- Wed Nov 04, 2020 2:12 pm
#80753
Hi leelee,
Start just from the local condition in the question stem (the phrase up to the comma): if four of the cities are each connected with the remaining city, that means the "remaining city" has to be a city that can be (and will be, for the question!) connected to all of the other four cities. In other words, the question stem wants you to start by finding a city that can have all the other four cities connected to it, and go from there. So let's begin there, and find a city that actually can be connected to all the other four cities.
1. Start with Honolulu: Honolulu can't be connected to Toronto, so it can't be connected to all four other cities.
2. Next think about Montreal: Montreal can't be connected to all four other cities. It can only be connected to one city, from the first rule.
3. Now think about Philadelphia: if you tried to connect Philadelphia to all four other cities, you'd run into an impossibility. Because as soon as you connect Philadelphia to Toronto, you can't connect it to Vancouver.
4. What about Toronto? It can't be connected to Honolulu, so it can't be connected to all four other cities.
This means the only city that can possibly be connected to all four other cities is Vancouver. So, for purposes of the question, Vancouver will be connected to H, M, P, and T.
That makes answer choice C the correct answer: Vancouver must be connected to Honolulu (because it must be connected to all the cities!).
There's no need to think about order in this game, because it's just a grouping game, figuring out for each city what the list of other cities it's connected to looks like.
Let me know if that clears things up!
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at:
https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT