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Congratulations!!!! Be proud, my friend :)
@Jineen Altayeh any academic articles that you might find boring. I just read one about allergies.
@Sam I got a 5/5 on this drill. I went ahead and tried the question you mentioned. It was a humbling experience. lol
@Dami Oyatayo It can get annoying, but take is as an opportunity to review your reasoning. Try eliminating answer choices one at a time!
@tar x2
@Jacob Levy "Only" and "The only" are two different ideas.
An "only" example would be- I cry only on Sundays. We can diagram: C --> S. Crying is sufficient to know that is Sunday.
"The only" usually introduces a sufficient statement. For example: Sundays are the only the day of the week that I cry. We can diagram: S-->C.
@ckimballdeaguero805 I did the same. I kicked up to the domain the term "proposal" and followed the conditional claim: Less than 50... and duplicate 25%... → /funding. However, I'm not too sure if this might cause an opportunity to fall for a trap answer.
@lauren0683 Hello! I understood the formal argument #6 with the "floating" letters example. Most As are Bs. Most As are Cs. Therefore, it would be valid to say that some Bs are Cs (Remember the "range" that is covered by the word "some"- The range could be from at least one, which would be the minimum, to all of the members of the set).
Assume that the population of As is 5. If we know that most As are Bs, then it would mean that at least three of the As are Bs. If we also say that most As are Cs, then it would also mean that at least three of the As are Bs. This would cause an overlap of an A to have both a B and a C.
Visually:
A B
A B
A B C
A C
A C
Hopefully it helps!
You are just on time, my good friend. I'm 31 and will be 33 when I go to Law School. You got this.