Criteria for eliminating answer-choices in the context of this question

Started by Mazen · started 2022-08-07 03:00 · last activity 2022-08-08 22:30 · 1 reply

Hi In the context of the passage, and to a large extent generally speaking, I feel that the words, "law," "principle," and "constraint" are more or less synonymous, so I thought how can one be correct and the other be incorrect when all three are mostly synonymous, and for this reason I proceeded to eliminate all three without giving it a second thought. But when I am reviewing this question, I feel that I got lucky! Did I get lucky? I probably should not have used that approach, which is eliminating answer-choices with largely overlapping meaning because in such case there is no justification for selecting one over the other when they all mean the same. Is there textual support for "system"? Thank you Mazen

Replies

  1. Emil-Kunkin · 2022-08-08 22:30

    Hi Mazen, I don't think you were wrong at all! For word-meaning questions like this, if two words are pretty much synonyms then it is quite unlikely that one is correct and the other is not. As to the support for system, I would argue that both K and J are arguing for different systems of bankruptcy law. While this isn't exact, it is by far the least bad answer.

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