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Llama 3 70B on 2.NBT.B.6

Common Core Standard 2.NBT.B.6

This standard covers the following:

Add up to four two-digit numbers using strategies based on place value and properties of operations.

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: At a party, 66 teenagers and 6 adults attend at first. Later on, the number of guests increases by 62. Near the end, an additional group of 52 people join the party. How many people attended the party in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Initially, there were 66 teenagers and 6 adults, making a total of 66 + 6 = 72 guests.
Later, the number of guests increased by 62, so the total number of guests became 72 + 62 = 134.
Near the end, an additional group of 52 people joined, making the total number of guests 134 + 52 = 186.
### Answer: 186

Expected answer: 186

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the party, the hosts want to estimate the total attendance for both the party and its pre-party. At the pre-party, the original group of teenagers and adults also attended (66 teenagers and 6 adults). How many people attended both events in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The total attendance at the party was 186 people.
The pre-party had the same number of teenagers and adults as the initial group at the party, which is 66 teenagers and 6 adults, making a total of 66 + 6 = 72 people.
To find the total attendance for both events, we add the attendance at the party and the pre-party: 186 + 72 = 258.
### Answer: 258

Expected answer: 258

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Tom has 11 hats. He then buys a box of hats that contains 42 more. How many hats does Tom have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Tom initially had 11 hats. He then bought a box of hats that contains 42 more, so he now has 11 + 42 = 53 hats.
### Answer: 53

Expected answer: 53

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, what if Tom originally had 8 hats instead of 11? How many hats would Tom have after buying the box of 42 hats?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Tom initially had 8 hats. He then bought a box of hats that contains 42 more, so he now has 8 + 42 = 50 hats.
### Answer: 50

Expected answer: 50

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Penny has 9 pens in her backpack. Later in the day, she finds 56 gum wrappers in her backpack. How many items does Penny have in her backpack in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Penny has 9 pens in her backpack. She finds 56 gum wrappers, so she now has 9 pens and 56 gum wrappers. To find the total number of items, we add the number of pens and gum wrappers: 9 + 56 = 65.

### Answer: 65

Expected answer: 65

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Penny realizes she drastically underestimated the number of pens in her backpack. There are actually 90 pens, not 9. With the 56 gum wrappers, how many items does Penny have in her backpack now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Penny has 90 pens in her backpack. She also has 56 gum wrappers. To find the total number of items, we add the number of pens and gum wrappers: 90 + 56 = 146.

### Answer: 146

Expected answer: 146

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: At a beach party, one participant inflated 75 beach balls. Shortly after, another participant added 78 more beach balls. How many beach balls are there in total at the beach party?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The first participant inflated 75 beach balls. The second participant added 78 more beach balls. To find the total number of beach balls, we add the number of beach balls from each participant: 75 + 78 = 153.

### Answer: 153

Expected answer: 153

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After all the beach balls were inflated at the party, a group of latecomers showed up with 96 more beach balls of their own to add to the mix. How many beach balls are there now in total at the beach party?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that there were 153 beach balls at the party before the latecomers arrived. The latecomers brought 96 more beach balls. To find the new total, we add the number of beach balls the latecomers brought to the existing total: 153 + 96 = 249.

### Answer: 249

Expected answer: 249

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: At a party, 74 adults and 58 children were enjoying the games and food. Later, an additional 20 adults arrived. How many total people were at the party then?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Initially, there were 74 adults and 58 children, making a total of 74 + 58 = 132 people.
Later, 20 more adults arrived, so the total number of people became 132 + 20 = 152.
### Answer: 152

Expected answer: 152

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: At the party where 74 adults and 58 children were enjoying the games and food, 20 more adults arrived later. After a while, a bus with 65 more people, both adults, and children, came to join the party. How many total people were at the party after the bus arrived?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Initially, there were 74 adults and 58 children, making a total of 74 + 58 = 132 people.
Later, 20 more adults arrived, so the total number of people became 132 + 20 = 152.
After that, a bus with 65 more people arrived, making the total number of people 152 + 65 = 217.
### Answer: 217

Expected answer: 217

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Originally at the party there were 74 adults and 58 children. However, what if there were only 11 children to start with instead of 58? 20 more adults still arrive later. How many total people would be at the party then?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Initially, there were 74 adults and 11 children, making a total of 74 + 11 = 85 people.
Later, 20 more adults arrived, so the total number of people became 85 + 20 = 105.
### Answer: 105

Expected answer: 105

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A boat starts on the east coast and travels 43 squids (a joke nickname for miles) west. It then takes a detour for an additional 25 squids. After this, it travels another 33 squids. How far in total, in squids, has the boat traveled from the starting point of east coast?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The boat travels 43 squids west, which means it is 43 squids away from the east coast.
Then, it takes a detour for 25 squids, which doesn't change its east-west distance from the coast, but adds to the total distance traveled.
After that, it travels another 33 squids, which again adds to the total distance traveled.
To find the total distance traveled, we add the distances: 43 + 25 + 33 = 101 squids.
### Answer: 101

Expected answer: 101

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the last problem, the boat decides to continue its journey, traveling for another 83 squids. How far in total, in squids, has the boat traveled from the starting point of the East Coast now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The boat had already traveled 101 squids from the previous problem.
It then travels another 83 squids, which adds to the total distance traveled.
To find the new total distance traveled, we add the distances: 101 + 83 = 184 squids.
The boat is still 43 squids west of the east coast, but it has traveled a total distance of 184 squids.
### Answer: 184

Expected answer: 184

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's revisit the previous scenario. Suppose that the boat started on the East Coast and initially traveled 43 squids west, then took a detour that was only 25 squids long. But instead of moving an additional 33 squids as before, this time, it only travels another 30 squids. Now, how far, in squids, has the boat traveled from the starting point of the East Coast?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The boat travels 43 squids west, which means it is 43 squids away from the east coast.
Then, it takes a detour for 25 squids, which doesn't change its east-west distance from the coast, but adds to the total distance traveled.
After that, it travels another 30 squids west, which increases its east-west distance from the coast by 30 squids.
So, the total east-west distance from the coast is 43 + 30 = 73 squids.
The total distance traveled is the sum of the distances: 43 + 25 + 30 = 98 squids.
### Answer: 98

Expected answer: 98

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Mary has 89 guitar picks in her collection. She goes to a music festival and indicates that she will have the amount she currently has plus 60 more after the event. How many guitar picks will Mary have after the festival?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mary currently has 89 guitar picks. She will have 60 more after the festival. To find the total number of guitar picks she will have after the festival, we can add the number she currently has to the number she will get: 89 + 60 = 149.
### Answer: 149

Expected answer: 149

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the music festival, Mary's friend James gives her an additional 31 guitar picks for her collection. Now, with the ones she got from the festival and the ones James gave her, how many guitar picks does Mary have in her collection?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mary had 149 guitar picks after the festival. James gave her 31 more guitar picks. To find the total number of guitar picks Mary has now, we can add the number she had after the festival to the number James gave her: 149 + 31 = 180.
### Answer: 180

Expected answer: 180

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Instead of obtaining 60 guitar picks at the music festival, what if Mary had only managed to gather 27 more picks? How many guitar picks would Mary have had after the music festival in that case?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mary currently has 89 guitar picks. She will have 27 more after the festival. To find the total number of guitar picks she will have after the festival, we can add the number she currently has to the number she will get: 89 + 27 = 116.
### Answer: 116

Expected answer: 116

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A fisherman was in his boat out on the lake. The total length, in inches, of all the fish he caught today was 90 inches. On the way back to shore, he caught 14 more inches of fish. He also caught a total of 56 inches of fish yesterday. Before he went home he caught an additional 46 inches of fish from the dock. If he added all the inches of fish he caught together, how many total inches of fish did he catch?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's break this down step by step:

1. The fisherman caught 90 inches of fish today.
2. On the way back to shore, he caught 14 more inches of fish, so he caught a total of 90 + 14 = 104 inches of fish today.
3. Yesterday, he caught a total of 56 inches of fish.
4. Before he went home, he caught an additional 46 inches of fish from the dock.

To find the total inches of fish he caught, we add up all the inches:

104 (today) + 56 (yesterday) + 46 (from the dock) = 206 inches

### Answer: 206

Expected answer: 206

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jackie has 49 contacts on her phone. She meets new people at a conference and adds 80 more contacts. Then, her co-worker gives her a list with 27 additional contacts. How many contacts does Jackie have on her phone now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jackie initially had 49 contacts on her phone.
She added 80 more contacts, so she now has 49 + 80 = 129 contacts.
Then, her co-worker gave her a list with 27 additional contacts, so she now has 129 + 27 = 156 contacts.
### Answer: 156

Expected answer: 156

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if, instead of initially having 49 contacts, Jackie only had 32 contacts on her phone before the conference? How many contacts would she have on her phone after adding the 80 from the conference and the additional 27 from her co-worker?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jackie initially had 32 contacts on her phone.
She added 80 more contacts, so she now has 32 + 80 = 112 contacts.
Then, her co-worker gave her a list with 27 additional contacts, so she now has 112 + 27 = 139 contacts.
### Answer: 139

Expected answer: 139

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Elizabeth has 70 beads and buys another 55 beads for making her necklace. She also gets another 52 beads as a gift from her friend. How many beads does she have altogether now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Elizabeth initially had 70 beads. She bought 55 more beads, so she now has 70 + 55 = 125 beads. Then, she received 52 beads as a gift, so she now has 125 + 52 = 177 beads.

### Answer: 177

Expected answer: 177

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous question, let's consider a different scenario. Suppose initially, Elizabeth had 70 beads and still bought another 55. However, her friend, instead of giving her 52 beads, gave her 75 beads. How many beads does she have in this case?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Elizabeth initially had 70 beads. She bought 55 more beads, so she now has 70 + 55 = 125 beads. Then, she received 75 beads as a gift, so she now has 125 + 75 = 200 beads.

### Answer: 200

Expected answer: 200

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a mythical land, a unicorn, named Oscar, discovered 66 golden apples. To his surprise, after a magical event, the number of apples increased by 67. On his way back home, he found an extra 13 golden apples. How many golden apples does Oscar have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Oscar initially had 66 golden apples. After the magical event, the number of apples increased by 67, so he now had 66 + 67 = 133 apples. On his way back home, he found 13 more apples, so he now has 133 + 13 = 146 apples.

### Answer: 146

Expected answer: 146

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jenny starts her day with 96 beads. She then gets an additional bracelet that has 73 more beads than she started with. How many beads are on the new bracelet?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jenny started with 96 beads. The new bracelet has 73 more beads than she started with, so it has 96 + 73 = 169 beads.
### Answer: 169

Expected answer: 169

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After receiving the new bracelet, Jenny decides to add 2 beads that she found in her room to her collection. How many beads does Jenny have now in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jenny had 96 beads initially. The new bracelet had 169 beads. So, she had a total of 96 + 169 = 265 beads. After adding 2 more beads, she now has 265 + 2 = 267 beads.
### Answer: 267

Expected answer: 171

Correct? No

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Instead of starting the day with 96 beads, imagine that Jenny had only 29 beads to begin with. She still adds a new bracelet to her collection, which has 73 more beads than she started the day with. How many beads are on this new bracelet?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jenny started with 29 beads. The new bracelet has 73 more beads than she started with, so it has 29 + 73 = 102 beads.
### Answer: 102

Expected answer: 102

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A cat named Whiskers catches 50 mice in a year. In the same year, another cat named Velvet catches 89. How many mice combined did Whiskers and Velvet catch in that year?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of mice caught by both cats, we need to add the number of mice caught by Whiskers and Velvet.

Whiskers caught 50 mice.
Velvet caught 89 mice.

Total number of mice caught = 50 + 89 = 139

### Answer: 139

Expected answer: 139

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous problem, suppose Whiskers had a surge in hunting activity and caught an additional amount of mice equal to the combined total previously calculated. How many mice would Whiskers have caught in total by the end of the year?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We previously calculated that Whiskers and Velvet caught a combined total of 139 mice.

Whiskers had a surge in hunting activity and caught an additional 139 mice.

Total number of mice caught by Whiskers = Initial number of mice caught + Additional number of mice caught
= 50 + 139
= 189

### Answer: 189

Expected answer: 189

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Referring back to the first problem, suppose Whiskers only caught 4 mice in the year instead of 50. Considering Velvet still caught 89 mice, how many mice combined did Whiskers and Velvet catch in that year?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of mice caught by both cats, we need to add the number of mice caught by Whiskers and Velvet.

Whiskers caught 4 mice.
Velvet caught 89 mice.

Total number of mice caught = 4 + 89 = 93

### Answer: 93

Expected answer: 93

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Oliver has 80 maps in his collection. Then, he acquires an additional 77 maps. How many maps does Oliver have in his collection now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Oliver initially had 80 maps in his collection. He then acquired 77 more maps. To find the total number of maps Oliver has now, we add the initial number of maps to the additional maps: 80 + 77 = 157.

### Answer: 157

Expected answer: 157

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous question, Oliver decided to visit a flea market and found additional 61 old maps to add to his collection. Now, how many maps does Oliver have in his collection?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Oliver already had 157 maps in his collection. He then acquired 61 more maps at the flea market. To find the total number of maps Oliver has now, we add the additional maps to his existing collection: 157 + 61 = 218.

### Answer: 218

Expected answer: 218

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Consider the map collection problem again. What if Oliver originally had 72 maps instead of 80, but still added the same number of maps (77) to his collection. Now, how many maps does Oliver have in his collection?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Oliver initially had 72 maps in his collection. He then acquired 77 more maps. To find the total number of maps Oliver has now, we add the initial number of maps to the additional maps: 72 + 77 = 149.

### Answer: 149

Expected answer: 149

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Joseph was weaving a blanket and the first day, he made 17 pieces. On the second day, he added an additional 33 pieces to his work. After seeing his work, his grandmother made 19 more pieces and added them to Joseph's work. How many pieces were made in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Joseph made 17 pieces on the first day.
He added 33 more pieces on the second day, so he had a total of 17 + 33 = 50 pieces.
His grandmother added 19 more pieces, making a total of 50 + 19 = 69 pieces.
### Answer: 69

Expected answer: 69

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Mark has 79 apples from his apple picking trip. His friend gifts him more apples such that the total count is now 92 more than his initial count. A week later, his neighbor gifts him another 24 apples. How many apples does Mark have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mark initially had 79 apples. His friend gifted him 92 more apples, so Mark now has 79 + 92 = 171 apples.
A week later, his neighbor gifted him 24 more apples, so Mark now has 171 + 24 = 195 apples.
### Answer: 195

Expected answer: 195

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario, Mark's cousin visits him and, being aware of his enthusiasm for apples, gifts him another 40 apples. Now, how many apples does Mark have in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mark had 195 apples before his cousin's visit. His cousin gifted him 40 more apples, so Mark now has 195 + 40 = 235 apples.
### Answer: 235

Expected answer: 235

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Going back to Mark's initial apple count, let's say he originally had 79 apples from his apple picking trip. His friend gifts him more apples such that the total count is now 92 more than his initial count. This time, however, his neighbour gifts him another 64 apples instead of 24. How many apples does Mark have in this scenario?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mark initially had 79 apples. His friend gifted him 92 more apples, so Mark now has 79 + 92 = 171 apples.
Then, his neighbor gifted him 64 more apples, so Mark now has 171 + 64 = 235 apples.
### Answer: 235

Expected answer: 235

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a fairy realm, Twinkle, a star fairy finds 35 magical clovers. Lumina, a light fairy finds 69 more. How many magical clovers did they both find in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Twinkle found 35 magical clovers. Lumina found 69 more, so Lumina found 69 magical clovers. To find the total number of magical clovers, we add the number of clovers found by Twinkle and Lumina: 35 + 69 = 104.
### Answer: 104

Expected answer: 104

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After gathering their magical clovers, Twinkle and Lumina decide to pool their findings together. How many magical clovers do Twinkle and Lumina have together now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already found the total number of magical clovers in the previous problem: 104. This is the total number of magical clovers Twinkle and Lumina have together now.
### Answer: 104

Expected answer: 104

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After re-counting their magical clovers, Twinkle realizes that she actually found 24, not 35. If Lumina still found 69, how many magical clovers do they have now when pooled together?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Twinkle found 24 magical clovers. Lumina found 69 magical clovers. To find the total number of magical clovers, we add the number of clovers found by Twinkle and Lumina: 24 + 69 = 93.
### Answer: 93

Expected answer: 93

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A weather instrument measured the wind speed at 93 miles per hour at one location. At another location, the wind speed was exactly the same. What was the combined wind speed recorded at the two locations?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Since the wind speed was the same at both locations, we can simply add the two wind speeds together. 

93 mph + 93 mph = 186 mph

However, it's important to note that the combined wind speed is not a meaningful measurement, as wind speed is a vector quantity that depends on direction. Adding the wind speeds together would only make sense if the winds were blowing in the same direction, which is not specified in the problem.

### Answer: The question is flawed, and a combined wind speed cannot be determined.

Expected answer: 186

Correct? No

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A robot is programmed to drive around a circuit. Initially, it travels 10 meters. Then, it runs an updated programming command that allows it to travel 26 meters more than it originally did. How far in total does the robot travel after running the updated programming command?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The robot initially travels 10 meters. Then, it travels 26 more meters than it originally did, which means it travels 10 + 26 = 36 meters. So, the total distance traveled by the robot is 10 + 36 = 46 meters.
### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 36

Correct? No

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Ella owns 5 pens, while Zach owns 30 pens. They both decide to donate all their pens to a local school. How many pens are they donating to the school?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Ella is donating 5 pens and Zach is donating 30 pens. To find the total number of pens they are donating, we add the number of pens each of them is donating.

5 (Ella's pens) + 30 (Zach's pens) = 35

### Answer: 35

Expected answer: 35

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Ella and Zach donate their pens to the local school, the school received another donation of 80 pens from a stationery company. How many total pens does the school now have after receiving all of the donation?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The school already received 35 pens from Ella and Zach. Now, it receives another 80 pens from the stationery company. To find the total number of pens the school has, we add the number of pens it already had to the new donation.

35 (pens from Ella and Zach) + 80 (pens from the stationery company) = 115

### Answer: 115

Expected answer: 115

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Ella realized that she actually had 50 pens instead of 5. Adding to Zach's 30 pens they had earlier, how many pens are they donating to the local school now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Ella is now donating 50 pens and Zach is still donating 30 pens. To find the total number of pens they are donating, we add the number of pens each of them is donating.

50 (Ella's pens) + 30 (Zach's pens) = 80

### Answer: 80

Expected answer: 80

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A dog shelter has 62 indoor kennels and 52 outdoor kennels for the dogs. How many kennels do they have altogether?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of kennels, we need to add the number of indoor kennels and outdoor kennels.

Number of indoor kennels = 62
Number of outdoor kennels = 52

Total number of kennels = 62 + 52 = 114

### Answer: 114

Expected answer: 114

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if at the start, the shelter originally had 89 indoor kennels instead of 62. How many kennels would they have combined with the 52 outdoor kennels in this scenario?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of kennels, we need to add the number of indoor kennels and outdoor kennels.

Number of indoor kennels = 89
Number of outdoor kennels = 52

Total number of kennels = 89 + 52 = 141

### Answer: 141

Expected answer: 141

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a math class, students have to draw shapes based on certain numeric conditions. One student starts by rotating an angle to form 92 degrees. Then, he rotates the same angle by an additional 84 degrees. This gives him shape 't'. He modifies shape 't' by rotating another 90 degrees and labels this as shape 'l'. Finally, he rotates it by another 66 degrees to form shape 'n'. What is the total degree measure of the rotations made to get shape 'n'?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's break down the sequence of rotations:

1. The student starts by rotating an angle to form 92 degrees.
2. Then, he rotates the same angle by an additional 84 degrees, making the total rotation 92 + 84 = 176 degrees.
3. He modifies shape 't' by rotating another 90 degrees, making the total rotation 176 + 90 = 266 degrees.
4. Finally, he rotates it by another 66 degrees to form shape 'n', making the total rotation 266 + 66 = 332 degrees.

### Answer: 332

Expected answer: 332

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the student creates shape 'n', he isn't quite satisfied. He rotates his most recent shape by another 22 degrees in order to make shape 'z'. What is the total degree measure of the rotations made to end up with shape 'z'?

Llama 3 70B:

We already know that the total degree measure of the rotations made to get shape 'n' is 332 degrees. To get shape 'z', the student rotates shape 'n' by another 22 degrees. Therefore, the total degree measure of the rotations made to end up with shape 'z' is:

332 + 22 = 354 degrees

### Answer: 354

Expected answer: 354

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's change the scenario a bit. Suppose the student does everything as before, rotating an angle to form 92 degrees, and again by an additional of 84 degrees to form shape 't'. Then they modify shape 't' by adding another 90 degrees to form shape 'l'. But this time, instead of rotating an additional 66 degrees for shape 'n', he rotates by 30 degrees. What would be the total degree measure of the rotations made to get to shape 'n' in this case?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's break down the sequence of rotations:

1. The student starts by rotating an angle to form 92 degrees.
2. Then, he rotates the same angle by an additional 84 degrees, making the total rotation 92 + 84 = 176 degrees.
3. He modifies shape 't' by rotating another 90 degrees, making the total rotation 176 + 90 = 266 degrees.
4. Finally, he rotates it by another 30 degrees to form shape 'n', making the total rotation 266 + 30 = 296 degrees.

### Answer: 296

Expected answer: 296

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jeremy bought 28 pieces of cheese from the cheese shop. Later that day, he buys 4 more pieces from the market. How many pieces of cheese does Jeremy now have?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jeremy initially had 28 pieces of cheese. He then bought 4 more pieces, so we need to add 4 to 28 to find the total number of pieces of cheese he now has.

28 + 4 = 32

### Answer: 32

Expected answer: 32

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's imagine that when Jeremy first went shopping, he actually only bought 26 pieces of cheese from the cheese shop, but he still bought 4 more pieces from the market later that day. How many pieces of cheese would Jeremy have then?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jeremy initially had 26 pieces of cheese. He then bought 4 more pieces, so we need to add 4 to 26 to find the total number of pieces of cheese he now has.

26 + 4 = 30

### Answer: 30

Expected answer: 30

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Once upon a time, there were 84 magic jewels in the secret treasure chest of the kingdom. Young princess Mia found the treasure chest and a magical charm that whenever she puts it on 83 more magic jewels appear in the chest. How many magic jewels are there in the treasure chest now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The princess started with 84 magic jewels in the treasure chest. When she put on the magical charm, 83 more magic jewels appeared. To find the total number of magic jewels, we add the initial number of jewels to the number of jewels that appeared: 84 + 83 = 167.

### Answer: 167

Expected answer: 167

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Princess Mia discovered the magic of the charm, she was very excited and couldn't resist using the charm one more time. This time, instead of 83 magic jewels, 72 extra magic jewels appeared in the treasure chest. How many magic jewels are there in the treasure chest now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Previously, there were 167 magic jewels in the treasure chest. When Princess Mia used the charm again, 72 more magic jewels appeared. To find the new total, we add the number of magic jewels that appeared to the previous total: 167 + 72 = 239.

### Answer: 239

Expected answer: 239

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a jewelry store, there are 98 rings on display. In another display case, there are an additional number of rings that is equal to 59 plus the number of rings in the first display case. How many rings are in the second display case?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Let's break this down step by step. We know there are 98 rings in the first display case. The number of rings in the second display case is equal to 59 plus the number of rings in the first display case. So, we can set up an equation:

Number of rings in second display case = 59 + Number of rings in first display case
= 59 + 98
= 157

### Answer: 157

Expected answer: 157

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario, the jewelry store receives a new batch of 84 rings that are added to the second display case. What is the new total number of rings in the second display case after adding the new batch?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that there were 157 rings in the second display case initially. Now, we need to add the new batch of 84 rings to this total.

New total number of rings in second display case = Initial number of rings + New batch of rings
= 157 + 84
= 241

### Answer: 241

Expected answer: 241

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's rethink our original scenario at the jewelry store. Suppose instead that the second display contained a number of rings equal to 43 plus the number of rings in the first display case, which was 98. In that case, how many rings would the second display case have held?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Let's use the same approach as before. The number of rings in the second display case is equal to 43 plus the number of rings in the first display case. We know the first display case has 98 rings, so we can plug that in:

Number of rings in second display case = 43 + Number of rings in first display case
= 43 + 98
= 141

### Answer: 141

Expected answer: 141

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a school stationery shop, there are 74 erasers available. If the shopkeeper adds 32 more erasers to the inventory, how many erasers are there in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The shopkeeper starts with 74 erasers. After adding 32 more erasers, the total number of erasers is 74 + 32 = 106.

### Answer: 106

Expected answer: 106

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a school stationery shop, there are 74 erasers available. A shopkeeper adds 32 more erasers to the inventory. Later in the day, a student donates another 24 erasers to the school shop. How many erasers are there in total now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The shopkeeper starts with 74 erasers. After adding 32 more erasers, the total number of erasers is 74 + 32 = 106. Later, a student donates 24 more erasers, so the new total is 106 + 24 = 130.

### Answer: 130

Expected answer: 130

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sally was on a swing and she swung back and forth 57 times. Jack also started swinging and he swung back and forth 57 more times than Sally. Xavier, feeling competitive, starts swinging too and he further manages to swing back forth 92 times more than Jack. How many times did Xavier swing back and forth?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally swung back and forth 57 times.
Jack swung back and forth 57 more times than Sally, so Jack swung 57 + 57 = 114 times.
Xavier swung back and forth 92 more times than Jack, so Xavier swung 114 + 92 = 206 times.
### Answer: 206

Expected answer: 206

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Xavier finishes his turn on the swing, Faye decides to take a ride. She swings back and forth 95 times. If we add the number of times Faye swung to the number of times Xavier swung, how many total swings is that?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Xavier swung back and forth 206 times.
Faye swung back and forth 95 times.
The total number of swings is 206 + 95 = 301.
### Answer: 301

Expected answer: 301

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous problem, we learned that Jack swung 57 times more than Sally. But what if Jack had only swung 46 times more than Sally? Sally still swung 57 times. If Jack then swung 46 more times than Sally, and Xavier again swung 92 times more than Jack, how many swings would Xavier have taken in this case?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally swung back and forth 57 times.
Jack swung back and forth 46 more times than Sally, so Jack swung 57 + 46 = 103 times.
Xavier swung back and forth 92 more times than Jack, so Xavier swung 103 + 92 = 195 times.
### Answer: 195

Expected answer: 195

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Tommy absolutely loves ice cream. One day he ate 15 ice creams. The next day, he ate twice that amount. On the third day, he couldn't resist and ate 31 more than he did on the second day. How many ice creams did Tommy eat on the third day?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On the first day, Tommy ate 15 ice creams.
On the second day, he ate twice that amount, which is 2 x 15 = 30 ice creams.
On the third day, he ate 31 more than he did on the second day, which is 30 + 31 = 61 ice creams.
### Answer: 61

Expected answer: 61

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the initial scenario, Tommy ate 15 ice creams on the first day and twice that amount on the second. Given this, suppose on the third day, Tommy ate 32 more than the number of ice creams he had on the second day, instead of 31. How many ice creams would Tommy have eaten on the third day, then?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On the first day, Tommy ate 15 ice creams.
On the second day, he ate twice that amount, which is 2 x 15 = 30 ice creams.
On the third day, he ate 32 more than he did on the second day, which is 30 + 32 = 62 ice creams.
### Answer: 62

Expected answer: 62

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Michael has a camera collection. He starts off with 97 cameras. He wins a major auction and adds another 65 cameras. How many cameras does he have in his collection now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Michael starts with 97 cameras and adds 65 more cameras to his collection. To find the total number of cameras, we can simply add the two numbers together.

97 (initial cameras) + 65 (additional cameras) = 162

### Answer: 162

Expected answer: 162

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After winning the auction, Michael receives a gift of 82 more cameras from a close friend who is retiring from photography. How many cameras does he have in his collection now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Michael already had 162 cameras in his collection after winning the auction. Now, he receives a gift of 82 more cameras from his friend.

To find the new total, we can add the number of cameras he already had to the number of cameras he received as a gift:

162 (cameras he already had) + 82 (gift cameras) = 244

### Answer: 244

Expected answer: 244

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What would have been the total number of cameras if Michael originally started off with 35 cameras instead of 97 before he won the auction and received additional cameras?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Michael starts with 35 cameras and adds 65 more cameras to his collection. To find the total number of cameras, we can simply add the two numbers together.

35 (initial cameras) + 65 (additional cameras) = 100

### Answer: 100

Expected answer: 100

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sam has 75 skateboard stickers. His friend Zack gives him another 68 stickers. Later, his other friend Ethan gives him 46 more stickers. How many skateboard stickers does Sam have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sam initially had 75 stickers. His friend Zack gave him 68 more stickers, so Sam now has 75 + 68 = 143 stickers. Then, his friend Ethan gave him 46 more stickers, so Sam now has 143 + 46 = 189 stickers.

### Answer: 189

Expected answer: 189

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's imagine that this time, Sam originally had 75 skateboard stickers, but his friend Zack gave him fewer stickers than before, just 68 stickers. However, his other friend Ethan only contributes 16 stickers this time. How many skateboard stickers does Sam have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sam initially had 75 stickers. His friend Zack gave him 68 more stickers, so Sam now has 75 + 68 = 143 stickers. Then, his friend Ethan gave him 16 more stickers, so Sam now has 143 + 16 = 159 stickers.

### Answer: 159

Expected answer: 159

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Samantha has 54 yellow crayons in her art box. Then, her friend Christina gave her 20 more crayons. How many crayons does Samantha have in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Samantha initially had 54 yellow crayons in her art box. Her friend Christina gave her 20 more crayons. To find the total number of crayons Samantha has, we need to add the initial number of crayons to the number of crayons Christina gave her.

Total number of crayons = Initial number of crayons + Number of crayons given by Christina
= 54 + 20
= 74

### Answer: 74

Expected answer: 74

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Samantha counts all the crayons in her art box. She realizes that she now has a new total number of crayons due to the 54 yellow ones and the 20 her friend Christina gave her. How many crayons does Samantha have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already calculated the total number of crayons Samantha has in her previous question.

Total number of crayons = 54 (initial yellow crayons) + 20 (crayons given by Christina)
= 74

### Answer: 74

Expected answer: 74

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Samantha originally had only 3 yellow crayons in her art box instead of 54 before her friend Christina gave her 20 more crayons. How many crayons would Samantha have in that case?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Samantha initially had 3 yellow crayons in her art box. Her friend Christina gave her 20 more crayons. To find the total number of crayons Samantha has, we need to add the initial number of crayons to the number of crayons Christina gave her.

Total number of crayons = Initial number of crayons + Number of crayons given by Christina
= 3 + 20
= 23

### Answer: 23

Expected answer: 23

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In an amusement park, there are 75 people waiting in line to slide down one slide, while 73 people are lined up for another slide. How many total people are waiting to slide down the slides?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of people waiting to slide down the slides, we need to add the number of people waiting in line for each slide.

There are 75 people waiting in line for one slide.
There are 73 people waiting in line for the other slide.

Let's add these numbers together:
75 + 73 = 148

### Answer: 148

Expected answer: 148

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After recounting, it turns out that there were actually 27 people waiting in line for one slide, not 75, while 73 people are still lined up for the other slide. Now, how many total people are waiting to slide down the slides?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of people waiting to slide down the slides, we need to add the number of people waiting in line for each slide.

There are 27 people waiting in line for one slide.
There are 73 people waiting in line for the other slide.

Let's add these numbers together:
27 + 73 = 100

### Answer: 100

Expected answer: 100

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A teacher has a classroom of 10 students in the morning and 13 students in the afternoon. The other teacher has 36 students in the morning and 80 in the afternoon. How many students do these teachers teach in total in a day?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's break this down step by step:

The first teacher has 10 students in the morning and 13 students in the afternoon, so they teach a total of:
10 + 13 = 23 students in a day.

The second teacher has 36 students in the morning and 80 students in the afternoon, so they teach a total of:
36 + 80 = 116 students in a day.

To find the total number of students taught by both teachers, we add the number of students taught by each teacher:
23 + 116 = 139 students.

### Answer: 139

Expected answer: 139

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: A teacher has a classroom of 10 students in the morning and 13 students in the afternoon. The other teacher has 36 students in the morning and 80 in the afternoon. The school just received a transfer of 85 more students. How many students do these teachers teach in total in a day after the new students arrive?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's break this down step by step:

The first teacher has 10 students in the morning and 13 students in the afternoon, so they teach a total of:
10 + 13 = 23 students in a day.

The second teacher has 36 students in the morning and 80 students in the afternoon, so they teach a total of:
36 + 80 = 116 students in a day.

To find the total number of students taught by both teachers, we add the number of students taught by each teacher:
23 + 116 = 139 students.

Now, the school receives a transfer of 85 more students. To find the total number of students after the transfer, we add the new students to the total number of students already being taught:
139 + 85 = 224 students.

### Answer: 224

Expected answer: 224

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario, one teacher had a classroom of 10 students in the morning and 13 students in the afternoon. But what if there were actually 30 students in the morning instead of 10? The other teacher has 36 students in the morning and 80 in the afternoon, as before. How many students do these teachers teach in total in a day in this new scenario?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's recalculate the total number of students taught by both teachers in this new scenario:

The first teacher has 30 students in the morning and 13 students in the afternoon, so they teach a total of:
30 + 13 = 43 students in a day.

The second teacher still has 36 students in the morning and 80 students in the afternoon, so they teach a total of:
36 + 80 = 116 students in a day.

To find the total number of students taught by both teachers, we add the number of students taught by each teacher:
43 + 116 = 159 students.

### Answer: 159

Expected answer: 159

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A wizard named Albus needs to perform an enchantment. The enchantment requires 43 units of sage. To make the spell stronger, he also adds a mixture that contains 78 units of elderberry and 85 units of thistle. What is the total amount of ingredients used in the enchantment?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The enchantment requires 43 units of sage. The mixture contains 78 units of elderberry and 85 units of thistle, so the total amount of ingredients in the mixture is 78 + 85 = 163 units. To find the total amount of ingredients used in the enchantment, we add the amount of sage to the amount of ingredients in the mixture: 43 + 163 = 206 units.

### Answer: 206

Expected answer: 206

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Albus, the wizard, realizes he needs to amplify the enchantment even further. He decides to add 67 units of phoenix feather in addition to the sage, elderberry and thistle. Now, what is the total amount of ingredients used in the enchantment?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Previously, the total amount of ingredients used in the enchantment was 206 units (43 units of sage + 163 units of elderberry and thistle). Now, Albus adds 67 units of phoenix feather to the enchantment. To find the new total amount of ingredients, we add the amount of phoenix feather to the previous total: 206 + 67 = 273 units.

### Answer: 273

Expected answer: 273

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: John bought 59 jackets for the winter season. Later, he bought another 22 jackets. Driven by the sale, he also bought 58 jackets with different colors and patterns. How many jackets did John buy in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: John initially bought 59 jackets.
He then bought 22 more jackets, making a total of 59 + 22 = 81 jackets.
Later, he bought 58 more jackets with different colors and patterns, making a total of 81 + 58 = 139 jackets.
### Answer: 139

Expected answer: 139

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous question, John had bought a total of 139 jackets. However, his family members also wanted some jackets for themselves. So, he bought an additional 35 jackets for his family. How many jackets did John buy in total now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: John had already bought 139 jackets.
He then bought 35 more jackets for his family, making a total of 139 + 35 = 174 jackets.
### Answer: 174

Expected answer: 174

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, John initially bought 59 jackets. However, let's reconsider that scenario with a slight modification. This time, after buying the initial 59 jackets, John went to another store and bought 83 more jackets. Then, as he was leaving, he noticed a stand with discount jackets and purchased 58 more of them there. How many jackets did John buy in total under these new conditions?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: John initially bought 59 jackets.
He then bought 83 more jackets, making a total of 59 + 83 = 142 jackets.
Later, he bought 58 more jackets at the discount stand, making a total of 142 + 58 = 200 jackets.
### Answer: 200

Expected answer: 200

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: On Thursday, the city experienced rainfall of about 69mm. On Friday, it rained more with an increase of 31mm compared to the previous day. On Saturday, it poured heavily throughout the day and the city saw 82mm of rain. How much total rainfall did the city experience on Friday and Saturday?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On Friday, the rainfall was 69mm + 31mm = 100mm.
On Saturday, the rainfall was 82mm.
The total rainfall on Friday and Saturday is 100mm + 82mm = 182mm.
### Answer: 182mm.

Expected answer: 182

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous problem, we considered an increase in rainfall of 31mm from Thursday to Friday. But what if the increase was less, let's say only 19mm more than Thursday's rainfall of 69mm? Then how much total rainfall did the city experience on Friday and Saturday?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On Friday, the rainfall was 69mm + 19mm = 88mm.
On Saturday, the rainfall was 82mm.
The total rainfall on Friday and Saturday is 88mm + 82mm = 170mm.
### Answer: 170mm.

Expected answer: 170

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A penguin named Zazu finds 66 shiny stones. Zazu sees that his friend Umi has found 70 more shiny stones than him. Another friend named Yara tucked away 36 shiny stones in addition to what Umi found. How many shiny stones did Yara find in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Zazu found 66 shiny stones. Umi found 70 more than Zazu, so Umi found 66 + 70 = 136 shiny stones. Yara found 36 more than Umi, so Yara found 136 + 36 = 172 shiny stones.
### Answer: 172

Expected answer: 172

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After all the shiny stones have been counted, a penguin named Dina dives and finds an additional 34 shiny stones. How many shiny stones are there in total now considering Yara's stones and the ones that Dina found?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Yara had 172 shiny stones. Dina found 34 more shiny stones. To find the total, we add Yara's stones and Dina's stones: 172 + 34 = 206.
### Answer: 206

Expected answer: 206

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Recall from the last time, Zazu found 66 shiny stones initially. Umi found 70 more shiny stones than Zazu. However, now consider that Yara only found 45 shiny stones more than what Umi found, instead of the 36 as previously stated. How many shiny stones did Yara find in this new scenario?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Zazu found 66 shiny stones. Umi found 70 more than Zazu, so Umi found 66 + 70 = 136 shiny stones. Yara found 45 more than Umi, so Yara found 136 + 45 = 181 shiny stones.
### Answer: 181

Expected answer: 181

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A river is composed of 77 miles of calm water. A new tributary recently merged and extended the river by an additional 26 miles. Later, a 99-mile rapid water stretch is discovered and added to the river's length. How long is the river in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The river initially had 77 miles of calm water. After the tributary merged, the river's length increased by 26 miles, making it 77 + 26 = 103 miles long. Later, a 99-mile rapid water stretch was added, making the total length of the river 103 + 99 = 202 miles.

### Answer: 202

Expected answer: 202

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: An optical shop manages to sell 44 eyeglasses in the month of May and 84 in the month of June. The total number of glasses sold before May was 77. How many eyeglasses has the shop sold in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The shop sold 77 eyeglasses before May. In May, they sold 44 eyeglasses, and in June, they sold 84 eyeglasses. To find the total number of eyeglasses sold, we add the number of eyeglasses sold in each period: 77 + 44 + 84 = 205.

### Answer: 205

Expected answer: 205

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if instead of selling 77 eyeglasses before May, they only sold 44 eyeglasses? How many eyeglasses has the shop sold in total then (including sales in May, June, and the first week of July)?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The shop sold 44 eyeglasses before May. In May, they sold 44 eyeglasses, and in June, they sold 84 eyeglasses. Let's assume they didn't sell any eyeglasses in the first week of July (the problem doesn't provide any information about July sales). To find the total number of eyeglasses sold, we add the number of eyeglasses sold in each period: 44 + 44 + 84 = 172.

### Answer: 172

Expected answer: 172

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In preparing for a camping trip, a group of friends collected 8 small tents and 88 large tents. They then added 17 medium tents to their collection. Separately, they also managed to gather 77 ground mats for the tents. How many total items including both tents and ground mats did they gather for the camping trip?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The friends collected 8 small tents and 88 large tents, which makes a total of 8 + 88 = 96 tents. They then added 17 medium tents, making a total of 96 + 17 = 113 tents.

They also gathered 77 ground mats. To find the total number of items, we add the number of tents and ground mats: 113 + 77 = 190.

### Answer: 190

Expected answer: 190

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Now consider this - instead of initially collecting 8 small tents, the group collected 9. They still maintained the same number of large tents at 88 and added 17 medium tents just as before. If they also collected 77 ground mats, how many total items including both tents and ground mats did they gather for the camping trip now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The friends collected 9 small tents and 88 large tents, which makes a total of 9 + 88 = 97 tents. They then added 17 medium tents, making a total of 97 + 17 = 114 tents.

They also gathered 77 ground mats. To find the total number of items, we add the number of tents and ground mats: 114 + 77 = 191.

### Answer: 191

Expected answer: 191

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In Lila's vineyard, one grapevine produced 61 grapes while another produced 49 grapes. What is the total number of grapes produced by these two grapevines?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of grapes produced by the two grapevines, we need to add the number of grapes produced by each grapevine.

Grapevine 1 produced 61 grapes.
Grapevine 2 produced 49 grapes.

Total number of grapes = 61 + 49 = 110

### Answer: 110

Expected answer: 110

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In addition to Lila's vineyard, her neighbor also runs a vineyard. This year, the neighbor's vineyard produced 94 grapes. What is the total number of grapes produced by Lila and her neighbor's vineyards combined?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that Lila's vineyard produced 110 grapes. Now, we need to add the number of grapes produced by her neighbor's vineyard to find the total number of grapes produced by both vineyards combined.

Lila's vineyard produced 110 grapes.
Neighbor's vineyard produced 94 grapes.

Total number of grapes = 110 + 94 = 204

### Answer: 204

Expected answer: 204

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's reconsider Lila's vineyard. Suppose one of the grapevines originally produced 50 grapes instead of 61. With the other grapevine still producing 49 grapes, what would then be the total number of grapes produced by these two grapevines?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of grapes produced by the two grapevines, we need to add the number of grapes produced by each grapevine.

Grapevine 1 produced 50 grapes.
Grapevine 2 produced 49 grapes.

Total number of grapes = 50 + 49 = 99

### Answer: 99

Expected answer: 99

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sally is a fashion designer who loves knitting socks. One day, she made 63 colourful pairs of socks. The next day, she decided to add 6 more pairs to her collection. How many pairs of socks does Sally have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally initially had 63 pairs of socks. She added 6 more pairs to her collection, so we need to add 6 to 63.

63 + 6 = 69

### Answer: 69

Expected answer: 69

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After knitting her socks, Sally decided to try knitting mittens as well. She found that she really liked it, and she was able to knit 16 pairs of mittens. How many pairs of socks and mittens does Sally have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally already had 69 pairs of socks. She then knitted 16 pairs of mittens. To find the total number of pairs of socks and mittens, we need to add the number of pairs of socks to the number of pairs of mittens.

69 (pairs of socks) + 16 (pairs of mittens) = 85

### Answer: 85

Expected answer: 85

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Sally didn't make 63 pairs of socks, but she actually only made 9 pairs of socks initially. She still added 6 more pairs of socks the next day as she did previously. How many pairs of socks does Sally have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally initially had 9 pairs of socks. She added 6 more pairs to her collection, so we need to add 6 to 9.

9 + 6 = 15

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Mike is the owner of an aquarium. He added 13 gallons of water to one of his tanks in the morning. Later in the afternoon, he added another 55 gallons to the same tank. Meanwhile, in another tank, he added 57 gallons in the morning and an additional 33 gallons in the afternoon. What is the total quantity of water (in gallons) that Mike added to both of his tanks throughout the day?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's break this down step by step:

Tank 1:
Mike added 13 gallons in the morning and 55 gallons in the afternoon, so the total amount of water added to Tank 1 is:
13 + 55 = 68 gallons

Tank 2:
Mike added 57 gallons in the morning and 33 gallons in the afternoon, so the total amount of water added to Tank 2 is:
57 + 33 = 90 gallons

To find the total quantity of water added to both tanks, we add the amounts for each tank:
68 + 90 = 158 gallons

### Answer: 158

Expected answer: 158

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Now, imagine that Mike also has a large pond outside his house. In the evening, he decides to refill it and adds 56 gallons of water. Considering all three locations (the two tanks and the pond), how much total water did Mike add throughout the day?

Llama 3 70B:

We already calculated the total amount of water added to the two tanks:
68 + 90 = 158 gallons

Now, Mike adds 56 gallons to the pond in the evening. To find the total amount of water added to all three locations, we add the amount added to the pond to the total amount added to the tanks:
158 + 56 = 214 gallons

### Answer: 214

Expected answer: 214

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's reconsider the scenario. Instead of adding 55 gallons of water to his first tank, suppose Mike instead adds 96 gallons of water in the afternoon. Given that all other quantities remain the same with 13 gallons added in the morning to the first tank, and the second tank receiving 57 gallons in the morning and an additional 33 gallons in the afternoon, how much total water did Mike add to both tanks throughout the day?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's recalculate the total amount of water added to both tanks:

Tank 1:
Mike added 13 gallons in the morning and 96 gallons in the afternoon, so the total amount of water added to Tank 1 is:
13 + 96 = 109 gallons

Tank 2:
Mike added 57 gallons in the morning and 33 gallons in the afternoon, so the total amount of water added to Tank 2 is:
57 + 33 = 90 gallons

To find the total quantity of water added to both tanks, we add the amounts for each tank:
109 + 90 = 199 gallons

### Answer: 199

Expected answer: 199

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Teddy has a favorite toy which is a tiny teddy bear. One day, Teddy's dad gave him 64 more teddy bears. Teddy's mom, feeling envious, gave Teddy 60 more teddy bears plus the exact number of teddy bears Teddy's dad gave him. At the end of the day, Teddy's grandma surprised him with twice the number of teddy bears his mom gave him. How many teddy bears did Teddy receive from his grandma?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Teddy's dad gave him 64 teddy bears.
Teddy's mom gave him 60 + 64 = 124 teddy bears.
Teddy's grandma gave him 2 x 124 = 248 teddy bears.
### Answer: 248

Expected answer: 248

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's imagine that instead of 64 teddy bears, Teddy's dad initially gave him only 30 teddy bears. Teddy's mom, feeling envious as before, gave Teddy 60 more bears plus the exact number of bears Teddy's dad gave him. At the end of the day, Teddy's grandma, wanting to double the joy, surprised him with twice the number of teddy bears his mom gave him. How many teddy bears did Teddy receive from his grandma under this new scenario?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Teddy's dad gave him 30 teddy bears.
Teddy's mom gave him 60 + 30 = 90 teddy bears.
Teddy's grandma gave him 2 x 90 = 180 teddy bears.
### Answer: 180

Expected answer: 180

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a forest, there are 84 oak trees. If the number of pine trees adds 75 more to the total number of trees, how many trees are there in the forest?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: There are 84 oak trees. If the number of pine trees adds 75 more to the total number of trees, that means there are 75 pine trees. 
The total number of trees is the sum of oak trees and pine trees, which is 84 + 75 = 159.
### Answer: 159

Expected answer: 159

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous question, suppose that the forest officials plant an additional 68 maple trees in the forest. Now how many trees are there overall in the forest?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that there are 159 trees in the forest (84 oak trees and 75 pine trees). 
The forest officials plant an additional 68 maple trees, so we need to add 68 to the total number of trees: 159 + 68 = 227.
### Answer: 227

Expected answer: 227

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In retrospect, considering the number of oak trees in the forest, it was mistaken before. There are actually 84 oak trees, not including other types of trees. If the number of pine trees adds 27 more to the total number of trees, how many trees are there in the forest now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Let's say the total number of trees is x. Since the number of pine trees adds 27 more to the total number of trees, the number of pine trees is x - 84. 
We know that the number of pine trees adds 27 more to the total number of trees, so we can set up the equation: x - 84 = 27 + 84.
Simplifying the equation, we get: x - 84 = 111.
Adding 84 to both sides, we get: x = 195.
### Answer: 195

Expected answer: 111

Correct? No

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a newly discovered dinosaur park, scientists found 71 Neovenator dinosaurs and 56 Ferrotholus dinosaurs. How many total dinosaurs did they find in all?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of dinosaurs, we need to add the number of Neovenator dinosaurs to the number of Ferrotholus dinosaurs.

Number of Neovenator dinosaurs = 71
Number of Ferrotholus dinosaurs = 56

Total number of dinosaurs = 71 + 56 = 127

### Answer: 127

Expected answer: 127

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After their initial discovery at the dinosaur park, scientists found another group of dinosaurs which was equal to the total number of Neovenator and Ferrotholus dinosaurs combined. How many dinosaurs did the scientists find in this second group?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that the total number of Neovenator and Ferrotholus dinosaurs is 127.

The second group of dinosaurs is equal to the total number of Neovenator and Ferrotholus dinosaurs combined, so the number of dinosaurs in the second group is also 127.

### Answer: 127

Expected answer: 127

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In their initial findings, the scientists had made a miscount and actually found 54 Neovenator dinosaurs instead of 71. With the same number of Ferrotholus dinosaurs being 56, what is the corrected total number of dinosaurs they found?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the corrected total number of dinosaurs, we need to add the corrected number of Neovenator dinosaurs to the number of Ferrotholus dinosaurs.

Corrected number of Neovenator dinosaurs = 54
Number of Ferrotholus dinosaurs = 56

Corrected total number of dinosaurs = 54 + 56 = 110

### Answer: 110

Expected answer: 110

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A boat has traveled 88 miles today. The next day, it travels 92 more miles plus the miles it traveled today. The third day, it travels an additional 61 miles plus the miles it traveled the previous days. How many miles has the boat traveled in these three days?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On the first day, the boat traveled 88 miles.
On the second day, the boat traveled 92 + 88 = 180 miles.
On the third day, the boat traveled 61 + 180 = 241 miles.
The total distance traveled by the boat in three days is 88 + 180 + 241 = 509 miles.
### Answer: 509

Expected answer: 241

Correct? No

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sarah has 7 liters of apple juice. She went to the store and bought 69 more liters. How many liters of apple juice does Sarah have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sarah initially had 7 liters of apple juice. She bought 69 more liters, so we need to add 7 and 69 to find the total amount of apple juice she has now.

7 + 69 = 76

### Answer: 76

Expected answer: 76

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Initially, Sarah thought she had bought only 7 liters of juice, but she realized she had actually bought 55 liters of apple juice. If she still bought an additional 69 liters from the store, how much apple juice does Sarah have in total now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sarah initially had 7 liters of apple juice. Then, she realized she had actually bought 55 liters, so she had 7 + 55 = 62 liters. After buying an additional 69 liters from the store, she now has 62 + 69 liters.

62 + 69 = 131

### Answer: 131

Expected answer: 124

Correct? No

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sally is on a mission to build the biggest marshmallow tower. She starts with 83 marshmallows, but then her friend brings an additional 33 marshmallows. How many marshmallows does Sally have now for her tower?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally starts with 83 marshmallows. Her friend brings 33 more marshmallows. To find the total number of marshmallows Sally has now, we add the initial number of marshmallows to the additional number of marshmallows: 83 + 33 = 116.

### Answer: 116

Expected answer: 116

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Sally counts all her marshmallows, her other friend decides to contribute as well and brings 22 more marshmallows. How many marshmallows does Sally have in total now for her tower?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally already had 116 marshmallows. Her other friend brings 22 more marshmallows. To find the total number of marshmallows Sally has now, we add the additional marshmallows to the total she already had: 116 + 22 = 138.

### Answer: 138

Expected answer: 138

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Sally started with only 13 marshmallows instead of 83 and then her friend brought the same amount of 33 additional marshmallows. How many marshmallows would Sally have had then for her tower?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally starts with 13 marshmallows. Her friend brings 33 more marshmallows. To find the total number of marshmallows Sally has now, we add the initial number of marshmallows to the additional number of marshmallows: 13 + 33 = 46.

### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 46

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jenna is a jewelry maker. She currently has 48 earrings in stock. She makes an additional 34 earrings for a special event. After the event, Jenna makes 24 more earrings to replenish her stock. How many earrings does she have in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jenna initially had 48 earrings in stock.
She made 34 more earrings for the special event, so she now has 48 + 34 = 82 earrings.
After the event, she made 24 more earrings to replenish her stock, so she now has 82 + 24 = 106 earrings.
### Answer: 106

Expected answer: 106

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the special event, Jenna decides to replenish her stock by making 94 more earrings instead of the 24 she initially planned. Now, how many earrings does she have on her shelf?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jenna initially had 48 earrings in stock.
She made 34 more earrings for the special event, so she now has 48 + 34 = 82 earrings.
After the event, she made 94 more earrings to replenish her stock, so she now has 82 + 94 = 176 earrings.
### Answer: 176

Expected answer: 176

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a city, 48 babies were born in March, and in April, another 25 were born. How many babies were born in these two months in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of babies born in March and April, we need to add the number of babies born in each month.

Number of babies born in March = 48
Number of babies born in April = 25

Total number of babies born = 48 + 25 = 73

### Answer: 73

Expected answer: 73

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In May, the number of babies born matches the total of both March and April. How many babies were born in May?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that the total number of babies born in March and April is 73. Since the number of babies born in May matches this total, we can conclude that:

Number of babies born in May = 73

### Answer: 73

Expected answer: 73

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a rethink, the hospital realized that there were actually 55 babies born in March, not 48. With the 25 born in April, how many babies were born in total over the two months?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of babies born in March and April, we need to add the correct number of babies born in March to the number of babies born in April.

Correct number of babies born in March = 55
Number of babies born in April = 25

Total number of babies born = 55 + 25 = 80

### Answer: 80

Expected answer: 80

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: At a drum store, there are 52 drum sets on display and 1 more drum set in the store room. In a different section of the same store, there are also 46 single drums. How many total drums and drum sets are in the store?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Let's first find the total number of drum sets. There are 52 drum sets on display and 1 more in the store room, so there are 52 + 1 = 53 drum sets in total.

Each drum set has multiple drums, but we're not given the exact number of drums in each set. However, we're asked to find the total number of drums and drum sets, so we can count the drum sets as a whole unit.

Now, let's add the number of single drums to the total number of drum sets: 53 (drum sets) + 46 (single drums) = 99.

### Answer: 99

Expected answer: 99

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose in the store, instead of having 52 drum sets, there were only 52 single drums, in addition to the 1 drum set in the store room. Given that there are still 46 single drums in a different section, how many drums and drum sets are then in the store?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Let's first count the total number of single drums: 52 (initial single drums) + 46 (additional single drums) = 98 single drums.

There is 1 drum set in the store room, and we don't know how many drums are in that set. However, we can count the drum set as 1 unit.

Now, let's add the number of single drums to the number of drum sets: 98 (single drums) + 1 (drum set) = 99.

### Answer: 99

Expected answer: 99

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A store sells 9 boxes of oranges each day. The following day, the seller added 22 more boxes to the total from the previous day. The next day, he added another 26 boxes to that day's total. How many boxes of oranges does the store have on the last day?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On the first day, the store had 9 boxes of oranges.
On the second day, the store had 9 + 22 = 31 boxes of oranges.
On the third day, the store had 31 + 26 = 57 boxes of oranges.
### Answer: 57

Expected answer: 57

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following on from the problem with the orange seller: after the seller added 26 boxes to the previous day's total, he decided to get a major shipment of oranges. So, he added an impressive shipment of 96 more boxes to the pile. Now, how many boxes of oranges does the store have?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On the third day, the store had 57 boxes of oranges.
After the major shipment, the store had 57 + 96 = 153 boxes of oranges.
### Answer: 153

Expected answer: 153

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following on from the previous scenario with the orange seller: suppose that the seller initially had only 9 boxes of orange but on the subsequent day, he added 22 new boxes as before. However, instead of adding 26 boxes to total on the third day this time, he adds 66 boxes. How many boxes of oranges does the store have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On the first day, the store had 9 boxes of oranges.
On the second day, the store had 9 + 22 = 31 boxes of oranges.
On the third day, the store had 31 + 66 = 97 boxes of oranges.
### Answer: 97

Expected answer: 97

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Yvonne has 27 balls in her collection. She went to a fair and won 19 more. How many balls does Yvonne have in her collection now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Yvonne initially had 27 balls in her collection. She won 19 more balls at the fair, so we need to add 19 to 27 to find the total number of balls she has now.

27 + 19 = 46

### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 46

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After donating some of her balls, Yvonne now has 97 balls left in her collection. She goes to another fair and wins 19 more. How many balls does Yvonne have in her collection now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Yvonne had 97 balls left in her collection after donating some. She then won 19 more balls at the fair, so we need to add 19 to 97 to find the total number of balls she has now.

97 + 19 = 116

### Answer: 116

Expected answer: 116

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In the sky, a cloud split into 8 small clouds and 13 larger ones. Another cloud split the same way. How many total clouds were formed?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The first cloud split into 8 small clouds and 13 larger ones, making a total of 8 + 13 = 21 clouds.

The second cloud also split into 8 small clouds and 13 larger ones, making another 8 + 13 = 21 clouds.

In total, there are 21 + 21 = 42 clouds formed.

### Answer: 42

Expected answer: 42

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After splitting, the original clouds came back together and formed 91 additional smaller clouds. How many total clouds are there now including the additional smaller clouds formed?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that there are 42 clouds formed after the two original clouds split.

Now, these 42 clouds came back together and formed 91 additional smaller clouds. To find the total number of clouds, we add the 42 clouds to the 91 additional smaller clouds:

42 + 91 = 133

### Answer: 133

Expected answer: 133

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if initially, instead of splitting into 8 small clouds, each of the two clouds split into 43 small clouds and kept the 13 larger ones the same? How many total clouds would have formed in that case?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The first cloud split into 43 small clouds and 13 larger ones, making a total of 43 + 13 = 56 clouds.

The second cloud also split into 43 small clouds and 13 larger ones, making another 43 + 13 = 56 clouds.

In total, there are 56 + 56 = 112 clouds formed.

### Answer: 112

Expected answer: 112

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Oliver recently took up skateboard stunting. He can perform 77 stunts with his skateboard. Now, if he learns to perform each stunt in reverse as well, how many stunts will he be able to perform in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Oliver can already perform 77 stunts. If he learns to perform each stunt in reverse, he will be able to perform an additional 77 stunts (since each stunt now has a reverse version). 
To find the total number of stunts he can perform, we add the original 77 stunts to the 77 reverse stunts: 77 + 77 = 154.
### Answer: 154

Expected answer: 154

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following his initial success, Oliver spends a few more months and learns 27 additional new skateboard stunts. Now, including his ability to perform the original stunts in reverse, how many skateboard stunts can Oliver perform in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Oliver could already perform 154 stunts (77 original stunts + 77 reverse stunts). He has now learned 27 new stunts. 
Since he can also perform these 27 new stunts in reverse, he has actually added 27 + 27 = 54 new stunts to his repertoire. 
To find the total number of stunts he can perform, we add the 54 new stunts to the 154 stunts he could already perform: 154 + 54 = 208.
### Answer: 208

Expected answer: 181

Correct? No

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After learning from his experience, Oliver realizes that he initially only needed to learn 61 stunts, as he could perform each stunt in reverse to effectively create a new trick. If he is still able to perform each of these stunts in reverse, how many skateboard stunts can Oliver perform now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Oliver can perform 61 stunts. Since he can perform each stunt in reverse, he can effectively create a new trick for each stunt, which means he can perform an additional 61 stunts (the reverse versions).
To find the total number of stunts he can perform, we add the original 61 stunts to the 61 reverse stunts: 61 + 61 = 122.
### Answer: 122

Expected answer: 122

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A pair of binoculars increases visibility by 22 degrees in one direction and 26 degrees in another direction. What is the total increase in the angle of visibility when both directions are considered?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total increase in the angle of visibility, we need to add the increase in one direction to the increase in the other direction.

Total increase = Increase in one direction + Increase in another direction
= 22 degrees + 26 degrees
= 48 degrees

### Answer: 48 degrees

Expected answer: 48

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, after the binoculars increase visibility by 22 degrees in one direction and 26 degrees in another direction, an additional lens is added that further increases the visibility by 76 degrees. What is the total increase in the angle of visibility considering all enhancements?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already found the total increase in the angle of visibility with the binoculars to be 48 degrees. Now, we need to add the additional increase in visibility provided by the lens.

Total increase = Increase with binoculars + Increase with lens
= 48 degrees + 76 degrees
= 124 degrees

### Answer: 124 degrees

Expected answer: 124

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, consider that the binoculars initially increased visibility by 14 degrees in one direction instead of 22 degrees, while the increase in the other direction remains 26 degrees. What is the total increase in the angle of visibility now when both directions are considered?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total increase in the angle of visibility, we need to add the increase in one direction to the increase in the other direction.

Total increase = Increase in one direction + Increase in another direction
= 14 degrees + 26 degrees
= 40 degrees

### Answer: 40 degrees

Expected answer: 40

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a galaxy, there are 83 stars in the Great Nebula. Fifty more are spotted in the South Nebula. In the Eastern Nebula, there are 45 stars. How many stars are there in total in the Great Nebula, South Nebula, and Eastern Nebula?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Let's start by adding the number of stars in the Great Nebula and the South Nebula: 83 + 50 = 133.
Then, we add the number of stars in the Eastern Nebula to the total: 133 + 45 = 178.
### Answer: 178

Expected answer: 178

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following from the previous problem, a recalculation by astronomers reveals that there are actually 32 stars, not 83, in the Great Nebula. Considering this recalculation, with 50 stars still in the South Nebula, and 45 in the Eastern Nebula, how many stars are there now across these three nebulas?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Let's recalculate the total number of stars. We have 32 stars in the Great Nebula, 50 stars in the South Nebula, and 45 stars in the Eastern Nebula.
First, we add the number of stars in the Great Nebula and the South Nebula: 32 + 50 = 82.
Then, we add the number of stars in the Eastern Nebula to the total: 82 + 45 = 127.
### Answer: 127

Expected answer: 127

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A boy has 15 balls. He goes to the store and buys another 22 balls. How many balls does he have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The boy initially had 15 balls. He then bought 22 more balls, so we need to add 22 to 15 to find the total number of balls he has now.

15 + 22 = 37

### Answer: 37

Expected answer: 37

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the balls he already has, his friends give him 64 more balls for his upcoming birthday. Now, how many balls does the boy have in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The boy already had 37 balls. His friends gave him 64 more balls, so we need to add 64 to 37 to find the total number of balls he has now.

37 + 64 = 101

### Answer: 101

Expected answer: 101

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Consider instead that the boy originally had 48 balls instead of 15. After buying another 22 balls from the store, how many balls does he have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The boy initially had 48 balls. He then bought 22 more balls, so we need to add 22 to 48 to find the total number of balls he has now.

48 + 22 = 70

### Answer: 70

Expected answer: 70

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Mira has 82 beautiful roses in her garden, and she decides to plant 12 additional daisies to add more variety. How many flowers does Mira have in her garden after planting the daisies?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mira already has 82 roses in her garden. She plants 12 additional daisies, so we need to add the number of daisies to the number of roses to find the total number of flowers.

Total number of flowers = Number of roses + Number of daisies
= 82 + 12
= 94

### Answer: 94

Expected answer: 94

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead Mira originally had 88 roses in her garden before planting the 12 daisies. How many flowers would there be in Mira's garden then?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mira already has 88 roses in her garden. She plants 12 additional daisies, so we need to add the number of daisies to the number of roses to find the total number of flowers.

Total number of flowers = Number of roses + Number of daisies
= 88 + 12
= 100

### Answer: 100

Expected answer: 100

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A jeweler strings together 82 gems to begin making a bracelet. He then adds 79 more gems to it. He finishes off the bracelet by adding 58 more gems. How many gems are there in total on the bracelet?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The jeweler starts with 82 gems. He then adds 79 more gems, making a total of 82 + 79 = 161 gems. Finally, he adds 58 more gems, making a total of 161 + 58 = 219 gems.

### Answer: 219

Expected answer: 219

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous problem: after the jeweler has strung together the number of gems on the bracelet, he decides to make a matching necklace. He adds another 60 gems to the total number of gems he has already used. How many gems in total did the jeweler use for both the bracelet and the necklace?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The jeweler used 219 gems for the bracelet. He then adds 60 more gems for the necklace, making a total of 219 + 60 = 279 gems.

### Answer: 279

Expected answer: 279

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: The jeweler has a change of mind and decides to start recreating the bracelet, but this time he starts with 77 gems instead of 82. He once again adds 79 more gems and completes it by adding 58 more gems. How many gems are now on this new bracelet in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The jeweler starts with 77 gems. He then adds 79 more gems, making a total of 77 + 79 = 156 gems. Finally, he adds 58 more gems, making a total of 156 + 58 = 214 gems.

### Answer: 214

Expected answer: 214

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Dalia has a stock of 65 tomatoes. She decides to buy the same quantity again. How many tomatoes does she have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Dalia initially had 65 tomatoes. She bought the same quantity again, which means she bought 65 more tomatoes. To find the total number of tomatoes she has now, we add the initial quantity to the additional quantity: 65 + 65 = 130.
### Answer: 130

Expected answer: 130

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After buying the same quantity of tomatoes again, Dalia decides to buy 50 more from her friend's farm. How many tomatoes does she have in total now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Dalia already had 130 tomatoes (from the previous problem). She bought 50 more tomatoes from her friend's farm. To find the total number of tomatoes she has now, we add the additional 50 tomatoes to the previous total: 130 + 50 = 180.
### Answer: 180

Expected answer: 180

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After seeing how her tomato stock fared last time, Dalia decides to start with 89 tomatoes this time. She decides again to buy the same quantity from her supplier. How many tomatoes does she have in stock now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Dalia initially had 89 tomatoes. She bought the same quantity again, which means she bought 89 more tomatoes. To find the total number of tomatoes she has now, we add the initial quantity to the additional quantity: 89 + 89 = 178.
### Answer: 178

Expected answer: 178

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: David has 25 pens in his pencil case. His best friend Pam gives him 34 more pens as a gift. How many pens does David have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: David initially had 25 pens. His friend Pam gave him 34 more pens. To find the total number of pens David has now, we add the initial number of pens to the number of pens Pam gave him: 25 + 34 = 59.
### Answer: 59

Expected answer: 59

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: David decided to count his pens to make sure he knows how many he has. When counting, he realizes he has as many pens as the total of the 25 pens in his pencil case and the 34 pens Pam gave him. How many pens does David count?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: David has the same number of pens as the total of the 25 pens in his pencil case and the 34 pens Pam gave him. To find the total, we add the initial number of pens to the number of pens Pam gave him: 25 + 34 = 59.
### Answer: 59

Expected answer: 59

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: David rechecks his pencil case and realizes he made a mistake. He actually had 55 pens in his pencil case, not 25. If Pam still gave him 34 pens, how many pens does David have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: David initially had 55 pens. His friend Pam gave him 34 more pens. To find the total number of pens David has now, we add the initial number of pens to the number of pens Pam gave him: 55 + 34 = 89.
### Answer: 89

Expected answer: 89

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A clothing designer is creating a custom shirt. The length of the shirt is 86 cm. The chest measurement is the length added by 11 cm. The waist measurement is the same as the sum of the two chest measurements. What is the waist measurement of the shirt in cm?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The chest measurement is the length added by 11 cm, so the chest measurement is 86 + 11 = 97 cm.
Since there are two chest measurements, the sum of the two chest measurements is 97 + 97 = 194 cm.
The waist measurement is the same as the sum of the two chest measurements, so the waist measurement is 194 cm.
### Answer: 194

Expected answer: 194

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: The clothing designer decides to adjust the shirt after taking the initial measurements. To ensure a comfortable fit, the designer adds a further 9 cm to the final waist measurement, which was the same as the sum of the two chest measurements. What is the new adjusted waist measurement of the shirt in cm?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The original waist measurement was 194 cm.
The designer adds a further 9 cm to the final waist measurement, so the new adjusted waist measurement is 194 + 9 = 203 cm.
### Answer: 203

Expected answer: 203

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Recall the clothing designer from before. This time, the designer is creating a shirt with a different length of 99 cm. In this design, the chest measurement is defined as the length added by 11 cm. The waist measurement is set as the sum of the two chest measurements. What is the waist measurement of this new shirt design in cm?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The chest measurement is the length added by 11 cm, so the chest measurement is 99 + 11 = 110 cm.
Since there are two chest measurements, the sum of the two chest measurements is 110 + 110 = 220 cm.
The waist measurement is the same as the sum of the two chest measurements, so the waist measurement is 220 cm.
### Answer: 220

Expected answer: 220

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: The computer has an initial operating power of 96 Watts. Later, an update increases the operational power by an additional 84 Watts. What is the computer's operation power after the update?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The computer's initial operating power is 96 Watts. The update increases the operational power by 84 Watts, so we need to add 84 to the initial power to find the new operating power.

New operating power = Initial operating power + Increase in power
= 96 + 84
= 180

### Answer: 180 Watts

Expected answer: 180

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that the computer initially had an operating power of 36 Watts instead of 96 Watts. Then, the same update increases the operational power by an additional 84 Watts. How much operation power would the computer have after the update in this scenario?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The computer's initial operating power is 36 Watts. The update increases the operational power by 84 Watts, so we need to add 84 to the initial power to find the new operating power.

New operating power = Initial operating power + Increase in power
= 36 + 84
= 120

### Answer: 120 Watts

Expected answer: 120

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A company produces 62 tubes of toothpaste every hour at their plant. Later, the company upgrades their production capacity and is now able to make 40 more tubes every hour. How many tubes of toothpaste can the company produce per hour after the upgrade?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The company originally produced 62 tubes of toothpaste per hour. After the upgrade, they can produce 40 more tubes per hour. To find the new production capacity, we add the original production capacity to the increase: 62 + 40 = 102.
### Answer: 102

Expected answer: 102

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the company initially started with a production capacity of 75 tubes of toothpaste every hour instead of 62. After the first upgrade, which still added an additional 40 tubes of toothpaste to their hour production, how many toothpaste tubes can the company produce per hour?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The company originally produced 75 tubes of toothpaste per hour. After the upgrade, they can produce 40 more tubes per hour. To find the new production capacity, we add the original production capacity to the increase: 75 + 40 = 115.
### Answer: 115

Expected answer: 115

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: At the beginning of the month, a penguin had 31 fish. By the middle of the month, he had as many fish as the initial amount plus 31 more. At the end of the month, he had as many fish as the amount he had in the middle of the month and the initial 31 fish. How many fish did the penguin have at the end of the month?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's break this down step by step:

At the beginning of the month, the penguin had 31 fish.

By the middle of the month, he had as many fish as the initial amount plus 31 more, so he had:
31 (initial amount) + 31 (additional fish) = 62 fish

At the end of the month, he had as many fish as the amount he had in the middle of the month and the initial 31 fish, so he had:
62 (middle of the month) + 31 (initial amount) = 93 fish

### Answer: 93

Expected answer: 93

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's reconsider the original scenario with the penguin. Instead of getting the original 31 extra fish in the middle of the month, the penguin now only gets an additional 21 fish. Using the rest of the fish count as before, how many fish does the penguin have by the end of the month now?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's recalculate:

At the beginning of the month, the penguin had 31 fish.

By the middle of the month, he had as many fish as the initial amount plus 21 more, so he had:
31 (initial amount) + 21 (additional fish) = 52 fish

At the end of the month, he had as many fish as the amount he had in the middle of the month and the initial 31 fish, so he had:
52 (middle of the month) + 31 (initial amount) = 83 fish

### Answer: 83

Expected answer: 83

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Katie baked 34 cookies in the morning. She baked the same amount in the afternoon. How many cookies did Katie bake in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Katie baked 34 cookies in the morning and the same amount in the afternoon, so she baked 34 + 34 = 68 cookies in total.
### Answer: 68

Expected answer: 68

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, what if instead of making 34 cookies in the morning and afternoon, Katie actually baked 23 cookies during each time period? How many cookies did she make in total in that case?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Katie baked 23 cookies in the morning and 23 cookies in the afternoon, so she baked 23 + 23 = 46 cookies in total.
### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 46

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Emma bought 17 toothbrushes for her family. Her friend Clarissa then gave her an additional sum of 71 and 38 toothbrushes from her dentist's office. How many toothbrushes does Emma have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Emma initially had 17 toothbrushes.
Clarissa gave her 71 toothbrushes and 38 toothbrushes, so Emma received a total of 71 + 38 = 109 toothbrushes from Clarissa.
Now, Emma has 17 + 109 = 126 toothbrushes.
### Answer: 126

Expected answer: 126

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Emma then visited a local health fair where she received an additional 59 toothbrushes to add to her collection. How many toothbrushes does Emma now have in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Emma already had 126 toothbrushes.
She received 59 more toothbrushes at the health fair, so she now has 126 + 59 = 185 toothbrushes.
### Answer: 185

Expected answer: 185

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous problem, suppose Emma initially bought 17 toothbrushes. But this time, Clarissa gives her an additional sum of 80 and 38 toothbrushes instead of the previous amount she received. How many toothbrushes does Emma have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Emma initially had 17 toothbrushes.
Clarissa gave her 80 toothbrushes and 38 toothbrushes, so Emma received a total of 80 + 38 = 118 toothbrushes from Clarissa.
Now, Emma has 17 + 118 = 135 toothbrushes.
### Answer: 135

Expected answer: 135

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A frog is sitting on a leaf. The leaf is 31 cm from the ground. The frog jumps and reaches an exact same spot on another leaf. How much distance in centimeters did the frog cover in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The frog jumps from a leaf that is 31 cm from the ground to another leaf at the same height. This means the frog travels a total distance of 31 cm up and 31 cm down, for a total distance of 31 + 31 = 62 cm.
### Answer: 62

Expected answer: 62

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After jumping to another leaf, the frog decided to jump again to a flower that is 69 cm above from the ground. Considering the distance the frog covered in his previous jumps, how much distance in centimeters did the frog cover in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The frog had already covered a distance of 62 cm in its previous jumps. Now, it jumps from a leaf that is 31 cm from the ground to a flower that is 69 cm from the ground. This means the frog travels a distance of 69 - 31 = 38 cm upwards.

The total distance covered by the frog is the sum of the distance covered in the previous jumps and the current jump: 62 + 38 = 100 cm.
### Answer: 100

Expected answer: 131

Correct? No

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of the initial 31 cm, the leaves were only 20 cm above the ground when the frog first started jumping. Given the same jumps as before, how much distance in centimeters would the frog cover then?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The frog jumps from a leaf that is 20 cm from the ground to another leaf at the same height. This means the frog travels a total distance of 20 cm up and 20 cm down, for a total distance of 20 + 20 = 40 cm.
### Answer: 40

Expected answer: 40

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a summer vacation assignment, Olivia wrote 70 words on her first day and 23 words on the second day. In addition to this, Isabella wrote 17 words in her assignment. Find the total number of words written by both Olivia and Isabella.

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Olivia wrote 70 words on the first day and 23 words on the second day, so she wrote a total of 70 + 23 = 93 words.
Isabella wrote 17 words in her assignment.
The total number of words written by both Olivia and Isabella is 93 + 17 = 110 words.
### Answer: 110

Expected answer: 110

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Now imagine that after Olivia and Isabella completed their assignments, Isabella decided to write an additional 17 words. With this additional contribution, what is the total number of words written by both Olivia and Isabella?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Previously, Olivia wrote a total of 93 words and Isabella wrote a total of 17 words, so together they wrote 93 + 17 = 110 words.
Now, Isabella decides to write an additional 17 words, so her new total is 17 + 17 = 34 words.
The new total number of words written by both Olivia and Isabella is 93 + 34 = 127 words.
### Answer: 127

Expected answer: 127

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, consider now that Olivia initially wrote only 4 words on the first day instead of 70, but still wrote 23 words on the second day. Isabella wrote 17 words as before. Given this, how many total words have Olivia and Isabella written now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Olivia wrote 4 words on the first day and 23 words on the second day, so she wrote a total of 4 + 23 = 27 words.
Isabella wrote 17 words in her assignment.
The total number of words written by both Olivia and Isabella is 27 + 17 = 44 words.
### Answer: 44

Expected answer: 44

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: On a morning commute, a bus picks up 48 riders at one stop. At the next stop, it picks up another 18 riders. How many riders are there in all on the bus?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The bus picks up 48 riders at the first stop. Then, it picks up 18 more riders at the next stop. To find the total number of riders, we add the number of riders at each stop: 48 + 18 = 66.

### Answer: 66

Expected answer: 66

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the morning commute, the same bus does an afternoon route. The number of riders it picks up is exactly the same as the morning route. How many riders does the bus pick up in total for both the morning and afternoon routes?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: In the morning, the bus picks up 48 riders at the first stop and 18 riders at the second stop, for a total of 48 + 18 = 66 riders. Since the afternoon route is the same, the bus picks up the same number of riders, which is 66. To find the total number of riders for both routes, we add the number of riders from each route: 66 + 66 = 132.

### Answer: 132

Expected answer: 132

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a new scenario, the bus picks up 48 riders on the morning commute, just like before. But this time at the next stop, it picks up 52 more riders. How many riders are there in all on the bus now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The bus picks up 48 riders at the first stop. Then, it picks up 52 more riders at the next stop. To find the total number of riders, we add the number of riders at each stop: 48 + 52 = 100.

### Answer: 100

Expected answer: 100

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sophia found a box of old trading cards in the attic. She counted 24 of them as baseball cards and 35 as basketball cards. Later on, she discovered 22 more cards from various sports. How many trading cards has Sophia found in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sophia initially found 24 baseball cards and 35 basketball cards, so she had a total of 24 + 35 = 59 cards.
Later, she found 22 more cards, so she now has a total of 59 + 22 = 81 cards.
### Answer: 81

Expected answer: 81

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Sophia counted 24 baseball cards, 35 basketball cards, and another 22 cards from various sports that she had found in the attic, she remembered her old shoebox full of trading cards under her bed. In the shoebox, she found 45 more cards. How many total trading cards does Sophia have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sophia already had 24 baseball cards, 35 basketball cards, and 22 cards from various sports, for a total of 24 + 35 + 22 = 81 cards.
She then found 45 more cards in the shoebox, so she now has a total of 81 + 45 = 126 cards.
### Answer: 126

Expected answer: 126

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Sophia initially found 24 baseball cards and 35 basketball cards in the attic. Later, she discovered 92 more cards, making it a wide variety of sports cards. How many trading cards has Sophia found in total now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sophia initially found 24 baseball cards and 35 basketball cards, so she had a total of 24 + 35 = 59 cards.
Later, she found 92 more cards, so she now has a total of 59 + 92 = 151 cards.
### Answer: 151

Expected answer: 151

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: For his birthday, Jenny's father receives 16 gifts. Eight more gifts arrive in the mail the next day. In addition, Jenny's dad gets 23 gifts at his office. How many gifts did Jenny's dad receive in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jenny's father initially received 16 gifts.
The next day, 8 more gifts arrived, making a total of 16 + 8 = 24 gifts.
At his office, he received 23 more gifts, making a total of 24 + 23 = 47 gifts.
### Answer: 47

Expected answer: 47

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if Jenny had made a mistake in her original count and her dad actually received 38 gifts initially, not 16? Eight more gifts still arrive in the mail the next day and he still gets the 23 gifts at his office. With these changes, how many gifts did Jenny's dad receive in total now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jenny's father initially received 38 gifts.
The next day, 8 more gifts arrived, making a total of 38 + 8 = 46 gifts.
At his office, he received 23 more gifts, making a total of 46 + 23 = 69 gifts.
### Answer: 69

Expected answer: 69

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Let's say you have 30 pencils. You bought an exact same amount more. How many pencils do you have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: If I have 30 pencils and I bought an exact same amount more, that means I bought 30 more pencils.
To find the total number of pencils I have now, I add the original 30 pencils to the 30 new pencils: 30 + 30 = 60.
### Answer: 60

Expected answer: 60

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After buying the same amount of additional pencils, you find that your friend has gifted you 15 more pencils. How many pencils do you have in total now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: I already had 60 pencils.
I bought the same amount more, which means I bought 30 more pencils again: 60 + 30 = 90.
Then, my friend gifted me 15 more pencils, so I add those to the total: 90 + 15 = 105.
### Answer: 105

Expected answer: 75

Correct? No

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's consider the previous scenario but this time, you initially have 80 pencils instead of 30. If you again bought an exact same amount more, how many pencils would you have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: If I have 80 pencils and I bought an exact same amount more, that means I bought 80 more pencils.
To find the total number of pencils I have now, I add the original 80 pencils to the 80 new pencils: 80 + 80 = 160.
### Answer: 160

Expected answer: 160

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Peter watched 93 minutes of TV in the morning. Later in the evening, he watched another 84 minutes. How many total minutes of TV did Peter watch in a day?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total minutes of TV Peter watched, we need to add the minutes he watched in the morning and the minutes he watched in the evening.

Morning: 93 minutes
Evening: 84 minutes

Total minutes = 93 + 84 = 177

### Answer: 177

Expected answer: 177

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the last time, after Peter had watched a total of minutes from morning and the evening, he again watched an additional 92 minutes of TV before his bedtime. How many total minutes of TV did Peter watch now in the whole day?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that Peter watched a total of 177 minutes of TV in the morning and evening. Now, he watched an additional 92 minutes before bedtime. To find the new total, we add the additional minutes to the previous total.

Previous total: 177 minutes
Additional minutes: 92 minutes

New total = 177 + 92 = 269

### Answer: 269

Expected answer: 269

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of 93 minutes in the morning, Peter initially watched 83 minutes of TV. He still watched 84 minutes later in the evening. Now, how many total minutes of TV did Peter watch in a day?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total minutes of TV Peter watched, we need to add the minutes he watched in the morning and the minutes he watched in the evening.

Morning: 83 minutes
Evening: 84 minutes

Total minutes = 83 + 84 = 167

### Answer: 167

Expected answer: 167

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jake has 69 balls. He goes to a store and buys the same amount of balls. How many balls does Jake have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jake initially had 69 balls. He bought the same amount, which means he bought 69 more balls. To find the total number of balls Jake has now, we add the initial number of balls to the number of balls he bought: 69 + 69 = 138.
### Answer: 138

Expected answer: 138

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous problem, after Jake buys the same amount of balls from the store, his friend decides to give him an additional 12 balls as a gift. How many balls does Jake have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that Jake had 138 balls after buying the same amount from the store. His friend gives him 12 more balls as a gift, so we add 12 to the total number of balls Jake had: 138 + 12 = 150.
### Answer: 150

Expected answer: 150

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, let's say Jake initially bought only 54 balls instead of 69. He still doubles that amount by buying the same number of balls from the store. How many balls would Jake have then?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jake initially had 54 balls. He bought the same amount, which means he bought 54 more balls. To find the total number of balls Jake has now, we add the initial number of balls to the number of balls he bought: 54 + 54 = 108.
### Answer: 108

Expected answer: 108

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A zookeeper takes count of the elephants in the zoo. In the first section, he finds 53 elephants. In the next section, he finds 71 more. On his way out, he realizes that he needs to revisit a previously counted section of 72 elephants. How many elephants did he count altogether?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The zookeeper initially counted 53 elephants in the first section.
Then, he counted 71 more elephants in the next section, making a total of 53 + 71 = 124 elephants.
Finally, he revisited a previously counted section of 72 elephants, adding to the total count.
So, the total number of elephants counted is 124 + 72 = 196.
### Answer: 196

Expected answer: 196

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the zookeeper's day shift, he decides to check the recorded count of the elephants during his night shift. He revisits the first two sections counting 53 and 71 elephants and recounts the same number. He then adds this to his previous total count including the section with the 72 elephants. What is his total count of the elephants now after his night shift?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: During the night shift, the zookeeper recounted the first two sections and got the same numbers: 53 and 71.
He added these to his previous total count, which was 196.
So, he added 53 + 71 = 124 to 196, making the new total count: 196 + 124 = 320.
### Answer: 320

Expected answer: 320

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sally is organizing her wardrobe and she notices she has a total of 7 dresses and 96 skirts. Later, she also finds another 26 shirts. How many total items of clothing does Sally have in her wardrobe?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally initially has 7 dresses and 96 skirts, so she has a total of 7 + 96 = 103 items of clothing.
Later, she finds 26 more shirts, so she now has a total of 103 + 26 = 129 items of clothing.
### Answer: 129

Expected answer: 129

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After going through her wardrobe again, Sally realizes she actually has 99 skirts instead of 96. Keeping the count of 7 dresses and 26 shirts the same, how many total items of clothing does Sally have in her wardrobe now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally has 7 dresses, 99 skirts, and 26 shirts.
To find the total number of items, we add these numbers together: 7 + 99 + 26 = 132.
### Answer: 132

Expected answer: 132

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sarah has managed to bake 80 sandwiches for the local fundraiser. Later in the day, Kevin, her friend, comes over and makes an additional quantity of sandwiches such that in total, the sandwiches he makes added to Sarah's make up 33 more than the number of sandwiches made by Sarah. How many sandwiches did Kevin make?

Llama 3 70B:

Let's say Kevin made x sandwiches.

We know that the total number of sandwiches made by Sarah and Kevin is 33 more than the number of sandwiches made by Sarah, so we can set up the equation:

80 + x = 80 + 33

Subtract 80 from both sides of the equation to get:

x = 33

### Answer: 33

Expected answer: 113

Correct? No

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Gabriella has 31 grapes. She buys 75 more. John has 64 grapes and decides to add to his pile all the grapes that Gabriella has. How many grapes does John have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Gabriella has 31 grapes initially and buys 75 more, so she now has 31 + 75 = 106 grapes.
John has 64 grapes initially and adds all of Gabriella's grapes to his pile, so he now has 64 + 106 = 170 grapes.
### Answer: 170

Expected answer: 170

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Instead of buying 75 grapes, what if Gabriella had bought 45 grapes initially. In this scenario, she would start with 31 grapes, then buy an additional 45 grapes, and then John would take his 64 grapes and add all the grapes Gabriella has. How many grapes would John have then?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Gabriella has 31 grapes initially and buys 45 more, so she now has 31 + 45 = 76 grapes.
John has 64 grapes initially and adds all of Gabriella's grapes to his pile, so he now has 64 + 76 = 140 grapes.
### Answer: 140

Expected answer: 140

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A queen bee lays 51 eggs and then lays an additional 64 eggs. The worker bees find 53 more eggs in the hive, and then they discover another cache of 79 eggs. How many eggs are in the hive in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The queen bee lays 51 + 64 = 115 eggs.
The worker bees find 53 more eggs, making a total of 115 + 53 = 168 eggs.
Then, they discover another cache of 79 eggs, making a total of 168 + 79 = 247 eggs.
### Answer: 247

Expected answer: 247

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the discovery of the cache of 79 eggs in the hive, an experienced beekeeper gives the worker bees a batch of 5 eggs from another hive. How many eggs are in the hive now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The worker bees already had 247 eggs in the hive.
The beekeeper adds 5 more eggs, making a total of 247 + 5 = 252 eggs.
### Answer: 252

Expected answer: 252

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A fruit vendor sells 68 bananas in a day. Meanwhile, a small market nearby sells 35 bananas during the same day. How many bananas were sold in total that day?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of bananas sold, we need to add the number of bananas sold by the fruit vendor and the small market.

Number of bananas sold by the fruit vendor = 68
Number of bananas sold by the small market = 35

Total number of bananas sold = 68 + 35 = 103

### Answer: 103

Expected answer: 103

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: From the bananas sold in a day, a fruit vendor picks up the total number of bananas he and the nearby small market have sold. This number is noted down for record keeping. What is the recorded total number of bananas sold in a day?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already calculated the total number of bananas sold in a day, which is the sum of the bananas sold by the fruit vendor and the small market.

Total number of bananas sold = 68 + 35 = 103

This total number of bananas sold is the recorded total number of bananas sold in a day.

### Answer: 103

Expected answer: 103

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Earlier, the fruit vendor sold 68 bananas in a day, but the following day he sells only 49 bananas. The same small market nearby keeps its sales consistent and sells 35 bananas again. How many bananas were sold in total on this new day?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total number of bananas sold, we need to add the number of bananas sold by the fruit vendor and the small market.

Number of bananas sold by the fruit vendor = 49
Number of bananas sold by the small market = 35

Total number of bananas sold = 49 + 35 = 84

### Answer: 84

Expected answer: 84

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sam's computer has 23GB of storage space left. After compressing some files, he is able to free up an additional 98GB. How much total storage space does Sam's computer have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sam's computer initially had 23GB of storage space left. After compressing some files, he freed up an additional 98GB. To find the total storage space, we add the initial space to the additional space: 23GB + 98GB = 121GB.
### Answer: 121GB

Expected answer: 121

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Now, suppose Sam had originally had a total of 96GB of storage space available on his computer instead of 23GB. After compressing the same files, he is still able to free up an additional 98GB. With this scenario, how much total storage space does Sam's computer have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sam's computer initially had 96GB of storage space. After compressing some files, he freed up an additional 98GB. To find the total storage space, we add the initial space to the additional space: 96GB + 98GB = 194GB.
### Answer: 194GB

Expected answer: 194

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Frank has a fish farm with 77 fish in one of the tanks. One day, he decides to add an additional 19 fish into the tank. How many fish are there in the tank in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Frank initially had 77 fish in the tank. He added 19 more fish to the tank. To find the total number of fish, we need to add the initial number of fish to the number of fish added.

77 (initial fish) + 19 (additional fish) = 96

### Answer: 96

Expected answer: 96

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Frank continues to grow his fish farm and adds an additional 51 fish into the tank. Now, how many fish are there in the tank in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Frank already had 96 fish in the tank. He added 51 more fish to the tank. To find the total number of fish, we need to add the current number of fish to the number of fish added.

96 (current fish) + 51 (additional fish) = 147

### Answer: 147

Expected answer: 147

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous question, imagine Frank started with a smaller tank that only had 4 fish. He adds the same number of fish as before, an additional 19 into the tank. How many fish are now in that tank in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Frank initially had 4 fish in the tank. He added 19 more fish to the tank. To find the total number of fish, we need to add the initial number of fish to the number of fish added.

4 (initial fish) + 19 (additional fish) = 23

### Answer: 23

Expected answer: 23

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A truck driver starts his journey with 83 gallons of gas in his tank. He stops at the first station and fills up an additional 36 gallons. Then he drives until he needs to refill and adds 99 more gallons. Finally, he stops near his destination and tops off his tank with 7 gallons. How many total gallons of gas did the truck driver use for his journey?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Let's first find the total amount of gas the truck driver had in his tank at the end of his journey. He started with 83 gallons, then added 36 gallons, then added 99 gallons, and finally added 7 gallons. So, the total amount of gas in his tank at the end of his journey is 83 + 36 + 99 + 7 = 225 gallons.

Since the truck driver's tank is full at the end of his journey, the amount of gas he used is the difference between the total amount of gas he had and the initial amount of gas he had. Therefore, the total amount of gas used is 225 - 83 = 142 gallons.

### Answer: 142

Expected answer: 225

Correct? No

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Bobby goes to the local park and decides to test how high he can swing on three different swings. On the first swing, he goes 56 feet in the air, then comes back down and goes another 53 feet high. On the second swing, he goes as high as he did on the first one plus an additional 5 feet. On the third swing, he challenges himself and goes as high as he did on the second one plus an additional 34 feet. How high did Bobby swing on the third swing?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On the first swing, Bobby goes 56 + 53 = 109 feet high.

On the second swing, he goes 109 + 5 = 114 feet high.

On the third swing, he goes 114 + 34 = 148 feet high.

### Answer: 148

Expected answer: 148

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Thrilled with his success on the first three swings, Bobby decides to attempt a final swing. This time, he pushes himself to go as high as he did on the third swing plus an additional 69 feet. How high did Bobby swing on this final powerhouse swing?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: On the third swing, Bobby went 148 feet high.

On the final swing, he goes 148 + 69 = 217 feet high.

### Answer: 217

Expected answer: 217

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Bob starts with a wallet containing $88. He finds $40 on the ground and adds it to his wallet. Later, his mom gives him an additional $56 for doing chores. How much money does Bob have in his wallet now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Bob starts with $88 in his wallet. He finds $40 on the ground and adds it to his wallet, so he now has $88 + $40 = $128. Later, his mom gives him an additional $56, so he now has $128 + $56 = $184.

### Answer: $184

Expected answer: 184

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the money Bob has in his wallet, his sister Penny gives him $13 from her piggy bank to help him buy a new game. How much money does Bob have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Bob already has $184 in his wallet. His sister Penny gives him an additional $13, so he now has $184 + $13 = $197.

### Answer: $197

Expected answer: 197

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Instead of finding $40 on the ground, Bob initially finds $53. He adds this to his original $88 he had in the wallet, and his mom still gives him an additional $56 for doing chores. How much money does Bob have in his wallet now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Bob starts with $88 in his wallet. He finds $53 on the ground and adds it to his wallet, so he now has $88 + $53 = $141. Later, his mom gives him an additional $56, so he now has $141 + $56 = $197.

### Answer: $197

Expected answer: 197

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a magical wizard world, Eugene the wizard has 98 magic orbs. Merlin, another wizard, has 71 more orbs than Eugene. Damien, a third wizard, has 59 orbs more than Merlin. How many orbs does Damien have?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Eugene has 98 magic orbs. Merlin has 71 more orbs than Eugene, so Merlin has 98 + 71 = 169 orbs. Damien has 59 orbs more than Merlin, so Damien has 169 + 59 = 228 orbs.
### Answer: 228

Expected answer: 228

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the further adventures of our magical wizards, Gertrude, a wise wizard, acquires 90 orbs more than Damien. How many orbs does Gertrude have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Damien has 228 orbs. Gertrude acquires 90 orbs more than Damien, so Gertrude has 228 + 90 = 318 orbs.
### Answer: 318

Expected answer: 318

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's revisit our magical wizards' adventure, but this time, envision Eugene starting off with a different amount of magic orbs. Suppose Eugene initially had only 85 magic orbs instead of 98. Following the same chain of orb-acquiring, with Merlin having 71 more orbs than Eugene and Damien having 59 more orbs than Merlin, how many orbs would Damien have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Eugene has 85 magic orbs. Merlin has 71 more orbs than Eugene, so Merlin has 85 + 71 = 156 orbs. Damien has 59 orbs more than Merlin, so Damien has 156 + 59 = 215 orbs.
### Answer: 215

Expected answer: 215

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Emma has 5 dolls. Sophia gives her the same number of dolls as she already has. How many dolls does Emma have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Emma already has 5 dolls. Sophia gives her the same number of dolls, which is 5 more dolls. 
To find the total number of dolls Emma has now, we add the number of dolls she already had to the number of dolls Sophia gave her: 5 + 5 = 10.
### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's say that instead of starting with 5 dolls, Emma originally had 12 dolls. If Sophia gives her the same number of dolls as she originally had, how many dolls does Emma have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Emma already has 12 dolls. Sophia gives her the same number of dolls, which is 12 more dolls. 
To find the total number of dolls Emma has now, we add the number of dolls she already had to the number of dolls Sophia gave her: 12 + 12 = 24.
### Answer: 24

Expected answer: 24

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: During a chilly winter, Sally makes a hot chocolate recipe that requires 36 spoons of chocolate and 84 spoons of milk. After she adds the chocolate and milk, she also adds 34 spoons of whipped cream. How many total spoons of ingredients does Sally use for her hot chocolate?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally uses 36 spoons of chocolate and 84 spoons of milk, so she uses 36 + 84 = 120 spoons of chocolate and milk.
Then, she adds 34 spoons of whipped cream, so she uses a total of 120 + 34 = 154 spoons of ingredients.
### Answer: 154

Expected answer: 154

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, what if Sally decided to increase her hot chocolate formula by using 64 spoons of chocolate instead of 36, while keeping the amount of milk and whipped cream identical. How many total spoons of ingredients does Sally now use for her hot chocolate recipe?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Sally uses 64 spoons of chocolate, 84 spoons of milk, and 34 spoons of whipped cream.
To find the total number of spoons, we add these amounts together: 64 + 84 + 34 = 182.
### Answer: 182

Expected answer: 182

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a word game, the letter Z is given a score of 3. The score of the letter U is the sum of 31 and the score of Z. What is the score of the letter U?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The score of the letter Z is 3. The score of the letter U is the sum of 31 and the score of Z, which is 31 + 3 = 34.
### Answer: 34

Expected answer: 34

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the same word game, the letter C is assigned a score which is the sum of 69 and the score of U. What is the score of the letter C?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We already know that the score of the letter U is 34. The score of the letter C is the sum of 69 and the score of U, which is 69 + 34 = 103.
### Answer: 103

Expected answer: 103

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing with the same word game, let's change the rule a bit. Now, the letter Z is given a new score of 90. With the rule still in place that the score of the letter U is the sum of 31 and the score of Z, what is the new score of the letter U?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The score of the letter Z is now 90. The score of the letter U is the sum of 31 and the score of Z, which is 31 + 90 = 121.
### Answer: 121

Expected answer: 121

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Mathew has 81 ounces of apple juice. He wants to add some orange juice to it. So, he pours in another 99 ounces. After pouring the orange juice, how many ounces of juice does Mathew have overall?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mathew initially had 81 ounces of apple juice. He added 99 ounces of orange juice to it. To find the total amount of juice, we need to add the two quantities together.

81 (apple juice) + 99 (orange juice) = 180

### Answer: 180

Expected answer: 180

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the last problem - Suppose initially, Mathew only had 17 ounces of apple juice instead of 81 ounces. He still adds 99 ounces of orange juice. With this change, how many ounces of juice does Mathew have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Mathew initially had 17 ounces of apple juice. He added 99 ounces of orange juice to it. To find the total amount of juice, we need to add the two quantities together.

17 (apple juice) + 99 (orange juice) = 116

### Answer: 116

Expected answer: 116

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Carla is testing a new feature on her binoculars that allows her to see objects from greater distances. Initially, she sets the view distance at 91 meters. Then, she increases the view distance by 80 more meters. What is the new adjusted viewing distance on her binoculars?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The initial view distance is 91 meters. Carla increases the view distance by 80 meters, so we add 80 to the initial distance: 91 + 80 = 171 meters.

### Answer: 171

Expected answer: 171

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Carla is now even more interested and decides to push her new binoculars to their limits. She decides to add another 92 meters to the viewing distance on her binoculars. After making this additional adjustment, what is the total viewing distance on Carla's binoculars now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The current view distance is 171 meters. Carla adds another 92 meters to the viewing distance, so we add 92 to the current distance: 171 + 92 = 263 meters.

### Answer: 263

Expected answer: 263

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Carla is considering her initial experimental trial with the binoculars. She thinks back to the first time she adjusted the binoculars, but she remembers that she initially set the view distance to 91 meters, but then increased it by 85 meters, not 80. What was the adjusted viewing distance on her binoculars during her initial trial?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The initial view distance is 91 meters. Carla increases the view distance by 85 meters, so we add 85 to the initial distance: 91 + 85 = 176 meters.

### Answer: 176

Expected answer: 176

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Bobby has 42 keys. He gets another set of keys that has 56 more than the original set. Bobby also has a keychain that includes both the original set of keys and the new set of keys. How many keys does Bobby have in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Bobby has 42 keys in the original set. The new set has 56 more keys than the original set, so the new set has 42 + 56 = 98 keys. 
To find the total number of keys, we add the original set and the new set: 42 + 98 = 140 keys.
### Answer: 140

Expected answer: 140

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, let's suppose Bobby originally had 42 keys, but he instead received an additional set of keys that only had 23 more than the original set. If Bobby's keychain still includes both the original set of keys and this new smaller set of keys, how many keys does Bobby now have in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Bobby has 42 keys in the original set. The new set has 23 more keys than the original set, so the new set has 42 + 23 = 65 keys. 
To find the total number of keys, we add the original set and the new set: 42 + 65 = 107 keys.
### Answer: 107

Expected answer: 107

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jordy has 45 carrots. She manages to gather the same amount again from her farm. How many carrots does Jordy have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jordy already has 45 carrots. She gathers the same amount again, which means she gathers 45 more carrots. To find the total number of carrots Jordy has now, we add the initial amount to the additional amount: 45 + 45 = 90.
### Answer: 90

Expected answer: 90

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After gathering the same amount of carrots from her farm, Jordy decides to go to the local market where she buys 4 more carrots. How many carrots does Jordy have now?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jordy already has 90 carrots. She buys 4 more carrots at the market. To find the total number of carrots Jordy has now, we add the additional carrots to the total she already had: 90 + 4 = 94.
### Answer: 94

Expected answer: 94

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: If originally Jordy had started with 14 carrots instead of 45 and she still managed to gather the same amount from her farm, how many carrots would she have then?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: Jordy starts with 14 carrots. She gathers the same amount again, which means she gathers 14 more carrots. To find the total number of carrots Jordy has now, we add the initial amount to the additional amount: 14 + 14 = 28.
### Answer: 28

Expected answer: 28

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a painting competition, one artist uses 43 blue strokes and 53 red strokes to complete his painting. Another artist, inspired by the first one, decides to use 67 more strokes in addition to what the first artist used. A third artist doubles the total number of strokes used by the second artist for her painting. How many strokes did the third artist use in her painting?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The first artist used 43 + 53 = 96 strokes.
The second artist used 96 + 67 = 163 strokes.
The third artist used 2 Γ— 163 = 326 strokes.
### Answer: 326

Expected answer: 326

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Looking at the painting in the gallery, the artist realizes that the painting is not quite balanced. She thinks back to the painting competition, and remembers that if she had originally used 81 blue strokes instead of 53, her painting might have been more harmonious. Keeping all other elements the same, and doubling the total number of strokes for her painting just like before, she wonders how many strokes would there have been in her painting if she had made this change. How many strokes would there have been?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: The first artist used 43 blue strokes and 53 red strokes, so the second artist used 43 + 81 = 124 strokes (instead of 96).
The second artist used 124 + 67 = 191 strokes.
The third artist used 2 Γ— 191 = 382 strokes.
### Answer: 382

Expected answer: 382

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: You buy 42 ice cream cones for your friends. You then decide to buy the same amount for another group of friends. How many ice cream cones did you buy in total?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: If I buy the same amount of ice cream cones for another group of friends, that means I will buy 42 more ice cream cones.
To find the total number of ice cream cones, I will add the number of cones I bought initially to the number of cones I bought for the second group: 42 + 42 = 84.
### Answer: 84

Expected answer: 84

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After you've bought ice cream for both groups of friends, another group of 59 friends shows up! You decide you don't want them to feel left out, so you buy ice cream for them too. How many total ice cream cones have you bought?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: I already bought 84 ice cream cones for the first two groups of friends.
Now, I need to buy 59 more ice cream cones for the new group of friends.
To find the total number of ice cream cones, I will add the number of cones I already bought to the number of cones I need to buy for the new group: 84 + 59 = 143.
### Answer: 143

Expected answer: 143

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Mike's left binocular lens can magnify objects from a distance of 30 miles away, and the right lens can magnify objects that are 56 miles away. He also has a telescope that can magnify objects from a distance of 67 miles away. What is the total distance from which both his binoculars and telescope can magnify objects?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To find the total distance, we simply add the distances of the left lens, right lens, and telescope.

Total distance = Distance of left lens + Distance of right lens + Distance of telescope
= 30 + 56 + 67
= 153

### Answer: 153

Expected answer: 153

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous problem, we considered the distance that Mike's binocular's two lenses can magnify. Consider now that we made a mistake and that the left lens can actually magnify objects from a distance of 54 miles away instead of 30 miles. Keeping the right lense and the telescope the same at 56 and 67 miles respectively, what would be the new total distance from which both his binoculars and telescope can magnify objects?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: We need to recalculate the total distance using the corrected distance for the left lens.

Total distance = Distance of left lens + Distance of right lens + Distance of telescope
= 54 + 56 + 67
= 177

### Answer: 177

Expected answer: 177

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In the land of the Wizarding World, one wand spells costs 50 magical crystals known as Quiblets. Quintus the wizard adds 5 Quiblets more to this to cast a slightly stronger spell. This amount is then topped up by 25 magical Quiblets to cast the most powerful spell. How many Quiblets does Quintus the wizard need to cast the most powerful spell?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To cast the basic spell, Quintus needs 50 Quiblets.
To cast a slightly stronger spell, he adds 5 more Quiblets, making it 50 + 5 = 55 Quiblets.
To cast the most powerful spell, he tops up the 55 Quiblets by 25 more, making it 55 + 25 = 80 Quiblets.
### Answer: 80

Expected answer: 80

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: As an extension to the previous problem, let's say Quintus the wizard then decides to cast an ancient and profound spell. To cast this spell, he needs to gather an additional number of Quiblets equivalent to his most powerful spell, plus 50 more. How many Quiblets does Quintus the wizard need in total to cast this ancient spell?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To cast the most powerful spell, Quintus needs 80 Quiblets.
To cast the ancient and profound spell, he needs to gather an additional number of Quiblets equivalent to his most powerful spell, which is 80 Quiblets, plus 50 more. So, he needs 80 + 50 = 130 more Quiblets.
In total, Quintus needs 80 (for the most powerful spell) + 130 (for the ancient spell) = 210 Quiblets.
### Answer: 210

Expected answer: 130

Correct? No

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: As a variation to the previous problem, let's say the most powerful spell that Quintus the wizard wants to cast actually requires an additional 87 Quiblets on top of the slightly stronger spell, not just 25. How many Quiblets does he now need to cast this more demanding powerful spell?

Llama 3 70B:

Reasoning: To cast the basic spell, Quintus needs 50 Quiblets.
To cast a slightly stronger spell, he adds 5 more Quiblets, making it 50 + 5 = 55 Quiblets.
To cast the most powerful spell, he tops up the 55 Quiblets by 87 more, making it 55 + 87 = 142 Quiblets.
### Answer: 142

Expected answer: 142

Correct? Yes