogs at home instead of 7. Then he meets another dog owner who has 9 dogs during the walk. How many dogs are there in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Charlie has 4 dogs at home. Charlie meets another dog owner who has 9 dogs. There are 4+9 = <<4+9=13>>13 dogs in total. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jasmine has 8 grapes in her left hand. She also has the same amount of grapes in her right hand. How many grapes does Jasmine have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jasmine has 8 grapes in her left hand and 8 grapes in her right hand. Jasmine has 8+8 = <<8+8=16>>16 grapes in total. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jasmine thinks she has too many grapes. Instead of starting with 8 grapes in each hand, what if she only started with 3 grapes in each hand? How many grapes would she have in total then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jasmine has 3 grapes in her left hand and 3 grapes in her right hand. Jasmine has 3+3 = <<3+3=6>>6 grapes in total. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: The distance from Earth to the Sun is typically about 11 Astronomical Units. If we were to travel an additional 9 Astronomical Units beyond the sun, how many Astronomical Units away would we be from Earth?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The distance from Earth to the Sun is 11 Astronomical Units. If we travel an additional 9 Astronomical Units beyond the Sun, we would be 11+9 = <<11+9=20>>20 Astronomical Units away from Earth. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: In our previous scenario, we considered the distance as if the Earth was 11 Astronomical Units away from the Sun. However, the real distance from Earth to the Sun is about 7 Astronomical Units. If we were to travel an additional 9 Astronomical Units beyond this real distance, how many Astronomical Units away would we be from Earth now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The real distance from Earth to the Sun is 7 Astronomical Units. If we travel an additional 9 Astronomical Units beyond this real distance, we would be 7+9 = <<7+9=16>>16 Astronomical Units away from Earth. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: Katie typed 2 pages for her research paper. Afterwards, she found that she needed to delete a page. How many pages does her research paper have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Katie typed 2 pages for her research paper. Katie deleted 1 page from her research paper. Katie's research paper has 2-1 = <<2-1=1>>1 page now. ### Answer: 1
Expected answer: 1
Correct? Yes
Problem: Katie realizes her research isn't complete and decides to add an extra page for each existing page in her research paper. How many total pages does her research paper have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Katie's research paper has 1 page. Katie adds 1 extra page for each existing page in her research paper. Katie's research paper has 1+1 = <<1+1=2>>2 pages now. ### Answer: 2
Expected answer: 2
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose initially Katie typed 10 pages for her research paper instead of 2. Afterwards, she found that she needed to delete a page. How many pages would her research paper have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Katie typed 10 pages for her research paper. Katie deleted 1 page from her research paper. Katie's research paper has 10-1 = <<10-1=9>>9 pages now. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: At the jungle gym, Lana counts a total of 9 monkey bars. An additional 5 bars are added to make the experience more thrilling. How many monkey bars are there on the jungle gym after the addition?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Initially, there are 9 monkey bars. After adding 5 more bars, the total number of monkey bars becomes 9 + 5 = <<9+5=14>>14. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous scenario at the jungle gym, there were initially 14 monkey bars instead of 9. Once again, an additional 5 bars are added. How many monkey bars are there on the jungle gym after the addition now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Initially, there are 14 monkey bars. After adding 5 more bars, the total number of monkey bars becomes 14 + 5 = <<14+5=19>>19. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sarah has 12 crayons in her art supply, but she loses 9 while at school. How many crayons does Sarah have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sarah has 12-9 = <<12-9=3>>3 crayons left. ### Answer: 3
Expected answer: 3
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of having 17 crayons originally, Sarah remembered she actually started the day with 9 fewer crayons, i.e., 17 - 9 crayons. How many crayons did she really start with?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sarah really started with 17-9 = <<17-9=8>>8 crayons. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: A farmer has 4 chickens in one coop and adds another 5 chickens to the same coop later in the day. How many chickens are there in the coop now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The farmer has 4+5 = <<4+5=9>>9 chickens in the coop now. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing from the previous scenario, the farmer decided to bring in another 8 chickens to the same coop very next day. How many chickens are in the coop now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The farmer has 9+8 = <<9+8=17>>17 chickens in the coop now. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: John bought 20 lemons initially. He used 18 lemons to make lemonade. How many lemons does he have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John has 20-18 = <<20-18=2>>2 lemons left. ### Answer: 2
Expected answer: 2
Correct? Yes
Problem: John originally thought he used 18 lemons to make lemonade. But then he remembered that he actually just used 4 lemons. So, how many lemons would he have had left initially, if he had started with 20?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John would have had 20-4 = <<20-4=16>>16 lemons left. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: A teacher had 11 student papers to grade, but she has already graded 6 of them. How many papers does she still have to grade?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The teacher has 11-6 = <<11-6=5>>5 papers left to grade. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: After the teacher grades the remaining papers, she finds another pile of 9 papers. However, due to a mix-up, some of these papers were already graded. The number of already graded papers was the same as the number of ungraded papers she had before. How many ungraded papers does she have now in this new pile?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The teacher had 5 ungraded papers before. Since the number of already graded papers in the new pile is the same as the number of ungraded papers she had before, there are 5 already graded papers in the new pile. Therefore, the number of ungraded papers in the new pile is 9-5 = <<9-5=4>>4. ### Answer: 4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: On the first day, a cat catches 14 mice, but 4 of them escape. The cat then adds 7 more mice the following day. How many mice does the cat catch in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The cat catches 14-4 = <<14-4=10>>10 mice on the first day. The cat catches 10+7 = <<10+7=17>>17 mice in total. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of initially catching 14 mice, suppose the cat had only managed to catch 6 mice on the first day, and 4 of them still managed to escape. With the 7 new mice she catches the following day, how many mice does the cat catch in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The cat catches 6-4 = <<6-4=2>>2 mice on the first day. The cat catches 2+7 = <<2+7=9>>9 mice in total. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: A farmer has 9 cows in one of his fields. Later that day, he brought 4 more cows into that field. How many cows does he have in that field now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The farmer has 9+4 = <<9+4=13>>13 cows in that field now. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: The farmer with 9 cows, who later added 4 more cows to the field, decided to sell 2 cows. How many cows are left in his field now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The farmer initially had 9 cows, added 4 more, making it 9+4 = <<9+4=13>>13 cows. After selling 2 cows, the number of cows left is 13-2 = <<13-2=11>>11 cows. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: The farmer initially had 9 cows in the field, but let's suppose he had actually added 5 cows to the field instead of 4. How many cows would there be in the field then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The farmer would have 9+5 = <<9+5=14>>14 cows in the field then. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: Paul has 1 foot of rope already. He then adds an additional length of 11 feet. How much total length of rope does he now have?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Paul has 1+11 = <<1+11=12>>12 feet of rope now. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing from the last situation, Paul finds an extra 5 feet of rope in his toolbox. After adding it to the rope he already has, how much total length of rope does he now have?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Paul has 12+5 = <<12+5=17>>17 feet of rope now. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: Revisiting the scenario with Paul's rope, let's slightly change it: suppose initially Paul had 3 feet of rope, and he still adds an extra length of 11 feet. In this case, how much total length of rope does Paul now have?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Paul has 3+11 = <<3+11=14>>14 feet of rope now. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: A farmer has 11 ducks. One day, a new baby duckling joins them. How many ducks does the farmer now have?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The farmer now has 11+1 = <<11+1=12>>12 ducks. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: After the new duckling joined, the farmer noticed after a while that 2 of his ducks had wandered off and gotten lost. How many ducks does the farmer have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The farmer now has 12-2 = <<12-2=10>>10 ducks. ### Answer: 10
Expected answer: 10
Correct? Yes
Problem: The farmer was mistaken in his original count. He initially only had 5 ducks, not 11, before the new duckling joined them. How many ducks does the farmer actually have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The farmer now has 5+1 = <<5+1=6>>6 ducks. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: A mermaid found 8 beautiful pearls but she gave 1 of them to her mermaid friend. How many pearls does she have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The mermaid had 8 pearls and gave 1 away, so she now has 8-1 = <<8-1=7>>7 pearls. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: After giving one pearl to her friend, the mermaid finds 13 more pearls during her next underwater journey. How many pearls does she have in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The mermaid had 7 pearls and found 13 more, so she now has 7+13 = <<7+13=20>>20 pearls. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the same scenario, let's say our mermaid initially found 6 beautiful pearls instead of 8, but she still gave 1 pearl to her friend as before. How many pearls would she have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The mermaid had 6 pearls and gave 1 away, so she now has 6-1 = <<6-1=5>>5 pearls. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mia has 7 pairs of roller skates. She gave 3 pairs to her best friend. How many pairs of roller skates does Mia have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mia has 7-3 = <<7-3=4>>4 pairs of roller skates now. ### Answer: 4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: After giving away 3 pairs, Mia buys some more roller skates at the store. She now has a total of 13 pairs of roller skates. How many pairs of roller skates did she buy at the store?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mia bought 13-4 = <<13-4=9>>9 pairs of roller skates at the store. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's say initially Mia did not have 7 pairs of roller skates, but only 10 pairs. If she still gave 3 pairs to her best friend as before, how many pairs of roller skates would she have left now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mia has 10-3 = <<10-3=7>>7 pairs of roller skates now. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: Catherine has 5 roses in her front garden. She then plants 8 more roses. How many roses in total does she have in her front garden now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Catherine has 5+8 = <<5+8=13>>13 roses in total. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: After Catherine plants the 8 roses, her little brother decides to add 4 more roses to the garden. How many roses are there in the garden now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 13+4 = <<13+4=17>>17 roses in the garden now. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose that initially, Catherine only had 3 roses instead of 5 in her front garden before planting the 8 additional roses. How many roses in total would there be in the garden then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Catherine has 3+8 = <<3+8=11>>11 roses in total. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: George has 7 boats. He sells 2 of them to Billy. How many boats does George have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: George has 7-2 = <<7-2=5>>5 boats left. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: After selling 2 boats, George goes to the boat market and buys 14 more boats. How many boats does George have in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: George has 5+14 = <<5+14=19>>19 boats in total now. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: If initially George had 13 boats instead of 7, and he still sold 2 boats to Billy, how many boats would George have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: George has 13-2 = <<13-2=11>>11 boats left. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: Emily had 5 books on her shelf. She went to the bookstore and bought an additional 15 books. How many books does she have in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Emily bought 15 books. Emily now has 5+15 = <<5+15=20>>20 books in total. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: A plane has 15 passengers onboard. 1 passenger exits the plane before it takes off. How many passengers are left on the plane?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 15-1 = <<15-1=14>>14 passengers left on the plane. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: After the plane takes off, another passenger decides to skydive, leaving the plane mid-flight. How many passengers are now left on the plane?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 14-1 = <<14-1=13>>13 passengers left on the plane. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: Earlier, the plane had initially 7 passengers instead of 15. If one passenger still exits the plane before take-off as before, how many passengers would be left on the plane?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 7-1 = <<7-1=6>>6 passengers left on the plane. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: Stella has a box that can fit a total of 20 dolls. If 17 dolls are already placed in it, how many more dolls can Stella fit in the box?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Stella can fit 20-17 = <<20-17=3>>3 more dolls in the box. ### Answer: 3
Expected answer: 3
Correct? Yes
Problem: If Stella found another box that can hold 15 more dolls, how many dolls in total can she now store in both boxes?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Stella can store 20+15 = <<20+15=35>>35 dolls in total in both boxes. ### Answer: 35
Expected answer: 18
Correct? No
Problem: Instead of 17, if Stella initially had only 7 dolls in the box, then how many more dolls can she fit in the box?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Stella can fit 20-7 = <<20-7=13>>13 more dolls in the box. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: A snail named Sal traveled 14 inches in the morning. In the afternoon, Sal scurried another 6 inches. How far did Sal travel in total in one day?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sal traveled 14+6 = <<14+6=20>>20 inches in total in one day. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: After her long journey, Sal the snail decides to backtrack a bit to meet a friend, moving 9 inches in the opposite direction. How many inches away from her starting point is Sal now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sal is now 20-9 = <<20-9=11>>11 inches away from her starting point. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose Sal the snail originally traveled only 9 inches in the morning instead of 14, but still traveled 6 inches in the afternoon. How far did Sal travel in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sal traveled 9+6 = <<9+6=15>>15 inches in total in one day. ### Answer: 15
Expected answer: 15
Correct? Yes
Problem: A forest has 18 trees in total. Later 10 trees were cut down. How many trees are left standing in the forest?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 18-10 = <<18-10=8>>8 trees left standing in the forest. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: A forest has 18 trees in total. Later 10 trees were cut down leaving some trees standing. But the next day, the forest team decides to plant new trees aiming to have a total of 17 trees in the forest. How many trees they need to plant to reach their goal?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 18-10 = <<18-10=8>>8 trees left standing in the forest. The forest team needs to plant 17-8 = <<17-8=9>>9 trees to reach their goal. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the original scenario, the forest had 18 trees and 10 were cut down. But what would have happened if the forest originally had just 18 trees and only 4 were cut down? How many trees would have been left standing in the forest then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There would have been 18-4 = <<18-4=14>>14 trees left standing in the forest. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sara had one scooter at home. Then she got four more scooters as gifts. How many scooters does she have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sara has 1+4 = <<1+4=5>>5 scooters now. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sara put all of her scooters in a line and discovered she could make another identical line with the same number of scooters. How many scooters does she have when she combines both lines?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sara has 5+5 = <<5+5=10>>10 scooters when she combines both lines. ### Answer: 10
Expected answer: 10
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's consider a different scenario. If Sara originally had only one scooter at home and then received two more as gifts instead of four, how many scooters would she have in this case?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sara has 1+2 = <<1+2=3>>3 scooters now. ### Answer: 3
Expected answer: 3
Correct? Yes
Problem: During a day at the park, Avery spotted 8 white fluffy clouds in the morning. In the afternoon, she saw 11 more. How many clouds did Avery see in total during her day at the park?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Avery saw 8+11 = <<8+11=19>>19 clouds in total during her day at the park. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of seeing 8 white fluffy clouds in the morning at the park, what if Avery had only spotted 5? Keeping the number of clouds Avery saw in the afternoon at 11, how many clouds would she have seen in total for the day?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Avery would have seen 5+11 = <<5+11=16>>16 clouds in total for the day. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: A farmer has 14 hens in total. After a fox took away 2 hens, how many hens does the farmer have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The farmer initially had 14 hens. After the fox took away 2 hens, the farmer has 14 - 2 = <<14-2=12>>12 hens left. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: At the farm, there were initially 11 potatoes in one sack. After removing 8 potatoes, the remaining were transferred to another sack which already contained 15 potatoes. How many potatoes were there in the new sack?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: After removing 8 potatoes, there were 11-8 = <<11-8=3>>3 potatoes left in the first sack. The new sack then contained 15+3 = <<15+3=18>>18 potatoes. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing from the previous scenario, at the farm, the farmer realizes he has mistakenly added 2 spoiled potatoes to the new sack. He quickly disposes of them. How many potatoes are now left in the sack?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Initially, the new sack contained 18 potatoes. After removing the 2 spoiled potatoes, the number of potatoes left in the sack is 18-2 = <<18-2=16>>16 potatoes. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: At a circus, a clown juggles 3 apples and then adds 16 more to his act. Later, he decides to add an extra apple for a challenge. How many apples is the clown juggling now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The clown starts with 3 apples and adds 16 more, making a total of 3+16 = <<3+16=19>>19 apples. Then, he adds an extra apple, making the total number of apples 19+1 = <<19+1=20>>20 apples. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: After the clown's juggling act, his partner offers to take some of the apples. He takes 18 apples away from the total that the clown has. How many apples does the clown have left to juggle now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The clown has 20 apples and his partner takes 18 away, leaving the clown with 20-18 = <<20-18=2>>2 apples. ### Answer: 2
Expected answer: 2
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's go back to the clown's juggling act. This time, instead of adding 16 apples to his initial 3, he adds only 9 to the 3 he's already juggling. Then he proceeds to add an extra apple again for a challenge. How many apples is the clown juggling now with this reset?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The clown starts with 3 apples and adds 9 more, making a total of 3+9 = <<3+9=12>>12 apples. Then, he adds an extra apple, making the total number of apples 12+1 = <<12+1=13>>13 apples. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: A pirate has 13 gold coins in his chest. After spending 4 coins to bribe a fellow pirate, how many coins does he have left in his chest?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The pirate has 13-4 = <<13-4=9>>9 coins left in his chest. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: The pirate decided to go on a treasure hunt and managed to find 7 more gold coins to add to his chest. Now, how many coins does he have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The pirate now has 9+7 = <<9+7=16>>16 coins in his chest. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: Considering instead that the pirate originally had 13 coins and this time he spent 6 to bribe an island guard, how many gold coins does he now have left in his chest before finding any additional treasure?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The pirate has 13-6 = <<13-6=7>>7 coins left in his chest. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: Merlin puts together 6 puzzle pieces in the morning, and then adds 5 more pieces in the afternoon. How many puzzle pieces has he put together in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Merlin put together 6+5 = <<6+5=11>>11 puzzle pieces in total. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: A river has 6 tributaries on its left side and 8 on the right side. How many tributaries does the river have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The river has 6+8 = <<6+8=14>>14 tributaries in total. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: Liam has 14 play toys in his sandbox. After getting a few new toys as gifts, he has added 4 more toys into his sandbox. How many toys does he have now in his sandbox?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Liam has 14+4 = <<14+4=18>>18 toys in his sandbox now. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: The next day, Liam's friend comes over to play and brings along 19 new toys to add to the sandbox. However, the sandbox could not fit any more toys after reaching a limit. If the number of toys currently in the sandbox is subtracted from the 19 new toys, how many toys did Liam's friend have left over that didn't fit into the sandbox?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Liam's sandbox can only hold 18 toys, so 19-18 = <<19-18=1>>1 toy did not fit into the sandbox. ### Answer: 1
Expected answer: 1
Correct? Yes
Problem: After sorting through the toys, Liam realizes that instead of 14 toys he initially thought he had in the sandbox, he actually only had 12. After adding the 4 new toys from earlier, how many toys are now in the sandbox?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Liam has 12+4 = <<12+4=16>>16 toys in his sandbox now. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: During the office event, Julie drank a total of 20 cups of hot chocolate. Before going to bed, she got anxious and decided to deduct 18 cups from her record, so as to feel healthier. How many cups of hot chocolate does she now pretend she drank at the event?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Julie drank 20-18 = <<20-18=2>>2 cups of hot chocolate. ### Answer: 2
Expected answer: 2
Correct? Yes
Problem: Immediately after bragging to her friend, Julie remembers that she, in fact, drank 20 cups but had initially subtracted 5 cups, not 18, from her own records out of confusion. How many cups of hot chocolate did she actually claim as per her corrected record?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Julie drank 20-5 = <<20-5=15>>15 cups of hot chocolate. ### Answer: 15
Expected answer: 15
Correct? Yes
Problem: A constellation of stars consisted of 11 stars at first. After a comet passed by, 3 stars dimmed and are not easily visible anymore. How many stars are left in the constellation that are still easily visible?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 11-3 = <<11-3=8>>8 stars left in the constellation that are still easily visible. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose that originally the constellation had 18 stars instead of 11. After the comet passed, 3 stars became dim. How many stars would remain easily visible then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There would be 18-3 = <<18-3=15>>15 stars left in the constellation that are still easily visible. ### Answer: 15
Expected answer: 15
Correct? Yes
Problem: During a camping trip, Max put together 1 tent for himself. Later, he was joined by 7 of his friends and each of them needed their own tent. How many tents in total did Max put up?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Max put up 1 tent for himself. Max's friends put up 7 tents. Max put up a total of 1+7 = <<1+7=8>>8 tents. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: After setting up tents for himself and his friends, Max realized that another group of 9 friends showed up unexpectedly. He quickly assembled tents for each of them too. How many tents has Max set up in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Max put up 8 tents for himself and his friends. Max put up 9 tents for the new group of friends. Max put up a total of 8+9 = <<8+9=17>>17 tents. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if initially, instead of setting up 1 tent for himself, Max had set up 11 tents for a group of scouts? If he still added 7 more for his friends who showed up, how many tents would Max have set up in total then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Max set up 11 tents for the scouts. Max's friends added 7 more tents. Max set up a total of 11+7 = <<11+7=18>>18 tents. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jacob has 14 pairs of pants, and he just bought a new pair. How many pairs of pants does he now have in his wardrobe?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jacob has 14+1 = <<14+1=15>>15 pairs of pants in his wardrobe. ### Answer: 15
Expected answer: 15
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if instead of buying just one pair of pants, Jacob bought 6 pairs instead? Now, how many pairs of pants does Jacob have in his wardrobe?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jacob has 14+6 = <<14+6=20>>20 pairs of pants in his wardrobe. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: A UFO contacted Earth and displayed a sequence of 18 lights. However, 12 of those turned out to be a ruse and only functioned as a distraction. How many of the displayed lights were actually significant?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The UFO displayed 18-12 = <<18-12=6>>6 lights that were actually significant. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the same UFO incident, suppose initially there were 20 significant lights displayed instead of the thought 18. If the 12 lights disguised as a distraction still hold true, then how many real significant lights would there have been in this situation?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Initially, there were 20 significant lights displayed. If 12 of those were a ruse, then the number of real significant lights would be 20-12 = <<20-12=8>>8. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: John had 6 pairs of roller skates, but he gave 2 pairs away to his friends. He then bought 5 more pairs from a garage sale. How many pairs of roller skates does John have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John had 6-2 = <<6-2=4>>4 pairs of roller skates after giving 2 pairs away. John has 4+5 = <<4+5=9>>9 pairs of roller skates now. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: After sorting out his roller skate collection, John decides to go shopping again and buys an additional 11 pairs of roller skates. How many pairs of roller skates does John have in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John had 9 pairs of roller skates before buying more. John now has 9+11 = <<9+11=20>>20 pairs of roller skates in total. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose that John originally had 11 pairs of roller skates, not 6, before giving away 2 pairs and subsequently buying 5 pairs from a garage sale. How many pairs of roller skates would John have then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John had 11-2 = <<11-2=9>>9 pairs of roller skates after giving 2 pairs away. John has 9+5 = <<9+5=14>>14 pairs of roller skates now. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: In a park, there are 3 squirrels playing on a tree and 6 more squirrels foraging on the ground. How many squirrels are there in total in that part of the park?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 3+6 = <<3+6=9>>9 squirrels in total in that part of the park. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: In addition to the 9 squirrels in one part of the park, there are an equal number of squirrels in another part of the park. How many squirrels are there in total in both parts of the park?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 9+9 = <<9+9=18>>18 squirrels in total in both parts of the park. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: In a different scenario, instead of there being 3 squirrels playing on a tree in the park, what if there are 13 squirrels playing on the tree while the same 6 squirrels are still foraging on the ground? How many squirrels would there be in total in that part of the park now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 13+6 = <<13+6=19>>19 squirrels in total in that part of the park. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: Daisy initially had 13 lemons. After making lemonade, she ended up using 2 lemons. How many lemons does Daisy have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Daisy initially had 13 lemons. After making lemonade, she used 2 lemons. Therefore, Daisy has 13 - 2 = <<13-2=11>>11 lemons left. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: In addition to the lemons she had left, Daisy buys 8 more lemons from the store. How many lemons does she have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Daisy had 11 lemons left. She buys 8 more lemons from the store. Therefore, Daisy now has 11 + 8 = <<11+8=19>>19 lemons. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose, originally Daisy had 18 lemons instead of 13. After making lemonade, if she still used 2 lemons as before, how many lemons would she have left now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Daisy initially had 18 lemons. After making lemonade, she used 2 lemons. Therefore, Daisy has 18 - 2 = <<18-2=16>>16 lemons left. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: In a robotics competition, William's robot can score 13 points in total. However, due to a minor technical malfunction, it scores 8 points less. After fixing the issue, he manages to accrue an additional 5 points. What is his robot's total score now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: William's robot scores 13-8 = <<13-8=5>>5 points after the malfunction. After fixing the issue, his robot scores 5+5 = <<5+5=10>>10 points. ### Answer: 10
Expected answer: 10
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the previous situation, William's robot encounters another malfunction and loses 3 points from its total score. What is his robot's total score now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: William's robot's total score was 10 points. After the new malfunction, his robot's score is 10-3 = <<10-3=7>>7 points. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: At the beginning of the day, the sky was clear with 8 rainbows spotted by an observatory. Later, the weather changed and 4 additional rainbows appeared. How many rainbows were seen in total by the observatory that day?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The total number of rainbows seen by the observatory that day is 8+4 = <<8+4=12>>12. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: After the 12 rainbows appeared, one of them faded away. How many rainbows remained visible in the sky at the end of the day?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The number of rainbows remaining visible in the sky at the end of the day is 12-1 = <<12-1=11>>11. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's say instead of 8 rainbows appearing at the beginning of the day, only 4 rainbows were spotted. Later, the weather still changed and 4 additional rainbows appeared as before. How many rainbows would have been seen in total by the observatory under these circumstances?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The total number of rainbows seen by the observatory under these circumstances would be 4+4 = <<4+4=8>>8. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: A dolphin trainer starts with 15 fish to give as rewards during training sessions. After the first series of tricks, he has already given 10 fish to the dolphins. How many fish does he have left for the rest of the session?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The trainer started with 15 fish and has given away 10 fish, so he has 15-10 = <<15-10=5>>5 fish left for the rest of the session. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose that instead of giving 10 fish to the dolphins during the first series of tricks, the trainer had only given 6 fish. If he started with 15 fish, how many fish would he have left for the rest of the session in this scenario?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The trainer started with 15 fish and has given away 6 fish, so he has 15-6 = <<15-6=9>>9 fish left for the rest of the session. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: Chloe baked 2 cookies in the morning and additionally baked 14 cookies in the evening. How many cookies did Chloe bake in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Chloe baked 2+14 = <<2+14=16>>16 cookies in total. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose Chloe initially baked 6 cookies in the morning instead of 2, and additionally baked 14 cookies in the evening like before. How many cookies did Chloe bake in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Chloe baked 6+14 = <<6+14=20>>20 cookies in total. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: A zookeeper spotted 7 elephants when he entered the enclosure. To his surprise, a new arrival was added. How many elephants are there in the enclosure now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 7+1 = <<7+1=8>>8 elephants in the enclosure now. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: Alexa has a collection of 7 pairs of silver earrings. She buys 11 more pairs from an online shop. After giving 2 pairs to her best friend, how many pairs of earrings does she end up with?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Alexa has 7+11 = <<7+11=18>>18 pairs of earrings after buying more. After giving 2 pairs to her friend, she has 18-2 = <<18-2=16>>16 pairs of earrings. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: After a few days, she found 2 pairs of earrings that she previously misplaced. Adding those to her current collection, how many pairs of earrings does Alexa have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Alexa has 16+2 = <<16+2=18>>18 pairs of earrings now. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose instead Alexa initially had 7 pairs of earrings, but this time she buys an additional 12 pairs online. After still giving 2 pairs to her friend, how many pairs of earrings would she have then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Alexa has 7+12 = <<7+12=19>>19 pairs of earrings after buying more. After giving 2 pairs to her friend, she has 19-2 = <<19-2=17>>17 pairs of earrings. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: A deck of cards has 8 suits: hearts and spades, plus 1 special suit. How many suits are there in total in the deck?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 8 suits in total in the deck. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose initially, the deck had 9 traditional suits in addition to the 1 special suit Arya found earlier. In this case, how many suits were there in the deck originally?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There were 9 traditional suits in addition to the 1 special suit Arya found earlier. There were 9+1 = <<9+1=10>>10 suits in the deck originally. ### Answer: 10
Expected answer: 10
Correct? Yes
Problem: There are 8 lions at the zoo, but 7 have been moved to a different zoo. The number of tigers at the zoo is this new lion count plus 10. How many tigers are at the zoo?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 8-7 = <<8-7=1>>1 lion left at the zoo. There are 1+10 = <<1+10=11>>11 tigers at the zoo. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's change the situation a bit. Suppose there were 8 lions at the zoo, but 7 of them were still moved to a different zoo. Instead of 10 tigers, this time there are 15 tigers at the zoo, accounting for the lions that were moved. How many tigers are there now at the zoo?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 8-7 = <<8-7=1>>1 lion left at the zoo. There are 15 tigers at the zoo. ### Answer: 15
Expected answer: 16
Correct? No
Problem: In a game, Max has a treasure chest with 10 gold coins. Later, he finds another set of coins that increase his total to 9 coins more than he had initially. How many gold coins does Max have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Max initially has 10 gold coins. He finds another set of coins that increase his total to 9 more than he had initially, which means he now has 10 + 9 = <<10+9=19>>19 gold coins. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: Max suddenly realizes that he has to pay 4 gold coins as a tax to the king of the game. How many gold coins will Max be left with after paying the tax?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Max has 19 gold coins. He has to pay 4 gold coins as a tax, so he will be left with 19 - 4 = <<19-4=15>>15 gold coins. ### Answer: 15
Expected answer: 15
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose that Max initially had 11 gold coins instead of 10 in his treasure chest before he found the additional set of coins. How many gold coins would Max have then after finding the additional coins?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Max initially has 11 gold coins. He finds another set of coins that increase his total to 9 more than he had initially, which means he now has 11 + 9 = <<11+9=20>>20 gold coins. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suzy has 6 pieces of candy. She then receives 1 more from her friend. How many pieces of candy does Suzy now have?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Suzy has 6+1 = <<6+1=7>>7 pieces of candy. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the previous situation, what if Suzy initially had 7 pieces of candy instead of 6, and then she receives 1 more from her friend just like before? How many pieces of candy would Suzy have then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Suzy has 7+1 = <<7+1=8>>8 pieces of candy. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has a collection of 17 books. He goes to the bookstore and buys 2 more books. How many books does John have in his library now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John initially has 17 books. He buys 2 more books. Therefore, John now has 17+2 = <<17+2=19>>19 books in his library. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: After adding 2 new books to his library, John decides to give away 5 books as gifts to his friends. How many books does John have left in his library now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John initially has 19 books. He gives away 5 books. Therefore, John now has 19-5 = <<19-5=14>>14 books left in his library. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the original scenario, John started with 17 books, but what would have happened if he initially had only 2 books, and he still bought 2 more from the bookstore? How many books would John have had in his library then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John initially has 2 books. He buys 2 more books. Therefore, John now has 2+2 = <<2+2=4>>4 books in his library. ### Answer: 4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mary originally has 20 dolls. She gives 6 of her dolls to her friend. How many dolls does Mary have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mary has 20-6 = <<20-6=14>>14 dolls now. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing the scenario, imagine that initially Mary only had 9 dolls instead of 20. If she gave away 6 dolls to her friend as before, how many dolls would Mary have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mary has 9-6 = <<9-6=3>>3 dolls now. ### Answer: 3
Expected answer: 3
Correct? Yes
Problem: Captain Jack had 3 parrots. Later, he found and added 6 more parrots to his crew. How many parrots does Captain Jack have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Captain Jack initially had 3 parrots. He added 6 more parrots to his crew. Therefore, Captain Jack has 3 + 6 = <<3+6=9>>9 parrots in total. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: If initially, Captain Jack had 14 parrots instead of 3, and he still found and added 6 more, how many parrots would he have in total then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Captain Jack initially had 14 parrots. He added 6 more parrots to his crew. Therefore, Captain Jack would have 14 + 6 = <<14+6=20>>20 parrots in total. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: Liam has 8 piano keys to start with. Later in the day, he adds 3 more out of necessity. How many piano keys does Liam have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Liam has 8+3 = <<8+3=11>>11 piano keys now. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the additions earlier in the day, Liam decides to add 5 more piano keys to further expand his range. Now, how many piano keys does Liam have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Liam has 11+5 = <<11+5=16>>16 piano keys now. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the earlier additions, let's consider a different scenario where Liam starts with 17 piano keys instead of the original 8. If he still adds 3 more keys as he did in the previous scenario, how many piano keys would Liam have now in this case?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Liam has 17+3 = <<17+3=20>>20 piano keys now. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: A pack of lions consists of 10 female lions. The unique feature of a lion pack is that it allows 4 males, as well. How many lions are there in the pack in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 10 female lions in the pack. There are 4 male lions in the pack. There are 10+4 = <<10+4=14>>14 lions in the pack in total. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of originally having 10 female lions in the pack as mentioned in the first question, if there were 15 female lions and the 4 males still joined, how many lions would be there in the pack in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 15 female lions in the pack. There are 4 male lions in the pack. There are 15+4 = <<15+4=19>>19 lions in the pack in total. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: A doctor come across 4 patients in the morning and later treats 10 more patients in the afternoon. How many patients did the doctor treat throughout the day?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The doctor treated 4+10 = <<4+10=14>>14 patients throughout the day. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: After treating patients all day, the doctor still had other administrative tasks to complete. Initially, he had 19 tasks to finish, but he managed to complete the same number of tasks as the number of patients he treated. How many tasks does he still have left to complete?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The doctor completed 14 tasks, which is the same number as the patients he treated. He had 19 tasks initially, so he has 19-14 = <<19-14=5>>5 tasks left to complete. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jenny has 7 balloons. She gave away 6 to her friends. How many balloons does she have left now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jenny has 7-6 = <<7-6=1>>1 balloon left. ### Answer: 1
Expected answer: 1
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jenny heads back to the party and finds 10 more balloons. Including the balloons she already has, how many balloons does Jenny have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jenny has 1+10 = <<1+10=11>>11 balloons now. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose Jenny originally had 8 balloons instead of 7 before she gave away 6 to her friends. How many balloons would she have left after giving away the 6 balloons in that case?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jenny has 8-6 = <<8-6=2>>2 balloons left. ### Answer: 2
Expected answer: 2
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jimmy had 6 ice-creams and then he bought 5 more. Later, he was given 3 more ice-creams. How many ice-creams does Jimmy have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jimmy had 6+5 = <<6+5=11>>11 ice-creams after buying more. Jimmy has 11+3 = <<11+3=14>>14 ice-creams now. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the previous scenario, Jimmy later wins a contest where he receives 5 additional ice-creams. How many ice-creams does Jimmy have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jimmy had 14 ice-creams before winning the contest. Jimmy now has 14+5 = <<14+5=19>>19 ice-creams. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the previous scenario, what if Jimmy initially had 9 ice-creams instead of 5 and then following the same events, bought 6 more and was given 3 more, how many ice-creams would Jimmy have then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Jimmy had 9+6 = <<9+6=15>>15 ice-creams after buying more. Jimmy has 15+3 = <<15+3=18>>18 ice-creams now. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: An album has 15 songs in total, but Sam already listened to 9 of them. How many songs on the album has Sam not listened to yet?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sam has not listened to 15-9 = <<15-9=6>>6 songs on the album. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: After realizing that Sam has not listened to some of the songs on the album, his friend Alex decided to share 3 additional new songs with him. Now, how many songs in total has Sam not listened to yet?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sam has not listened to 6+3 = <<6+3=9>>9 songs in total. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous problem, we learned that Sam had initially not listened to some songs and Alex shared 3 additional songs with him. However, what if Sam had originally listened to 13 songs from the album instead of 9, how many songs from the album then would he have not listened to?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sam has not listened to 15-13 = <<15-13=2>>2 songs on the album. ### Answer: 2
Expected answer: 2
Correct? Yes
Problem: A wizard casts a spell that creates 12 magical orbs. Then, he performs another spell and conjures 8 more orbs. How many magical orbs does the wizard have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The wizard has 12+8 = <<12+8=20>>20 magical orbs in total. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: After conjuring up the orbs, the wizard decides to use 2 of the orbs to power his magic staff. How many magical orbs does he have left now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The wizard has 20-2 = <<20-2=18>>18 magical orbs left. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's consider a change. Instead of creating 12 magical orbs initially, the wizard had only conjured up 10 orbs. Then, he performed another spell and made 8 more orbs. How many magical orbs would the wizard have in total in this case?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The wizard has 10+8 = <<10+8=18>>18 magical orbs in total. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: A young dinosaur enthusiast has 13 dinosaur figurines. He decides to give 8 of them to his best friend. How many dinosaur figurines is he left with?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The dinosaur enthusiast starts with 13 dinosaur figurines. He gives away 8 of them. So, he is left with 13 - 8 = <<13-8=5>>5 dinosaur figurines. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: After a thoughtful night, the young dinosaur enthusiast decides to give one more of his dinosaur figurines to his best friend. How many dinosaur figurines does he have left then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The dinosaur enthusiast had 5 dinosaur figurines. He gives away 1 more. So, he is left with 5 - 1 = <<5-1=4>>4 dinosaur figurines. ### Answer: 4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if initially, the young dinosaur enthusiast had given 6 of his dinosaur figurines to his best friend instead of 8? How many dinosaur figurines would he have left then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The dinosaur enthusiast starts with 13 dinosaur figurines. He gives away 6 of them. So, he is left with 13 - 6 = <<13-6=7>>7 dinosaur figurines. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: Maya has 20 total beads. She uses 6 beads to make her first bracelet. How many beads are left to use for her next bracelet?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Maya has 20-6 = <<20-6=14>>14 beads left to use for her next bracelet. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: After making that first bracelet, Maya uses all the remaining beads to make a second bracelet. If that second bracelet needs 18 beads in total, how many more beads does Maya need to complete it?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Maya needs 18-14 = <<18-14=4>>4 more beads to complete the second bracelet. ### Answer: 4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if Maya initially had 9 beads instead of 6 when she started making her first bracelet? How many beads would she have left to use for her next bracelet?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Maya has 20-9 = <<20-9=11>>11 beads left to use for her next bracelet. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: A doctor starts her day with 15 patients. She successfully attends to 9 of these patients in the morning. How many patients does she still need to attend to?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The doctor has 15-9 = <<15-9=6>>6 patients left to attend to. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: After checking her schedule again, the doctor realizes that there were actually 16 patients to start with, not 15. After attending to 9 of these patients in the morning, how many patients does she now have left to attend to?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The doctor has 16-9 = <<16-9=7>>7 patients left to attend to. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has 11 blue pens and 5 red pens. How many pens does John have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John has 11+5 = <<11+5=16>>16 pens in total. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: Farmer Bob harvested 7 potatoes from his garden in the morning. In the afternoon, he found an additional 9 potatoes. However, he realised he had to give 10 of his harvested potatoes to his neighbour as part of an agreement. How many potatoes did Farmer Bob have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Farmer Bob harvested a total of 7+9 = <<7+9=16>>16 potatoes. After giving away 10 potatoes, Farmer Bob had 16-10 = <<16-10=6>>6 potatoes left. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: After giving his neighbour the agreed-upon potatoes, Farmer Bob found another patch of potatoes in his garden and harvested 14 more. How many potatoes does he have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Farmer Bob had 6 potatoes left after giving away 10. After harvesting another 14 potatoes, Farmer Bob now has 6+14 = <<6+14=20>>20 potatoes. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose Farmer Bob originally harvested 7 potatoes in the morning and then found 4 more in the afternoon, instead of the 9 he originally found. After giving his neighbour 10 potatoes, how many potatoes would he have then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Farmer Bob harvested a total of 7+4 = <<7+4=11>>11 potatoes. After giving away 10 potatoes, Farmer Bob had 11-10 = <<11-10=1>>1 potato left. ### Answer: 1
Expected answer: 1
Correct? Yes
Problem: Alexa baked a cake full of 15 cherries. Then, she ate 6 cherries from the cake. Later, she decided to add 8 more cherries to the cake. How many cherries are there now on the cake?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: After eating 6 cherries, there are 15-6 = <<15-6=9>>9 cherries left on the cake. After adding 8 more cherries, there are 9+8 = <<9+8=17>>17 cherries on the cake now. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: After putting on the additional cherries, Alexa decided the cake looked a little bare, so she added 2 more cherries. How many cherries are now on the cake in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: After adding 2 more cherries, there are 17+2 = <<17+2=19>>19 cherries on the cake now. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: In our previous scenario, Alexa started with 9 cherries on her cake instead of 15. After eating 6 cherries and then adding 8 more, how many cherries would be on the cake?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: After eating 6 cherries, there are 9-6 = <<9-6=3>>3 cherries left on the cake. After adding 8 more cherries, there are 3+8 = <<3+8=11>>11 cherries on the cake now. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: There are 3 small trees and 6 medium trees in a park. How many trees will be there if 9 additional big trees are planted?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 3+6 = <<3+6=9>>9 trees in the park. There will be 9+9 = <<9+9=18>>18 trees in the park after 9 additional big trees are planted. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous scenario, what if instead of planting 9 big trees, we had only planted 8 big trees? How many trees would there be in the park then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 3+6 = <<3+6=9>>9 trees in the park. There will be 9+8 = <<9+8=17>>17 trees in the park after 8 additional big trees are planted. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has 7 glasses on a shelf. He goes to the store and buys 3 more glasses. How many glasses does he have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John has 7+3 = <<7+3=10>>10 glasses now. ### Answer: 10
Expected answer: 10
Correct? Yes
Problem: Imagine if instead of 7 glasses, John originally had 12 glasses on the shelf along with the 7 he bought from the store. How many glasses would John have then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John has 12+7 = <<12+7=19>>19 glasses now. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: A zookeeper has 2 lions in one section of the zoo and 8 lions in a separate section. How many lions does the zookeeper have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The zookeeper has 2+8 = <<2+8=10>>10 lions in total. ### Answer: 10
Expected answer: 10
Correct? Yes
Problem: After the count, two more lions are transferred from another zoo to the zookeeper's sections. Now, how many lions does the zookeeper have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The zookeeper now has 10+2 = <<10+2=12>>12 lions in total. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if instead of the initial count, the zookeeper had 12 lions in the first section and 8 lions in the second section before the new arrivals? How many lions would the zookeeper have then, before the two new lions arrived?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The zookeeper would have 12+8 = <<12+8=20>>20 lions in total before the two new lions arrived. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: A team of 9 firefighters was sent to extinguish a fire. 6 firefighters managed to get to the site immediately. How many firefighters are still on their way?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 9-6 = <<9-6=3>>3 firefighters still on their way. ### Answer: 3
Expected answer: 3
Correct? Yes
Problem: After 5 additional firefighters from another station were dispatched, how many firefighters are on their way now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 3+5 = <<3+5=8>>8 firefighters on their way now. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose the team initially consisted of 11 firefighters instead of 9. In that case, how many firefighters would still be on their way if 6 managed to get to the site immediately?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 11-6 = <<11-6=5>>5 firefighters still on their way. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: Carter wants to swing 6 times on the blue swing. After that, he wants to swing 12 more times on the red swing. How many times does Carter want to swing in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Carter wants to swing 6+12 = <<6+12=18>>18 times in total. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of wanting to swing 6 times on the blue swing and 12 times on the red swing, Carter changes his mind and decides he wants to swing 6 times on both the blue and red swing. How many times does Carter now want to swing in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Carter wants to swing 6+6 = <<6+6=12>>12 times in total. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: There are 5 rooms on the ground floor of a house. If the total number of rooms in the house is 18, how many rooms are there above the ground floor?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 18-5 = <<18-5=13>>13 rooms above the ground floor. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: Not only that, but there is also a basement to consider. If we count the basement as a room, how many rooms in the house are there above the ground floor or in the basement?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 13+1 = <<13+1=14>>14 rooms above the ground floor or in the basement. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sara blows 1 bubble. Then, she doubles the number of bubbles she just blew. How many bubbles did she blow in the second attempt?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sara blew 1 bubble in the first attempt. She doubled the number of bubbles in the second attempt, so she blew 1*2 = <<1*2=2>>2 bubbles in the second attempt. ### Answer: 2
Expected answer: 2
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of blowing 1 bubble on her first attempt, suppose Sara blew 5 bubbles. If she doubled the number of bubbles from this new first attempt on her second attempt, how many bubbles would she have blown in the second attempt?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sara blew 5 bubbles in the first attempt. She doubled the number of bubbles in the second attempt, so she blew 5*2 = <<5*2=10>>10 bubbles in the second attempt. ### Answer: 10
Expected answer: 10
Correct? Yes
Problem: Carlos has 6 strings for his kites. Some one gives him 11 more strings. How many strings does Carlos have in total for his kites?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Carlos has 6+11 = <<6+11=17>>17 strings in total for his kites. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous scenario, Carlos initially had 6 kite strings. But what if instead he was given 14 more strings instead of 11? How many kite strings would he have in total then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Carlos has 6+14 = <<6+14=20>>20 strings in total for his kites. ### Answer: 20
Expected answer: 20
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mark has written 3 letters to his parents and an additional 8 letters to his friends. How many letters has Mark written in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mark has written 3+8 = <<3+8=11>>11 letters in total. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: After writing all his previous letters, Mark remembers one more friend to whom he wishes to write. After including this letter, how many letters has Mark written in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mark has written 11+1 = <<11+1=12>>12 letters in total. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose originally, Mark only wrote 3 letters to his parents instead of 5 and still wrote 2 letters to his friends. How many letters would he have written in total then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Mark would have written 3+2 = <<3+2=5>>5 letters in total. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: Tina has 1 apple and she finds 8 more apples under the apple tree. How many apples does she have altogether?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Tina has 1+8 = <<1+8=9>>9 apples altogether. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: Tina eats 8 of the apples she has collected. How many apples does she have left now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Tina has 9-8 = <<9-8=1>>1 apple left. ### Answer: 1
Expected answer: 1
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of finding 8 more apples, what would have been the total number of apples Tina had if she only found 6 more under the apple tree?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: If Tina found 6 more apples, she would have 1+6 = <<1+6=7>>7 apples altogether. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: At the zoo, we spotted 6 giraffes in one area, but 4 wandered off to another part of the habitat. A little later, an additional 11 giraffes came over from a neighboring enclosure. How many giraffes are now in this part of the habitat?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: There are 6-4 = <<6-4=2>>2 giraffes left in the first area. There are 2+11 = <<2+11=13>>13 giraffes now in this part of the habitat. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sam has 18 chocolate candies. He eats 16 of them while watching a movie. How many chocolates does he have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sam has 18-16 = <<18-16=2>>2 chocolates left. ### Answer: 2
Expected answer: 2
Correct? Yes
Problem: After watching the movie, Sam's brother gives him 16 more chocolate candies. How many chocolates does Sam have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sam has 2+16 = <<2+16=18>>18 chocolates now. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if Sam initially had 18 chocolate candies but only ate 6 while watching the movie? How many chocolates would he have left in this case?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Sam has 18-6 = <<18-6=12>>12 chocolates left. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: John bought 9 shirts last week but gave 6 shirts away to his friends. How many shirts does John have left now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John has 9-6 = <<9-6=3>>3 shirts left. ### Answer: 3
Expected answer: 3
Correct? Yes
Problem: After realizing he gave away too many, John decided to buy 13 more shirts. How many shirts does John have now in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: John has 3+13 = <<3+13=16>>16 shirts now. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: John originally thought he had bought 17 shirts last week, but then he remembered he only bought 6 before giving some away to his friends. How many shirts would John have left if he actually started with 17 shirts?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: If John started with 17 shirts, he would have 17-6 = <<17-6=11>>11 shirts left. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: Peter had 16 carrots altogether. But then he gave 2 carrots to his pet rabbit, how many carrots does he have left now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Peter had 16-2 = <<16-2=14>>14 carrots left. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: Peter then notices that he needs 15 carrots to make his carrot soup recipe. How many more carrots does he need to be able to make the soup?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Peter needs 15-14 = <<15-14=1>>1 more carrot to make the soup. ### Answer: 1
Expected answer: 1
Correct? Yes
Problem: Now imagine if Peter had given 10 carrots to his pet rabbit instead of just 2. How many carrots would he have left then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Peter had 16-10 = <<16-10=6>>6 carrots left. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: A local shop opens at 13.00 hour. Five hours later, what will be the time on the clock?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The local shop opens at 13.00 hour. Five hours later, the time on the clock will be 13.00+5 = <<13+5=18>>18.00 hour. ### Answer: 18.00
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: The local shop usually closes one hour before the time it is supposed to. At what time will the shop actually close after it opens at 13.00 hour and is supposed to stay open for 5 hours?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The local shop opens at 13.00 hour. It is supposed to stay open for 5 hours, so it is supposed to close at 13.00+5 = <<13+5=18>>18.00 hour. The shop usually closes one hour before the time it is supposed to, so it will actually close at 18.00-1 = <<18-1=17>>17.00 hour. ### Answer: 17.00
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: Gary has a total of 16 pairs of pants in his wardrobe. Later, he buys a new pair on his shopping trip. How many pairs of pants does he have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Gary has 16+1 = <<16+1=17>>17 pairs of pants now. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: Janet has 8 crayons, and gives 3 of them to her friend, Anna. How many crayons does Janet have left now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Janet has 8-3 = <<8-3=5>>5 crayons left now. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: Janet finds 2 more crayons in her bag after giving some to Anna. How many crayons does she have in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Janet has 5+2 = <<5+2=7>>7 crayons in total now. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's say initially, Janet had 14 crayons instead of 8 before she gave 3 of them to her friend, Anna. How many crayons would she have had left in this case?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Janet would have had 14-3 = <<14-3=11>>11 crayons left in this case. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: A rabbit found 5 carrots in the backyard and one more in the front yard. How many carrots in total did the rabbit find?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The rabbit found 5+1 = <<5+1=6>>6 carrots in total. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: After finding those carrots, the rabbit finds one more carrot in the neighbor's yard. How many total carrots has the rabbit found now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The rabbit found 6+1 = <<6+1=7>>7 carrots in total. ### Answer: 7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: If originally the rabbit found 17 carrots in the backyard instead of 5, and still found one in the front yard, how many total carrots would the rabbit have found?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The rabbit found 17+1 = <<17+1=18>>18 carrots in total. ### Answer: 18
Expected answer: 18
Correct? Yes
Problem: Emma is on a plane that is flying 9 hours to reach her layover. After a short rest, she will then fly for another 3 hours to reach her final destination. How long is her total flying time?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The total flying time is 9+3 = <<9+3=12>>12 hours. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: An alien has 3 eyes on one side of its head and 5 on the other. How many total eyes does the alien have?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The alien has 3+5 = <<3+5=8>>8 eyes in total. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's revisit our previous question. What if the first alien only had 3 eyes on one side of its head, but still had 8 eyes on the other side. How many total eyes does this alien have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The alien has 3+8 = <<3+8=11>>11 eyes in total. ### Answer: 11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: A circus has 14 clowns, but 7 plus 3 of them decide to leave the circus. How many clowns are left at the circus?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: 7 plus 3 equals 7+3 = <<7+3=10>>10. The circus has 14-10 = <<14-10=4>>4 clowns left. ### Answer: 4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose initially, instead of 7 clowns leaving the circus, only 3 plus 3 clowns decided to leave. Then how many clowns would have been left at the circus?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: 3 plus 3 equals 3+3 = <<3+3=6>>6. The circus has 14-6 = <<14-6=8>>8 clowns left. ### Answer: 8
Expected answer: 8
Correct? Yes
Problem: Melissa has 5 blankets in her living room. She finds 14 more stashed away in her wardrobe. How many blankets does she have in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Melissa has 5+14 = <<5+14=19>>19 blankets in total. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: After counting all the blankets, Melissa decides to donate 6 of them to a local shelter. How many blankets does she have left after her kind donation?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Melissa has 19-6 = <<19-6=13>>13 blankets left after her donation. ### Answer: 13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose Melissa initially had 9 blankets in her wardrobe instead of 14. How many blankets would she have in total then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Melissa has 5+9 = <<5+9=14>>14 blankets in total. ### Answer: 14
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: A geometry box contains 18 shapes. If one shape is removed, how many shapes are left in the box?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: If one shape is removed from the box, then the number of shapes left in the box is 18-1 = <<18-1=17>>17. ### Answer: 17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: After removing one shape, there are still too many shapes left in the geometry box. Arya decides to remove 8 more shapes. How many shapes would be left in the geometry box then?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: If Arya removes 8 more shapes from the box, then the number of shapes left in the box is 17-8 = <<17-8=9>>9. ### Answer: 9
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: Charlie has 11 scooters in his collection. He then adds one more to it by purchasing the latest model. How many scooters does Charlie have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Charlie initially has 11 scooters. After purchasing one more, he has 11+1 = <<11+1=12>>12 scooters now. ### Answer: 12
Expected answer: 12
Correct? Yes
Problem: After realizing his collection is getting too big, Charlie decides to sell some of his scooters. If he sells 6 of them, how many scooters does he have left?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Charlie initially has 12 scooters. After selling 6, he has 12-6 = <<12-6=6>>6 scooters left. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of having initially 11 scooters, what if Charlie started with only 4 scooters in his collection and then added one more? How many scooters would Charlie have now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Charlie initially has 4 scooters. After purchasing one more, he has 4+1 = <<4+1=5>>5 scooters now. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the morning, Alex saw 6 dinosaurs near his campsite, and in the afternoon he saw 4 more. How many dinosaurs did Alex see in total?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Alex saw 6+4 = <<6+4=10>>10 dinosaurs in total. ### Answer: 10
Expected answer: 10
Correct? Yes
Problem: Initially, Alex saw 15 dinosaurs in the morning instead of 6. After adding the 4 he saw in the afternoon, how many dinosaurs did then Alex see before the evening?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: Alex saw 15+4 = <<15+4=19>>19 dinosaurs before the evening. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: A baby Tyrannosaurus Rex had 3 teeth when it was born. Every week, the baby T-Rex grows 3 more teeth. How many teeth does the T-Rex have after one week?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: After one week, the baby T-Rex grows 3 more teeth. So, the baby T-Rex has 3+3 = <<3+3=6>>6 teeth after one week. ### Answer: 6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: The baby Tyrannosaurus Rex with its new teeth was curious about the adult Tyrannosaurs. It learned that, on average, an adult T-Rex has 11 teeth. After growing its new teeth, how many more teeth does the baby T-Rex need to grow to have as many teeth as an adult T-Rex?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: The baby T-Rex has 6 teeth after growing its new teeth. An adult T-Rex has 11 teeth. So, the baby T-Rex needs to grow 11-6 = <<11-6=5>>5 more teeth to have as many teeth as an adult T-Rex. ### Answer: 5
Expected answer: 5
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose instead of the baby T-Rex having 3 teeth to start with, it only had 1 tooth when it was born. If it still grows 3 additional teeth each week, how many teeth will the baby T-Rex have after one week?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: After one week, the baby T-Rex grows 3 more teeth. So, the baby T-Rex has 1+3 = <<1+3=4>>4 teeth after one week. ### Answer: 4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: David has 15 beach balls. He buys 4 more from a beach toy store. How many beach balls does David have in total now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: David has 15+4 = <<15+4=19>>19 beach balls in total now. ### Answer: 19
Expected answer: 19
Correct? Yes
Problem: In addition to his collection, David gave 3 of his beach balls to his friends. How many beach balls does he have left now?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: David has 19-3 = <<19-3=16>>16 beach balls left now. ### Answer: 16
Expected answer: 16
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose initially, instead of 15, David had 11 beach balls. If he then buys 4 more from the store, how many beach balls would David have in total in this new scenario?
Qwen2-Math 72B:
Reasoning: David has 11+4 = <<11+4=15>>15 beach balls in total now. ### Answer: 15
Expected answer: 15
Correct? Yes