- Tue Nov 16, 2021 5:36 pm
#92108
As confirmed template junkie, I like ashpine's suggestion here of setting up three diagrams based around which of the three variables is in the 1/3 spots. And ashpone, your second comment is also correct: when O is in those two positions, we know for sure that J is in both 2 and 4, and we could not have another O in the game. The last two spaces would either both be S or else one S and one J (and Sammi, you're correct that there is no problem with either a JJ block or an SS block!)
We should also think about numeric distributions for this game, since there are three variables to fill six positions. The most extreme of those would be a 4-1-1 distribution, meaning one of the variables goes 4 times with the others each going just once. 3-2-1 is also possible, as is 2-2-2. In a game like this I expect at least one question to test those numeric ideas (and in fact, question 8 does just that).
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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