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Surprised that this is listed at only a 3 out of 5 difficulty - absolutely stumped me
I'm here for the "didn't fully read the question stem" party
Somehow the only question I got wrong in this set was #3. Even though I knew the passage mentioned photosynthesis, I didn't choose the correct answer choice because the passage didn't explain the full, specific process of photosynthesis. Huge L on my part.
To do this problem quickly I just CTRL + F'd "or" and eliminated B, C, and D on not having an "or", or anything similar, in their conclusions. Remember you can use CTRL + F on LSAT.
Science lesson takeaway: The farther away you get either north or south of the equator, the higher the latitude of your location.
Got 14 wrong. Probably shouldn't have, because even though the words idyllic and amorphous are confusing, C talking about nomadic lives is pretty random and unrelated to the quote.
I chose AC C for question 6 as well, but I think I see why it's wrong. JY misses the confusion in the video. The passage, in general, does interrelate the personal/political struggle for Kahlo. The first half of the third paragraph also seems to do this. But if you look closer, in the first half of the paragraph, it says about the Aztec symbols being discussed that "these images of destruction coupled with creation speak not only to Kahlo's personal battle for life, but also to the Mexican struggle to emerge as a nation." It follows with the example of her artwork titled 'Self-Portrait on the Border between Mexico and the United States', and goes into a deep description of a heavily political piece with many uses of Aztec symbolism. So basically, it does not try to interrelate the personal/political here, but rather support the generalization of "the Aztec images were also used by Kahlo to speak to the Mexican struggle to emerge as a nation" by bringing up the heavily political and symbolic 'Self-Portrait on the Border between Mexico and the United States'.
That's an amazing improvement. Congrats mate!!
Rest in Peace Mamba and Mambacita :(
Also with how often James Harden travels during his iconic double step-back shot I would argue that knowing how to dribble is not necessary for being a great basketball player lmao