Step 1: Understanding the Question:
We are given a set of comparisons between the marks of five individuals: Kiran, Hina, Tina, Urvi, and Ira. We need to combine these comparisons to determine which of the two given statements must be true.
Step 2: Key Formula or Approach:
We will represent the given information using mathematical inequality symbols (>, <, \(\geq\), \(\leq\), =). Then, we will combine these inequalities to establish a clear relationship between the individuals' marks.
Let K, H, T, U, and I be the marks of Kiran, Hina, Tina, Urvi, and Ira, respectively.
Step 3: Detailed Explanation:
From the problem statement, we can deduce the following relationships:
1. The mark of Kiran is greater than or equal to the marks of Hina: \(K \geq H\)
2. Hina and Tina got equal marks: \(H = T\)
3. The mark of Tina is greater than Urvi: \(T>U\)
4. Urvi's marks are less than or equal to the marks of Ira: \(U \leq I\)
Now, let's combine these relationships:
From (1) and (2), we get \(K \geq H = T\), which simplifies to \(K \geq T\).
Combining this with (3), we get the chain of inequalities: \(K \geq T>U\).
From \(K \geq T\) and \(T>U\), it is definitively true that \(K>U\).
Now let's evaluate the given statements:
Statement I: Urvi got less marks than that of Kiran.
This statement translates to \(U<K\). Our combined inequality \(K>U\) proves this statement is definitely true.
Statement II: Ira's marks are less than or equal to the marks of Tina.
This statement translates to \(I \leq T\). We know \(T>U\) and \(U \leq I\). There is no direct relationship that can be established between T and I from this information. For example, if T=10 and U=8, I could be 9 (making \(I<T\)) or I could be 12 (making \(I>T\)). Since we cannot be certain about the relationship between I and T, this statement is not definitely true.
Step 4: Final Answer:
Only statement I is definitely true.