Lawyer has hilarious questions about a maths puzzle. But wait, can you solve it?
Do you think you have what it takes to solve this viral maths puzzle?
Brain teasers are thrilling, challenging, and most of the time leave people scratching their heads. That is probably what this X user is experiencing after coming across a puzzle that is designed for school students.

The X user, a lawyer by profession, not only shared the maths puzzle but also a list of questions that she had about it. Do you think you will be able to solve it or will you end up having your own set of questions about the brain teaser?
X user Michelle Strowhiro wrote, “Hey #lawtwitter I have questions'' while sharing a picture. The image has a question written on it that reads, “Sam and Jesse can wash 5 cars each hour. They work for 7 hours each day over 2 days. How many cars did Sam and Jesse wash?”
Also Read: Brain Teaser: Can you find the ‘dog’ in this puzzle?
Strowhiro then listed a series of questions in her tweet. “Are Sam & Jesse washing 5 cars total each hour or 5 cars per person each hour?” she wrote. “Just because Sam & Jesse ‘can’ wash 5 cars each hour, are we to assume they did?” she added.
Then she jokingly questions if her confusion about the question has anything to do with her being a lawyer. “Did maths get harder since I was in 3rd grade or did law school ruin me?” she tweeted.
Take a look at this hilarious tweet:
Since being shared on November 8, the post has accumulated close to a million views. It has also gathered several likes and comments. While some tried answering, others had questions of their own.
Here’s how X users react to the puzzle:
“The answers to #1 and #2 depend on whether you represent Sam, Jesse, Sam + Jesse, or the car wash,” joked an X user. “That maths question needed to be reviewed by an English teacher,” added another.
Also Read: ‘Nobody can solve’: Can you answer this viral brain teaser?
“The tears shed over elementary school maths are often from the parents. I remember problems like this and my inability to help with the homework. I couldn’t turn my brain off enough to make the problem as simple as intended. My advice - take everything at face value. Good luck,” joined a third. “Equal to or less than 140,” answered a fourth. “Numbers freak me out,” wrote a fifth.
ABOUT THE AUTHORTrisha SenguptaTrisha Sengupta works as Chief Content Producer at Hindustan Times with over six years of experience in the digital newsroom. Known for her ability to decode the internet’s most talked-about moments, she specialises in high-engagement storytelling that bridges the gap between viral trends and traditional journalism. Throughout her tenure, Trisha has focused on the intersection of technology, finance, and human emotion. She frequently covers personal finance and real estate struggles in hubs like Gurgaon, Bengaluru, and Hyderabad, while also documenting the unique challenges of the NRI experience. Her work often highlights the movements and philosophies of global newsmakers and personalities like Elon Musk, Mukesh Ambani, Nikhil Kamath, Dubai crown prince, and MrBeast. From reporting on Amazon or Meta layoffs and startup culture to the emergence of AI-driven platforms like Grok and xAI, she provides a grounded and empathetic perspective on the stories shaping our world. When not decoding the internet, Trisha is likely offline: lost in a book, exploring a historical ruin, or navigating the world as a solo traveler. She balances her fast-paced career with family time and a healthy dose of curiosity, currently trading her "human" sources for silicon ones as she masters AI to future-proof her storytelling.Read More

E-Paper


