One of the RC videos that I watched mentioned that when something (call it X) happens more & more frequently, it does not mean that X happens most of the time. But I read it from one of the PowerScore posts that "more often than not" means MOST. They sound quite similar to me, so I'm not sure how to make a distinction between them. If I change it to "X happens more & more frequently THAN NOT" would it equate to most?
Comments
To clarify your confusion: "More and more frequently" refers to a change in frequency, while "Most of the time" refers to just frequency - like comparing velocity vs. distance.
Instead of focusing on specific terms, first become familiar with general LSAT qualifiers (on a scale of 0 to 100):
- All/Always (100)
- Most/Usually (51-100)
- Some/Sometimes (1-100)
- Not All/Not Always (0-99)
- None/Never (0)
You can then interpret specific terms by applying them to this framework.