... butchering the simple translation rules? Translating and "seeing" the logic, is ... back from progressing through the logical reasoning section/question types.
I’ve been through the CC, and I’ve gone back and repeated basic and advanced logic. I’m still losing a massive amount of points because I’m having trouble translating English to logicalstatements. What did you guys do to master this?
Can anyone help me with translating this statement into a conditional? < ... rationale was from experience with translating "is" statements: i.e, cows are ... ? If my reasoning error is logical, please point out my oversight ...
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This is technically the logical translation of my statement, but ... mixes false casual reasoning with logicalstatements to give illogical outcomes (other ...
> @LSAT_Wrecker said:
> > @mgzero2 said:
> > Yes, but I don't think in those tests. Think more like 62+ being far harder than anything 1-60.
> >
> > They have shifted from basically wanting simple " ...
... about conditional logic (i.e. translating stuff into A-->B ... when 7sage teaches you about translating conditional statements, rather than relying on ...
... , then C) into two separate statements. A-> C ; B-> ... to break it into two statements because of the "OR" logical statements, with each component of the ... />
As opposed to AND statements in the sufficient condition, where ...
... to practice memorizing the logical indicators, and translating english into lawgic (or ... on command) of all the logical indicators, and a field for ...
Translating the above statements back into English, logical understanding. I can easily imagine ... to be most strong in statements of "until" involving time and ...
... No statements. However, I want to be sure that I am translating ... /understanding them correctly. I still feel iffy when reading no statements ... " that can break down No statements.