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LSAT Out of Scope Answers

Perhaps the most common type of wrong answer on the LSAT test is an answer that is beyond the scope of the evidence being considered. By being able to recognize out of scope answer choices, you will most likely be able to eliminate at least one if not two or three wrong answers per question. 

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LSAT Tips for Logic Games

We’ll leave you with a couple of simple tips for handling the LSAT Logic Games section.  These are LSAT tips you should practice with each game section you take.

This is the final article in a series of articles presenting LSAT Tips for Logic Games. The series includes the following articles:

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Finding LSAT Assumptions

This article is the third in a lesson series on LSAT Arguments. This article will demonstrate techniques for finding LSAT assumptions. Assumptions are the parts of the argument that the author left out but must be intended by the author given the premises and the conclusion.

This lesson series covers the following articles:

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LSAT Formal Logic

This series of lesson articles will deal with LSAT Formal Logic. Learning some tricks for handling LSAT Formal Logic can translate into some quick points on test day. This lesson series covers the following articles:

LSAT Formal Logic: An Introduction
LSAT If-Then Statements
LSAT Contrpositive 
Best LSAT Logic Tip

LSAT Formal Logic

The LSAT doesn’t explicitly test formal logic in many Logical Reasoning questions; however, your ability to analyze argument structure often depends on your understanding of some basic formal principles. Furthermore, the Analytical Reasoning section is based entirely in formal logic.

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LSAT Answers with Wrong Tone

Most Logical Reasoning arguments and almost all Reading Comprehension passages are fairly reasonable in their tone. That is, they don’t use extreme language or stretch what the author is trying to say.

This is the fifth in a series of articles dealing with wrong answer choices in LSAT Logical Reasoning. The series includes the following articles:

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Right Answer, Wrong Question

The LSAT test asks you specific types of questions in the Logical Reasoning section, and you will become extremely familiar with all of them. One way to trick you into the wrong answer choice is to offer you an answer that would be right for another question stem, but is wrong for the question at hand.

This article is the third in a series of articles explaining LSAT Logical Reasoning Wrong Answers. The series includes the following articles:

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