- Fri Sep 03, 2021 7:56 pm
#90169
Happy to help, Azimat!
One of the difficult things about this game is the potential for confusing a "feature" with a "type," and it looks like that's what has happened to you. Think of the word "feature" as meaning "article," as in an article in a newsletter, while a "type" is the subject of the article. You can have three different features (articles) that are all the same type (subject)!
In the example you cited, there is a feature in slot 1 that is about Industry; a second feature (a different article) that is about Marketing that occupies slots 2 and 3 (it's a long article, so it spills over from the second slot to the third); a third feature (article) about Marketing in slot 4 (so it is a different feature than the previous one, although it is on the same subject/of the same type); and a Graphic is slot 5. That's three different features (articles), even though they are of only two types (subjects).
Here's a solution that is even more extreme: 5 features, one in each slot, and every one of them is about Technology. That would satisfy all the rules! One might be about batteries, another about solar panels, another about computer chips, another about satellites, and another about robots. Five different features, but just one type: TTTTT in the five slots. It works!
One last thing about this question: if an answer choice refers to a feature being in slot 5 ("except the feature in slot 5"), then slot 5 has to have a feature and not a graphic, and there have to be at least two more features elsewhere in the newsletter. That phrasing means there is not a graphic in that slot.
I hope that clears things up for you!
One of the difficult things about this game is the potential for confusing a "feature" with a "type," and it looks like that's what has happened to you. Think of the word "feature" as meaning "article," as in an article in a newsletter, while a "type" is the subject of the article. You can have three different features (articles) that are all the same type (subject)!
In the example you cited, there is a feature in slot 1 that is about Industry; a second feature (a different article) that is about Marketing that occupies slots 2 and 3 (it's a long article, so it spills over from the second slot to the third); a third feature (article) about Marketing in slot 4 (so it is a different feature than the previous one, although it is on the same subject/of the same type); and a Graphic is slot 5. That's three different features (articles), even though they are of only two types (subjects).
Here's a solution that is even more extreme: 5 features, one in each slot, and every one of them is about Technology. That would satisfy all the rules! One might be about batteries, another about solar panels, another about computer chips, another about satellites, and another about robots. Five different features, but just one type: TTTTT in the five slots. It works!
One last thing about this question: if an answer choice refers to a feature being in slot 5 ("except the feature in slot 5"), then slot 5 has to have a feature and not a graphic, and there have to be at least two more features elsewhere in the newsletter. That phrasing means there is not a graphic in that slot.
I hope that clears things up for you!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam