... , I always overthought these types of questions. That alone ... knowing all the different types of flaws that others ... what the flaw may be before you see the AC. I ... to see or understand the flaw. I think of Loophole ... how to go about the types of questions, but the ...
... types that you can anticipate flaw BEFORE you go to AC. ... For example, for flaw and weakening types, you ... should identify the flaw in the stimulus BEFORE reading the AC ... />
Another would be weakening/flawtypes because you can anticipate the ...
... to SEARCH for the right AC and not fall into LSAT ... structure and logic. These question types are: MP, MOR, PMOR, PF ... usually have NA, W, S, Flaw, MSS, etc. In a live ... their MOR in these question types are quite limited. The quicker ...
... inferences. During BR, analyze each AC why it's not valid ... reasoning method, or the reasoning flaw, or the principle underlying ... answer choice. Think what the AC should say, and also find ... the flaw.
If you have trouble doing these question types ...
... immediately looked for an AC that eliminated that flaw. In that sense ... , B almost helps patch that flaw but clearly falls short. The ... tear down the buildings. However, AC E is correct because anyone ... to require removal of these types of buildings.
... immediately looked for an AC that eliminated that flaw. In that sense ... B almost helps patch that flaw but clearly falls short. The ... down the buildings. However, AC E is correct because anyone ... government were to remove these types of buildings.
... necessity sufficiency confusion in wrong AC's, etc) .
Is ... strengthen/weaken/flaw questions in the later tests? Like, those types from ... more than the other question types in my current studying experience ...
... find myself diagramming other types of LR questions, but ...
The correct AC is frequently a perfect match ... S2 Q23, a parallel flaw question. The diagram for ... relationship to be found. AC B could absolutely be ... some reason considered AC E before AC D, it ...
... since weaken (like all question types in LR to a degree ... weaken questions. How about your flaw question type? If you're ... well as in flaws, are AC's that look attractive but ... mean is that the correct AC that hurts, if not ruins ...
... repeat themselves across question types. But also some notes ... AC's is helpful as well. Like for parallel flaw, ... the order of the flaw compared to the stimulus, ... but still have the same flaw." After doing the first ... reverse engineering LR Q types because he is a ...
... , that would be a huge flaw in our author's argument ... a quick scan over the AC's, I'd rather spend ... how to select the correct AC (A) and avoid B, ... why to chose the correct AC). It was largely a stream ... answer this question. For these types of questions, I'd say ...
I took a PT last Saturday and based from the question stem analysis of the test grader (extremely helpful guys), flaw questions gave me the most trouble. What is the best way to approach them?
Politics aside, this is a fun read to warm up for logical flaw description questions. "A CONSERVATIVE GUIDE TO RHETORIC" http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/shouts/2013/10/conservative-guide-to-rhetoric-republican-quotations.html
What are the most common question types on LR, as in the types such as weakening, principle etc that appear the most often on the test. We know what the most common LG types are, I'm just wondering if there are also any hard statistics for LR?
Hey so does anyone know what question types appear the most on the lsat and which appear the least? I wanted to know so i could study accordingly and focus on getting the ones that appear the most right.