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Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2012 8:32 pm
by PeanutsNJam
Example: PT 60 Q10:
How can you possibly say that "petition" and "testimony" are equatable?
PT 59 Q14:
Negating E leaves you with typical donut eaters eating more calories than typical bagel eaters.
How do you guys justify the answers when doing these?
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2012 8:36 pm
by MarcusAurelius
It would help if we could actually see the question you are seeking an answer to
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2012 8:38 pm
by PeanutsNJam
Sorry it's illegal to post the question.
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2012 8:39 pm
by MarcusAurelius
THEY'LL NEVER TRACE IT BACK TO YOU!
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Wed Oct 03, 2012 8:40 pm
by relevantfactor
PeanutsNJam wrote:Sorry it's illegal to post the question.
Section 1 or 2?
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2012 12:00 am
by PeanutsNJam
PT 60 sect 1 and PT 59 sect 2
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2012 10:22 am
by ncc5
For PT 60, you're distorting the meaning of testimony. They don't mean in a court room, they just mean what the respondents affirm. Which answer did you choose?
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2012 10:29 am
by echamberlin8
Is it really illegal to post old PT questions on here?
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2012 10:41 am
by defdef
pt60 i think the link between testimony (A formal written or spoken statement, esp. [though not necessarily] one given in a court of law) and petition is pretty clear.
as for pt59, the key distinction is "one sitting". it doesn't matter if there is overlap between typical donut eaters and typical bagel eaters because the question sets the parameters for how much food is consumed in "one sitting". if he is both and he has both a donut and a bagel, this would be considered two sittings. that's the way i see it anyhow.
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2012 5:58 pm
by PeanutsNJam
ncc5 wrote:For PT 60, you're distorting the meaning of testimony. They don't mean in a court room, they just mean what the respondents affirm. Which answer did you choose?
I believe I chose E. However, it was one of those questions where I felt none of the answer choices were right.
Testimony doesn't have to be a court room. It's simply a written or spoken
statement. It's
individual.
A petition is a
signature. It's done as a
collective.
I think those two are completely different things.
And as for PT59, I was under the impression that the answer choice meant a donut eater would also eat a bagel in the same sitting. The stimulus never said that donut eaters "only" eat 4 donuts.
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2012 7:40 pm
by cahwc12
PeanutsNJam wrote:
And as for PT59, I was under the impression that the answer choice meant a donut eater would also eat a bagel in the same sitting. The stimulus never said that donut eaters "only" eat 4 donuts.
It also never says they date supermodels, but that doesn't mean you can assume it to be true because you want to.
Don't post stuff with sensationalist titles like this just because you don't understand a question.
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2012 7:52 pm
by Nova
echamberlin8 wrote:Is it really illegal to post old PT questions on here?
Yes, breaks copyright laws.
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2012 9:28 pm
by PeanutsNJam
cahwc12 wrote:PeanutsNJam wrote:
And as for PT59, I was under the impression that the answer choice meant a donut eater would also eat a bagel in the same sitting. The stimulus never said that donut eaters "only" eat 4 donuts.
It also never says they date supermodels, but that doesn't mean you can assume it to be true because you want to.
Don't post stuff with sensationalist titles like this just because you don't understand a question.
Let me break down Q14 for you since you clearly either did not look at the question or don't understand it yourself:
Stimulus
In one sitting, a typical donut eater eats 4 donuts (680 calories and 40g fat total).
In one sitting, a typical bagel eater eats one bagel with random spreads that add up to about 680 calories also.
Therefore, donut eaters and bagel eaters eat the same amount of calories in one sitting.
If you negate E
Most donut eaters are also bagel eaters. If I am a donut eater and a bagel eater, then what does that mean?
That means in one sitting, I eat 4 donuts because I am a typical donut eater. I would also eat a bagel with random spreads because I am a typical bagel eater. Nowhere are we told that donut eaters and bagel eaters are mutually exclusive (a silly assumption to make).
Is that clear enough for you? Or do you need pictures too.
And you clearly did not address again the question as to how one can equate petition and testimony given the fact that the former is a
collective signing of a letter/document while the latter is an
individual statement (verbal or written).
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2012 9:43 pm
by cahwc12
PeanutsNJam wrote:cahwc12 wrote:PeanutsNJam wrote:
And as for PT59, I was under the impression that the answer choice meant a donut eater would also eat a bagel in the same sitting. The stimulus never said that donut eaters "only" eat 4 donuts.
It also never says they date supermodels, but that doesn't mean you can assume it to be true because you want to.
Don't post stuff with sensationalist titles like this just because you don't understand a question.
Let me break down Q14 for you since you clearly either did not look at the question or don't understand it yourself:
Stimulus
In one sitting, a typical donut eater eats 4 donuts (680 calories and 40g fat total).
In one sitting, a typical bagel eater eats one bagel with random spreads that add up to about 680 calories also.
Therefore, donut eaters and bagel eaters eat the same amount of calories in one sitting.
If you negate E
Most donut eaters are also bagel eaters. If I am a donut eater and a bagel eater, then what does that mean?
That means in one sitting, I eat 4 donuts because I am a typical donut eater. I would also eat a bagel with random spreads because I am a typical bagel eater. Nowhere are we told that donut eaters and bagel eaters are mutually exclusive (a silly assumption to make).
Is that clear enough for you? Or do you need pictures too.
And you clearly did not address again the question as to how one can equate petition and testimony given the fact that the former is a
collective signing of a letter/document while the latter is an
individual statement (verbal or written).
I read the question and solved it in about 30 seconds. There's no flaw or gab or ambiguity or arbitrariness in here at all.
You're assuming you have to eat donuts and bagels in one sitting. Where does it tell you that you can draw that assumption? You're absolutely right that you can't assume they are mutually exclusive either. But acknowledging this doesn't give you free reign to draw any other assumption you want.
Someone else already clearly explained that you're wrong if you scroll up a little bit.
Instead of complaining about arbitrariness that doesn't exist, strive to actually understand why your brain missed this simple logical reasoning question. Focus on why that incorrect answer is indeed incorrect. You ask for advice here but are ignoring it.
In regards to the other very straightforward LR you are complaining about:
tes·ti·mo·ny/ˈtestəˌmōnē/
Noun:
A formal written or spoken statement, esp. one given in a court of law.
You're right that the plural of testimony is testimonies, but you should consider that the object in the answer choice is "people," a singular entity. It would be grammatically incorrect for them to say "the testimonies of people."
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2012 12:02 am
by defdef
defdef wrote:
as for pt59, the key distinction is "one sitting". it doesn't matter if there is overlap between typical donut eaters and typical bagel eaters because the question sets the parameters for how much food is consumed in "one sitting". if he is both and he has both a donut and a bagel, this would be considered two sittings. that's the way i see it anyhow.
the stimulus even uses the phrasing "EXACTLY one bagel". meaning that ONLY a bagel can be eaten by typical bagel eater.
second, petition is absolutely a singular statement that is usually used when talking about many signatures, but needn't have many. even if a petition does have a thousand signatures it is still a single statement which is all that is required. if you want, think of it as many people co-signing the same testimony.
though the previous poster made a good point regarding the grammar, it is an unnecessary distinction as testimonies may mean that each individual had a different testimony. in this case they did not - they all had the same testimony.
Re: Excessively arbitrary LR in the low number range
Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2012 12:32 am
by PeanutsNJam
defdef wrote:defdef wrote:
as for pt59, the key distinction is "one sitting". it doesn't matter if there is overlap between typical donut eaters and typical bagel eaters because the question sets the parameters for how much food is consumed in "one sitting". if he is both and he has both a donut and a bagel, this would be considered two sittings. that's the way i see it anyhow.
the stimulus even uses the phrasing "EXACTLY one bagel". meaning that ONLY a bagel can be eaten by typical bagel eater.
second, petition is absolutely a singular statement that is usually used when talking about many signatures, but needn't have many. even if a petition does have a thousand signatures it is still a single statement which is all that is required. if you want, think of it as many people co-signing the same testimony.
though the previous poster made a good point regarding the grammar, it is an unnecessary distinction as testimonies may mean that each individual had a different testimony. in this case they did not - they all had the same testimony.
Thanks your explanations were good. Made sense.