In a committee, 50 people speak French, 20 speak Spanish and 10 speak both Spanish and French. How many speak at least one of these two languages?
Let F be the set of people who speak French,
and S be the set of people who speak Spanish.
Number of people who speak French = n(F) = 50
Number of people who speak Spanish = n(S) = 20
Number of people who can both speak French and Spanish
= n(F ∩ S)
= 10
Number of people who speak at least one of these two languages = n(F ∪ S)
We know that-
n(F ∪ S) = n(F) + n(S) - n(F ∩ S)
= 50+20 - 10
= 60
∴ n(H ∩ E) = 60
Thus, 60 people can speak at least one of French or Spanish.