10 FEET HIGH RIDDLES WITH ANSWERS TO SOLVE - PUZZLES & BRAIN TEASERS

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10 Feet High Riddles To Solve

Solving 10 Feet High Riddles

Here we've provide a compiled a list of the best 10 feet high puzzles and riddles to solve we could find.

Our team works hard to help you piece fun ideas together to develop riddles based on different topics. Whether it's a class activity for school, event, scavenger hunt, puzzle assignment, your personal project or just fun in general our database serve as a tool to help you get started.

Here's a list of related tags to browse: Insect Riddles Air Riddles Brain Teasers For High School Math Brain Teasers Brain Teasers For Teens Riddles To Solve Political Riddles Probability Riddles Logic Riddles

The results compiled are acquired by taking your search "10 feet high" and breaking it down to search through our database for relevant content.

Browse the list below:

100 Feet In The Air

Hint:
A centipede flipped over.
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Feet In A Yard Riddle

Hint:
3.
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100 Politicians Riddle

Hint:
Yes, from the information you know 1 is honest and 99 are liars.

One of them is honest satisfying the first piece of information. Then if you take the honest man and any other politician, the other politician must be a liar to satisfy the second piece of information, 'If you take any two politicians, at least one of them is a liar.' So 99 are liars.
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100 Blank Cards Riddle

Hint: Perhaps thinking in terms of one deck is the wrong approach.
Yes!

A sample strategy:
Divide the deck in half and turn over all lower 50 cards, setting aside the highest number you find. Then turn over the other 50 cards, one by one, until you reach a number that is higher than the card you set aside: this is your chosen "high card."

Now, there is a 50% chance that the highest card is contained in the top 50 cards (it is or it isn't), and a 50% chance that the second-highest card is contained in the lower 50. Combining the probabilities, you have a 25% chance of constructing the above situation (in which you win every time).

This means that you'll lose three out of four games, but for every four games played, you pay $40 while you win one game and $50. Your net profit every four games is $10.

Obviously, you have to have at least $40 to start in order to apply this strategy effectively.
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The 100 Pound Watermelon

Hint:
50 pounds.

In the beginning it is 99 pounds water and 1 pound other stuff. At the end the 1 pound other stuff is 2 percent so the total weight is 50 pounds. 50 pounds - 1 pound other stuff = 49 pounds water. So 99 pounds - 49 pounds = 50 pounds water lost.
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Three Feet

Hint:
A yardstick.
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Higher Than A House

Hint:
Any, Houses can't jump
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A 100 Year Old Ant

Hint:
An antique!
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Halfway To 100

Hint:
50
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I Am Close To 100

Hint:
98.
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Jumping Higher Than A House

Hint:
All of them. Houses can't jump!
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High In The Sky Riddle

Hint:
The Tower of Babel
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High Tide Boat Riddle

Hint:
None. The boat is floating on the water, so as the tide rises, so does the ladder.
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The 100 Seat Airplane

Hint: You don't need to use complex math to solve this riddle. Consider these two questions: What happens if somebody sits in your seat? What happens if somebody sits in Steve's assigned seat?
The correct answer is 1/2.

The chase that the first person in line takes your seat is equal to the chance that he takes his own seat. If he takes his own seat initially then you have a 100% chance of sitting in your seat, if he takes your seat you have a 0 percent chance. Now after the first person has picked a seat, the second person will enter the plan and, if the first person has sat in his seat, he will pick randomly, and again, the chance that he picks your seat is equal to the chance he picks someone your seat. The motion will continue until someone sits in the first persons seat, at this point the remaining people standing in line which each be able to sit in their own seats. Well how does that probability look in equation form? (2/100) * 50% + (98/100) * ( (2/98) * 50% + (96/98) * ( (2/96) * (50%) +... (2/2) * (50%) ) ) This expansion reduces to 1/2.
An easy way to see this is trying the problem with a 3 or 4 person scenario (pretend its a car). Both scenarios have probabilities of 1/2.
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The Sturdy Feet Of Man

Hint:
A bike
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