- Fri Jan 20, 2017 12:00 am
#34965
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14138)
The correct answer choice is (C)
The general nature of the question makes it difficult to arrive at a more precise prephrase. Instead, try
the process of elimination: any answer choice that cannot be proven by the passage will be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): The author makes no mention of the frequency with which “El Corrido de
Gregorio Cortez” was sung at Border social gatherings.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice contains an exaggeration. Even though the “El Corrido
de Kiansis” is referred to as the oldest corrido surviving in complete form (lines 10-11), implying
that not all surviving corridos are as complete as “Kiansis,” there is no reason to suspect that most
surviving corridos are incomplete.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. All complete corridos contain certain readymade
lines (line 40), which is most evident in the corrido’s formal closing verse, the despedida. In it,
the first and third lines are a set convention (lines 46-47), suggesting that all complete corridos have
some lines in common.
Answer choice (D): While it is possible that most corrido variants share the same despedida, this
cannot be proven with the requisite degree of certainty. Recall that two of the lines in the despedida
are variable. Even if all corrido variants bear the same name (fourth line), it is possible that the
second line differs from one variant to another “according to exigencies of rhyme” (line 50).
Answer choice (E): The passage provides no information as to the origins of the composer who
wrote “El Corrido de Kiansis.”
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14138)
The correct answer choice is (C)
The general nature of the question makes it difficult to arrive at a more precise prephrase. Instead, try
the process of elimination: any answer choice that cannot be proven by the passage will be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): The author makes no mention of the frequency with which “El Corrido de
Gregorio Cortez” was sung at Border social gatherings.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice contains an exaggeration. Even though the “El Corrido
de Kiansis” is referred to as the oldest corrido surviving in complete form (lines 10-11), implying
that not all surviving corridos are as complete as “Kiansis,” there is no reason to suspect that most
surviving corridos are incomplete.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. All complete corridos contain certain readymade
lines (line 40), which is most evident in the corrido’s formal closing verse, the despedida. In it,
the first and third lines are a set convention (lines 46-47), suggesting that all complete corridos have
some lines in common.
Answer choice (D): While it is possible that most corrido variants share the same despedida, this
cannot be proven with the requisite degree of certainty. Recall that two of the lines in the despedida
are variable. Even if all corrido variants bear the same name (fourth line), it is possible that the
second line differs from one variant to another “according to exigencies of rhyme” (line 50).
Answer choice (E): The passage provides no information as to the origins of the composer who
wrote “El Corrido de Kiansis.”