Answers (100% Accurate Answers) LSAT – Law School
Admission Test 2025 Prep Exam (Brand New!)
logical reasoning question parts - ANSW✔✔✔✔stimulus, prompt, and 5 answer choices
stimulus - <<answer>>>subject matter of the logical reasoning question
prompt - <<answer>>>question about the stimulus in the logical reasoning question
Step 1 to Logical Reasoning questions - <<answer>>>read the question prompt first do
that you are aware of what you're being asked for
Step 2 to Logical Reasoning questions - <<answer>>>move on to the stimulus and
read it carefully and deliberately
Step 3 to Logical Reasoning questions - <<answer>>>Consider the basic form that the
right answer will have.
Types of Logical Reasoning questions - <<answer>>>implication, operation, and
characterization
Implication questions - <<answer>>>A question in which you are asked to draw an
inference and everything in the stimulus must be believed to be true
Operation questions - <<answer>>>A question that allows answer choices to perform
an operation on the stimulus, each answer choice should be treated as true to see how
it affects the stimulus
Characterization questions - <<answer>>>A question in which you read the stimulus
and the. are asked to characterize it in some way
What is the best way to approach a Characterization Logical Reasoning question? -
<<answer>>>The best way to respond is to ask yourself, "what makes this argument
work?"
Proposition - <<answer>>>the basic unit of assertion
Sentence - <<answer>>>one or multiple propositions
, argument - <<answer>>>a set of propositions in which one or more propositions are
intended to provide support for another proposition
premises - <<answer>>>propositions upon which an argument is based, they are
stated as facts and are intended to support a conclusion
conclusion - <<answer>>>propositions that are supported by premises
premise keywords - <<answer>>>since, because, for, as, after all, moreover, in
addition, given that
conclusion keywords - <<answer>>>therefore, thus, hence, so, as a result,
consequently, it follows that, it is clear that
assumptions - <<answer>>>claims that are not explicitly stated but that must be true in
order for the conclusion to be inferred from the premises
steps to breaking down arguments - <<answer>>>1. locate the conclusion
2. find the premises
3. identify any assumptions
logical - <<answer>>>not concerned with the truth but with implications, inferences,
and validity
Greek symbol for entailment - <<answer>>>3 dots in a triangle formation
valid argument - <<answer>>>conclusion is properly inferred from the premises
invalid argument - <<answer>>>conclusion cannot be properly inferred from the
premises
absolute statements - <<answer>>>assert the existence of some fact
conditional statements - <<answer>>>assert the existence of a hypothetical
relationship between conditions
elements of a conditional statement - <<answer>>>sufficient condition and necessary
condition; goes from sufficient to necessary
sufficient condition - <<answer>>>satisfied condition is enough to guarantee that a
necessary condition will follow
necessary condition - <<answer>>>required for a sufficient condition to be satisfied