I was down to A and C, and the answer is A, but I chose C.
I'm having a difficult time understanding why A is the answer and C is wrong.
I mean I thought both could be answers.
... of the answers were very difficult to read and understand (more ... of the answers were very difficult to distinguish between two answer ... that it was reasonably more difficult or if I really do ...
... will encounter a few insanely difficult curve breaker questions. Every LSAT ... will be prepared. Skip those difficult questions. Maintain your rhythm.
All the different companies use different phrases for question types and I'm getting a bit confused by the different terms. Can someone explain what pseudo sufficient questions mean?
This recently tripped me up...
But just wondering what words or phrases in an RC passage would indicate that an author is neutral towards a particular subject/theory etc.
This might be a really obvious question, but: if a given LSAT has a less rigorous section, is it usually compensated by a very difficult section of another type? I find that when games are easy, reading comp is a lot harder.
... will encounter a few insanely difficult curve breaker questions. Every LSAT ... will be prepared. Skip those difficult questions. Maintain your rhythm.