A survey of 100 students in an institution shows that 80 students speak Hausa and 20 students speak Igbo, while only 9 students speak both language. How many students speak neither Hausa nor Igbo?

  • A 0
  • B 9
  • C 11
  • D 20

The correct answer is B. 9

Let's solve this problem step by step. We are given that in a survey of 100 students, 80 students speak Hausa, 20 students speak Igbo, and 9 students speak both languages. We want to find the number of students who speak neither Hausa nor Igbo.

We can use the principle of inclusion-exclusion to solve this problem. The principle of inclusion-exclusion states that for any two sets A and B, the number of elements in their union is given by:

|A ∪ B| = |A| + |B| - |A ∩ B|

In this case, we have two sets: the set of students who speak Hausa (set A) and the set of students who speak Igbo (set B). We are given that |A| = 80, |B| = 20, and |A ∩ B| = 9. Using the formula above, we can find the number of students who speak either Hausa or Igbo (or both):

|A ∪ B| = |A| + |B| - |A ∩ B|

= 80 + 20 - 9

= 91

Since there are a total of 100 students, the number of students who speak neither Hausa nor Igbo is 100 - 91 = 9.

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