Support Every student who walks to school goes home for lunch. ██ ███████ ████ ████ ████████ ███ ████ █████████ ████ ██ ███ ████ ██ ███████
We have one premise: every student who walks to school goes home for lunch.
walks to school → home for lunch
From this, the author concludes that some students who have part-time jobs do not walk to school.
part-time job ←some→ NOT walk to school
The premise says nothing about part-time jobs. The conclusion introduces "part-time jobs" out of nowhere and links it to not walking to school. So the correct answer must connect part-time jobs to something already in the premise.
The contrapositive of the premise would allow us to prove that someone does NOT walk to school:
NOT home for lunch → NOT walk to school
The conclusion says: part-time job ←some→ NOT walk to school
If we could establish that some students with part-time jobs don't go home for lunch, then, based on the contrapositive of the premise, we'd know that those students don't walk to school.
So the bridge we want is:
part-time job ←some→ NOT home for lunch
In plain English: some students with part-time jobs don't go home for lunch.
Analysis by Kevin_Lin
The conclusion of the argument ███████ █████████ ██ █████ ███ ██ ███ █████████ ██ ████████
Some students who ██ ███ ████ █████████ ████ ██ ████ ███ ██████
Every student who ████ ████ ███ █████ ███ █ █████████ ████
Some students who ██ ███ ████ █████████ ████ ██ ███ ██ ████ ███ ██████
Some students who ██ ███ ██ ████ ███ █████ ████ █████████ █████
Every student who ████ ████ ███ █████ █████ ██ ███████