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@AliGoldberg where we going lol
@Nicoled Right I feel like I don't understand because I don't know how I got it right or exactly how the other questions are that wrong.
I am getting them right, but it is hard for me to tell the sufficient vs the necessary assumption right now. I am hoping I get sharper with practice.
@Jake. If I cannot explain why the other answers are wrong in my BR then I review the video as well so I can be aware of traps and common mistakes that can trip me later.
@cwferrari righttt I had to go back to that one
I got it right but I was 55 seconds over again!
4/5 then hit the blind review and got 5/5!
I got it right, but I was 55 seconds past the suggested time.
I am getting them right, but I am not sure how to get my time down. I am always 12-15 seconds over.
I finally beat the timer!!!
4/5 the double negative in question 2 got me.
@Pranjal Chaudhary Not most, but some. We don't know what percentage of the A group that is not B. Most means more than half. It could just be one A that is not B, and some encompasses that range.
@Pranjal Chaudhary It was explained in a tutoring session that for the case of the LSAT "some" could include the entire set as long as its at least one. As for "most" it could include the entire set because it is at the least more than 50 percent of the group in question.
If Jack walks he will go to the store or the movies.
Jack walks → store or movie
It becomes
Jack walks → /store → movies
Jack walks → store →/movies
@SusanLeifker You too girl!!!
5/5
If Cain runs he will go to the store and the movies .
Runs → store and movies
The negation
/ store or / movies → /run
If Cain did not go to the store or the movies then he did not run.
Superset: Employee
Subset: janitor
Being a janitor is sufficient to being an employee
Being an employee is necessary to be a janitor
@AntonioKiser This explanation really helped me connect the dots to understand how the subset is sufficient. I was missing that it is sufficient in relation to the superset, and the superset is necessary for the subset.
@KeziaH19 I think it is because the predicate verb is pertaining to how the hurricane forms, and not a fully developed hurricane. The subject noun is talking about a process and not the result of the process.
They mentioned what the process is for (hurricanes), but it is a modifier because the clause is about how they are formed.
I got it right buttt, I was 54 seconds over the time.