- Wed Feb 24, 2021 5:45 pm
#84439
To your first question, gingerale, those inferences come about as a result of the restrictive nature of the J-G-R sequence and that fact that you have to keep GHJ apart from each other and also QRS apart each other. If Q was 4th, it would have to be before S, but not next to it, so S would be 6th and Y would be 7th. Now, where would you put R? There is no place for it to fit!
If S was 5th, R would be forced into the 7th space (because it can never be 1, 2, or 3, and could not be 4 or 6 as that would put it next to S). Y would have to go between at 6, forming an SYR sequence at the end of the order. But then GHJ would all be forced into the first four spaces (along with Q going in there somewhere), and at least two of those would end up next to each other, which is not allowed.
The inference about Y is similar - if Y is 2nd, then S must be 1st and Q must be 3rd. If the first three in order are SYQ, then GHJ all end up squeezed into the last four spaces (along with R), and at least two of them will have to go next to each other. That's why Y can never be 2nd!
Most of these inferences come from trying them out - they are not immediately obvious, and for that reason you might not get them during the initial setup, and that's okay. You can still succeed at this game without them, as long as you discover them when certain questions require you to.
If S was 5th, R would be forced into the 7th space (because it can never be 1, 2, or 3, and could not be 4 or 6 as that would put it next to S). Y would have to go between at 6, forming an SYR sequence at the end of the order. But then GHJ would all be forced into the first four spaces (along with Q going in there somewhere), and at least two of those would end up next to each other, which is not allowed.
The inference about Y is similar - if Y is 2nd, then S must be 1st and Q must be 3rd. If the first three in order are SYQ, then GHJ all end up squeezed into the last four spaces (along with R), and at least two of them will have to go next to each other. That's why Y can never be 2nd!
Most of these inferences come from trying them out - they are not immediately obvious, and for that reason you might not get them during the initial setup, and that's okay. You can still succeed at this game without them, as long as you discover them when certain questions require you to.
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