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How many permutations are there of the letters APPLE, if the arrangement must begin with a

vowel and end with a consonant?

User Sorcerer
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1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:


18.

Explanation:

Start by considering the two "
\verb!P!"'s as being different from one another. That way, all five letters in this word would be distinct. With this assumption, the number of arrangements would be
\left(\genfrac{}{}{0}{}{2}{1}\right) = 2 times that of the actual value.

Start by fixing the first and the last letter since they come with special requirements.

There are
2 choices for the first letter (the vowel:
\verb!A! and
\verb!E!.)

Under the assumption that the two "
\verb!P!"'s are distinct, there would be
3 choices for the last letter (
\verb!L! and the two

After choosing the first and the last letters, there would be
(5 - 1 - 1) = 3 choices for the second letter,
(3 - 1) = 2 choices for the third, and
(2 - 1) = 1 for the fourth.

Thus, under the assumption that the two "
\verb!P!"'s are distinct, there would be
(2 * 3) * (3 * 2 * 1) = 36 ways to choose the new word. Since this assumption doubles the number of arrangements, dividing the
36 by
\left(\genfrac{}{}{0}{}{2}{1}\right) = 2 would give the actual number of arrangements:


\begin{aligned}\frac{36}{\genfrac{(}{)}{0}{}{2}{1}} = (36)/(2) = 18\end{aligned}.


\begin{aligned}& 1 && \verb!APPEL!\\& 2 && \verb!APLEP!\\& 3 && \verb!APEPL!\\& 4 && \verb!APELP!\\& 5 && \verb!ALPEP!\\& 6 && \verb!ALEPP!\\& 7 && \verb!AEPPL!\\& 8 && \verb!AEPLP!\\& 9 && \verb!AELPP!\\& 10 && \verb!EAPPL!\\& 11 && \verb!EAPLP!\\& 12 && \verb!EALPP!\\& 13 && \verb!EPAPL!\\& 14 && \verb!EPALP!\\& 15 && \verb!EPPAL!\\& 16 && \verb!EPLAP!\\& 17 && \verb!ELAPP!\\& 18 && \verb!ELPAP!\end{aligned}.

User Alexander Simonov
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