Sure. That's pretty much it. The answer works by "eliminating the possibility that the occurrence was as a result of meteorites thereby firming the support for volcanoes".
Probably not cause it would be disruptive of others. If you do it such that the people around you can't hear, I'd imagine you're okay.
These are the LSAC's rules: http://www.lsac.org/jd/lsat/day-of-test.asp
This is a curve breaker question. It's very, very difficult.
First let's make sure we understand the argument. We spot craters in a line. We know that it could be caused by (1) volcanos or (2) meteorites or (3) a combination. The stimulus precludes…
Sure! High literary style is prone to being misinterpreted. Judicial decisions are determinations of law so we want to avoid misinterpretation. That's why judicial decisions are not written in high literary style. BUT! Dissenting decisions often are…
That's a rule that comes up quite a bit in the games in the 50's and 60's prep tests. I don't want to give away which games in particular have them, but you'll encounter them when you go through those prep tests, which you should!
Then, watch their…
Line 18, Passage A, "presents difficulties" to different groups. It's not a problem to solve. You can try to solve the problem for the Roma (that would be a very nice thing to do). But, in the passage, "problematic" is referring to the how tough is …
Hey Quinn, hypothesis --> statements. In other words, statements are the superset, hypothesis are the subset. All hypotheses necessarily have to be statements.
For example, "the world is round". That is and always has been a statement. Now, we …
They are subtly different. It's kind of like how aging works. You at 20 are pretty much the same as you at 21. But you at 21 are very different from you at 61. That's a decent analogy for the LSAT prep tests. The difference isn't as dramatic but it'…
I've said this to Mark a couple times already, but Jason, read this lesson/blog post on "why you must practice skipping questions on timed LSATs". I explain in there why people freak out during the real test.
Ah, good question! These phrases typically introduces a point that might be raised by someone who would object.
E.g. Although pizza is fatty, it is also cheap, convenient, and filling, therefore making it an excellent food for college students.
I'm also curious to know what others do. I keep track of time per game/passage doing exactly what you're suggesting. Marking the beginning of game and end of the game. My watch has a bezel, so my times are a little easier to tell.
This is the o…
Hey Corina, there isn't a set date for that. The most extreme example being my very first student ever who score higher on their actual LSAT than on any of their practice LSATs. Crazy right?
Anyway, personally I'd feel comfortable if within 2-3 …
I agree with Mark, the harder Disagree questions need to to first MSS a statement from the speaker's statements. Intuitive approach is the better, more seasoned approach.