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SAT Reading Long Passages Drill 1, Problem 2
SAT Reading 3.3 Long Passages 173 Views
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Description:
SAT Reading: Long Passages Drill 3, Problem 3
Transcript
- 00:03
All we are saying is... give Shmoop a chance.
- 00:08
And on our text...not our singing. We know we suck.
- 00:11
We know you can't get enough of this passage.
- 00:13
Press pause and have some more...
- 00:34
According to the information in lines 14 through 20, the accident that Muir suffered while
Full Transcript
- 00:38
working in a factory...did what?
- 00:41
And here are the potential answers...
- 00:47
We can find the answer to this question without
- 00:49
breaking a sweat.
- 00:50
All we have to do is go back and read the lines it's talking about, then see which
- 00:53
answer matches.
- 00:54
Looks like the key phrase here is "a world unaltered by man or machine."
- 00:59
There's absolutely nothing in the line that indicates that Muir was permanently incapacitated
- 01:04
by the accident.
- 01:05
It'd be kind of hard for him to hike all over Yosemite if this were true.
- 01:09
(A) is easy to bump from consideration. Unless the factory where Muir worked was run
- 01:15
by evil cows... which we highly doubt...(C) isn't even worth our time.
- 01:19
Muir's battle against livestock was connected with the way they affected natural ecosystems...
- 01:24
and had nothing to do with his factory injury. The passage does make it clear that Muir moved
- 01:29
from the old homestead to start working at the infamous factory...
- 01:33
But since this occurred after he left, it couldn't have caused him to leave in the
- 01:36
first place.
- 01:37
(D) can't be right. While being in the hospital might allow a
- 01:40
person some solid writing time...
- 01:42
The article says that Muir didn't do his nature writing thing until later in his career.
- 01:47
...which takes (E) off of our list.
- 01:50
Really, no answer choice but (B) has anything to do with the lines in question.
- 01:54
The excerpt makes it uber-clear that Muir's factory accident turned him on to nature.
- 02:00
All those other answers ought to be sentenced to seven years of hard labor for wasting our time.
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