DmitryFarber wrote:
Quote:
Any time you're trying to figure out which answer is preferable or "outweighs" another, you need to find a different approach. The right answer must be right, and the wrong answers must all be wrong. We shouldn't have to consider what the GMAT writers like or what is more important in general terms. In the case of an inference question, unless the question itself prompts us for something relating to the overall point, we are just looking for something provably true. If you know that E is inferable, then you should select that for sure. D isn't "somewhat inferable," because we don't know the risks of NESP. It eliminates one potential source of complications, but it may introduce others.
In any case, while D is a somehwhat broader point than E, we haven't been asked for a broad point, so that should't affect our evaluation. In fact, it's quite common for the right answer to an inference question to be a random, narrow, uninteresting point that
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Statistics : Posted by saynchalk • on 03 Aug 2014, 09:50 • Replies 20 • Views 15340







