- PowerScore Staff
- Posts: 91
- Joined: Sep 06, 2021
- Tue Sep 07, 2021 11:30 am
#90211
Hi Anureet,
For our purposes attacking this question, "clog" and "impair" are the same family of "negatively impact," and they have roughly the same level of intensity. I would not say that for this question, impair is a stronger term than clogged. Words that would cue you to extremes would be like "always," "never," or "completely broken" (if we saw that instead of impair, then yes, that would be a different level of intensity).
Hope that makes sense!
Eveline
For our purposes attacking this question, "clog" and "impair" are the same family of "negatively impact," and they have roughly the same level of intensity. I would not say that for this question, impair is a stronger term than clogged. Words that would cue you to extremes would be like "always," "never," or "completely broken" (if we saw that instead of impair, then yes, that would be a different level of intensity).
Hope that makes sense!
Eveline