... separating the conclusion, premise, and context, are we supposed to ignore ... the context/"some people's argument"/etc ... determining which sentence in the context, we can just ignore it ...
... argument into premises, conclusion, and context.
The common procedure ... />
This was my answer: Context: The common procedure for determining ... />
http://7sage.com/lesson/quiz-context-identification-1-answers/
Hello guys please when solving an LR problem is it okay to ignore the context and read the argument only to be a little fast, since we just need premise and conclusion.
Thank you
Hi everyone! Does anyone have tips on the "word in context" questions for RC? I keep consistently struggling with these questions despite the seemingly straight forward manner of the qs. Any tips would be appreciated!
... I considered to be background context information, the author/solutions/explanations ... and/or distinguish between premise, context, and conclusion/(thesis) information. In ...
What is the difference between premise indicator vs. context? The way I understood was that context are just additional info to lead up to the premise.
Just as the title says, I was wondering if anyone has any tips in regards to noting what you would categorize as context and what you would categorize as premise. I feel like there is a blurred line from my understanding.
... Premise (P), Conclusion (C), or Context. As you can probably tell ... problem = is the first sentence "Context" or part of the "Argument ... />
#20. -- (My problem = where does Context end? with "citywide opposition." or ...
... providing a tiny bit of context, then either a) states an ... Hand. Sometimes it skips the context and goes straight to the ... scribble down CTX for context next to context, then put a CIRCLE ...
I always identify the premises in my head and bracket the conclusion. Should I be actually circling subjects/predicates and noting where context ends/argument begins as well?
... relevant issues quickly despite unfamiliar context; in how seamlessly and effortlessly ... select few people in any context are good enough at something ...