- Fri Jul 24, 2020 5:12 pm
#77423
However, I want to pose another question when it comes to the usage of "but."
I like everything about you BUT your personality.
= I like everything about you BUT (I don't like) your personality.
Can we break down the former statement like the latter one if it happened in the actual LSAT? Since the statement above is clearly different from what we dealt with the passage, (It doesn't imply any kind of time period at all) the conjunction 'but' here demonstrates a different implication within this sentence, correct?
Is there another good example that gives us more insight into this specific usage of BUT? I just want to make sure that this is not a particular rule that we have to follow during the LSAT aside from the common use of English.
Thanks in advance!
Kristina Moen wrote:Hi Laura,Now all these perfectly make sense to me since it merely "indicates the two ends of a time period." Like so many other people posted here, I fell for this little grammar trick that seems like test-makers intentionally devised.
Great question. The word "but" here just indicates the two ends of a time period. Think of the ends of string. "I took the train after breakfast but before lunch." Here, "breakfast" is one end of the string and "lunch" is on the other end. I took the train sometime between those ends. It can be helpful to make a note on your test when you see this again. You can write something like "Harvest |-------| Cafeteria" so you can clearly visualize the time period. Answer choice (A) is saying that the apples were NOT washed during that time. So with the Assumption Negation technique, you ask yourself "What would happen if the apples WERE harvested during that time?" Well, the pesticides would be washed off and the author's conclusion "Clearly, the cafeteria is selling pesticide covered fruit, thereby endangering its patrons" would be undermined.
Hope this helps. I like the way you're thinking - look at each question as an opportunity to learn skills and techniques you can apply on test day.
However, I want to pose another question when it comes to the usage of "but."
I like everything about you BUT your personality.
= I like everything about you BUT (I don't like) your personality.
Can we break down the former statement like the latter one if it happened in the actual LSAT? Since the statement above is clearly different from what we dealt with the passage, (It doesn't imply any kind of time period at all) the conjunction 'but' here demonstrates a different implication within this sentence, correct?
Is there another good example that gives us more insight into this specific usage of BUT? I just want to make sure that this is not a particular rule that we have to follow during the LSAT aside from the common use of English.
Thanks in advance!