... being extremely skeptical of absolute language such as "inevitably, invariably, etc ... "correct," except one has absolute language and the other doesn't ... . The one without absolute language is generally the correct answer ...
... to the unfamiliarity with LSAT language, (which explains why we aren ... familiarize yourself with it's language paving the foundation for further ...
... traps, in my opinion, concern language rather than logic. If you ... aren't seeing any improvements, language needs to be your focus ... it's Monday") or prescriptive language ("This law would save lives ...
Eeeeh I'm unsure. But if it was in a parallel reasoning question I would try to find similar language being used in one of the answers. Like if one answer said "most" and another said "virtually every" I would select the "virtually every" one.