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In Episode 7 of our GMAT Ninja CR series, we are rounding up the oddballs, the misfits, and the format-benders: EXCEPT, Fill-In-The-Blanks, and other unusual Critical Reasoning question types. When you see a question that ends with a literal blank line
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One question: if the answer is D, the result must be the same for both scenarios?
For instance, could be a question such as:
What is the area of a square? A) side=sqrt(2) B) diagonal=2
Answer is D, and for both cases Area=2.
Could it be: A) side=sqrt(2) B) diagonal=3
Answer would be D, but the result would be different in each case.
Knowing this can be useful to double check results.
Thanks.
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On the GMAT, two data sufficiency statements always provide TRUE information and these statements never contradict each other.
So we can not have answer 2 from statement (1) and answer 4.5 from statement (2), as in this case statements would contradict each other.
Or for example in YES/NO DS questions we can not have answer YES from statement (1) and answer NO from statement (2), as in this case statements also would contradict each other.
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