Understanding of the conditions in LG
Posted: Sun Oct 30, 2011 9:53 am
Could anyone help me to explain the meaning of the two sentences I've taken from the conditions of Logic Games:
1) She does not have any meetings in a row with F. (The stimulus talks about there are 7 meetings, each with one of the five foreign dignitaries: F, M, R, S, or T, among which 3 meetings are with F). OCT 2004, Questions 1-6
2) The site visited 3rd dates from a more recent century than does either the site visited 1st or that visited 4th. (5 sites are visited, which are discovered by F, G or O archaelogists and date from 8th, 9th, 10th century AD.) OCT 2004, Question 13-17
Here, "either ... or ..." means at least one or both? I understand from the answer that it means both, but why is that? Don't we take "either ... or ..." as "at least one" in LR?
Thanks!
1) She does not have any meetings in a row with F. (The stimulus talks about there are 7 meetings, each with one of the five foreign dignitaries: F, M, R, S, or T, among which 3 meetings are with F). OCT 2004, Questions 1-6
2) The site visited 3rd dates from a more recent century than does either the site visited 1st or that visited 4th. (5 sites are visited, which are discovered by F, G or O archaelogists and date from 8th, 9th, 10th century AD.) OCT 2004, Question 13-17
Here, "either ... or ..." means at least one or both? I understand from the answer that it means both, but why is that? Don't we take "either ... or ..." as "at least one" in LR?
Thanks!