I've honestly been inconsistenly studying on and offer 2 years :/ I score at 154 on average. I really want to take studying more seriously, hoping to take my first LSAT in the fall but im not sure how to study.
As of now, im trying to really understand question types... and be better at answering based on those (obvious I know, but I do think this is absolutely necessary) but idk what else I should do. I know I must blind review and keep a wrong answer journal--which I do, but I sort of like to be more active in studying idk...help!!
@Hanifa No, "Tom’s recipe for lasagna is easy to follow for most people" is an absolute statement, not a comparative one. [1]
It describes a general state or quality ("is easy") and its intended audience ("for most people") without making a comparison to another specific recipe, method, or standard. [1]
A comparative statement would explicitly contrast the recipe against something else, using structures like "-er than" or "more... than" (e.g., "Tom’s lasagna recipe is easier to follow than Mary’s recipe" or "Tom's recipe is more straightforward than traditional ones"