- Fri Jul 16, 2021 4:13 pm
#88817
Hello,
I'm a little confused about the wording of one of the answer choices to the question for this passage.
The question is "The author would most likely agree with each of the following statements EXCEPT:"
I knew this question was a Must Be True, Except question, meaning that the author must agree with four of the five answer choices and that the correct answer choice will be one that the author will not necessarily agree with. I ended up choosing answer choice E) "The validity of certain studies in the field of lying is somewhat questionable" because the last sentence of the passage states "However, the validity of such studies is clearly questionable". Given the difference in force between "clearly", which insinuates an absolute or a sureness, and "somewhat", which is not very forceful or sure at all, it doesn't seem to me that the author must agree with this answer because they don't necessarily mean the same thing.
I do understand C) as the correct answer, but I'm not sure how to not get tripped up here because it seems like the exact kind of trap the test makers would set, especially because one of the strategies in the Logical Reasoning textbook is to look at force in wording when comparing the stimulus to the answer choices.
Thank you in advance!
I'm a little confused about the wording of one of the answer choices to the question for this passage.
The question is "The author would most likely agree with each of the following statements EXCEPT:"
I knew this question was a Must Be True, Except question, meaning that the author must agree with four of the five answer choices and that the correct answer choice will be one that the author will not necessarily agree with. I ended up choosing answer choice E) "The validity of certain studies in the field of lying is somewhat questionable" because the last sentence of the passage states "However, the validity of such studies is clearly questionable". Given the difference in force between "clearly", which insinuates an absolute or a sureness, and "somewhat", which is not very forceful or sure at all, it doesn't seem to me that the author must agree with this answer because they don't necessarily mean the same thing.
I do understand C) as the correct answer, but I'm not sure how to not get tripped up here because it seems like the exact kind of trap the test makers would set, especially because one of the strategies in the Logical Reasoning textbook is to look at force in wording when comparing the stimulus to the answer choices.
Thank you in advance!