- Thu Nov 02, 2017 5:29 pm
#41122
Hi BlueBalloon,
If I am understanding you correctly, you are imagining a hypothetical answer choice that said the following:
(F) Only artworks that succeed in expressing deep emotions are the products of great artworks.
Is this how you imagine the rephrasing? If so, I am confused about how one artwork could ever be considered the product of another piece of great art. You would need to rephrase this answer choice even further to make grammatical sense.
I think your point is that you misread this answer choice to say something along the lines of "all great artworks succeed in expressing a deep emotion."
That would be correct, but you are unlikely to see an answer choice merely restate the exact same relationship as given by the stimulus in a Must Be True question. Instead you will be expected to work with the information given in some way - combining, negating, etc... - to yield an inference that was not directly given.
If I am understanding you correctly, you are imagining a hypothetical answer choice that said the following:
(F) Only artworks that succeed in expressing deep emotions are the products of great artworks.
Is this how you imagine the rephrasing? If so, I am confused about how one artwork could ever be considered the product of another piece of great art. You would need to rephrase this answer choice even further to make grammatical sense.
I think your point is that you misread this answer choice to say something along the lines of "all great artworks succeed in expressing a deep emotion."
That would be correct, but you are unlikely to see an answer choice merely restate the exact same relationship as given by the stimulus in a Must Be True question. Instead you will be expected to work with the information given in some way - combining, negating, etc... - to yield an inference that was not directly given.