- Fri Sep 28, 2018 6:29 pm
#58890
Alex,
I am trying to understand your question, because it seems like you are arguing a general point instead of asking anything about Question #21 from the June 2015 test, LR Section 3. It seems to me like Jonathan is trying to help Oakenshield by focusing on the core elements of his question. Jonathan has correctly pointed out that "The more x, the more y" describes a proportional, relationship, and he is not focused on whether the x and y can be reversed since that is not the critical issue for the people who asked the question.
If you have a question about that in the context of this Question #21, please let me know so I can figure out how to best help you here. Thanks!
I am trying to understand your question, because it seems like you are arguing a general point instead of asking anything about Question #21 from the June 2015 test, LR Section 3. It seems to me like Jonathan is trying to help Oakenshield by focusing on the core elements of his question. Jonathan has correctly pointed out that "The more x, the more y" describes a proportional, relationship, and he is not focused on whether the x and y can be reversed since that is not the critical issue for the people who asked the question.
If you have a question about that in the context of this Question #21, please let me know so I can figure out how to best help you here. Thanks!