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unisday379
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PrepTests ·
PT116.S2.Q25
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unisday379
Wednesday, Apr 15 2015

oh no... i spent 20 minutes figuring out the question until I found that answer choice was talking about the larvae,,, not the unhatched eggs... I don't know why I thought it was talking about the eggs.

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unisday379
Friday, Apr 10 2015

I always try to comprehend the content, but whenever I find the part too complex, I only try to understand it on the surface level, and write the simplest note beside it just in case for the reference in later questions.

Also, as I do more RCs, I find some of the contents, you can just see how they will use it for the question, then I also make a note next to the part for an indication. The most frequent example for this would be when you understand what they are saying, but it has multiple examples/details that you know you will get confused anyway later.

PrepTests ·
PT138.S2.Q16
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unisday379
Monday, May 09 2016

Refine the argument's conclusion

→"his excuse is not acceptable" = "you could not be confused"

PrepTests ·
PT115.S4.Q24
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unisday379
Tuesday, Apr 07 2015

I think the last part "Thus raising user...reduce the revenues devoted to maintenance" is saying when lesser people visit the park because of the increased fees, the decreased number of visitors further drops the necessary amount of revenues dvoted to maintenance (b/c lesser people visit the park, lesser wear out).

Therefore, to use the same example, even when we are only attracting 3 people with $10, because now it only requires, say from $40 maintenance to $10 maintenance hypothetically, the raised user fees still could improve the park maintenance.

Please correct me if I'm wrong!

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unisday379
Friday, Apr 01 2016

As a political science major, I was half forced to read and thoroughly understand various political theories and related texts during my final semester. At that time, comprehending Robert Dahl or Dewey as precise as I can was extremely time consuming and painful. You know what I'm about to say. Because those texts are cratered with unnecessarily heavy conditional structures (just like the LSAT), the LR and RC sections now read much more smoothly, and I can certainly feel how much my reading skills have been improved. I often read the Economist and Dahl's Democracy and Its Critics in between just to warm up before I deal with LSAT questions.

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