Alright, these "some" ones always trip me up. I want to make sure I thoroughly understand it so I can be confident when I face these questions in the future. Here's how I diagrammed. Can someone confirm my logic?
Stimulus:
1. PCM (those representing CI)
SOME
significant financial interest
2. PCM (includes all of them)
NOT live in subs
3. PCM
SOME
work in subs
I changed "many" to "some" since they both mean, "at least one." Is that okay to do?? I understand if there was a "most" that would be a different story, since that means "more than half."
I also thought that the first sentence "those representing the construction industry" was important to note, because it is a subcategory of the planning committee members. Therefore, it is safe to assume that PCM (those representing CI) is included in PCM, but not all PCM are represented in the CI. Is that correct?
I then substituted #1 into the PCM portion of #2 and then #3 into the PCM portion of #2 to make two distinct inferences:
1+2) PCM (those representing CI)
SOME
significant financial interest
NOT live in subs
3+2) PCM
SOME
work in subs
NOT live in subs
I found that answer choice E clearly represented SOME significant financial interest
NOT live in suburbs.
I eliminated A because we don't know anything about those "IN the construction industry." Those who represent it, may not even be "in" it.
I eliminated B because it lacked the "some" that needed to be carried over.
I eliminated C because it tried connecting my inferences that weren't even connected (SOME significant financial interest and SOME work in suburbs are not connected, they just share a necessary side).
I eliminated D because it too tried to connect two distinct ideas. PCM (those representing CI) does not connect to working in the suburbs.
Let me know if my logic is valid. I know I need to get quicker at this, so I do understand that I could have just reversed the PCM
SOME
significant financial interests into significant financial interests
SOME
PCM and connected that directly into PCM
NOT live in subs. But how did you know that that the "representing construction industry" distinction was not necessary to include?
Thanks in advance!