This question asks what could be true if there’s a day where Grecia and Joe work together. I have a lazy approach to logic games. On a question like this, I’ll first see if any past scenarios put Grecia and Joe together, and then see if that scenario solves the question.
The correct answer to the first question had the following order. I’ve filled in the first shift (it’s the only possible order):
I’ve highlighted what’s interchangeable. As I mentioned in question 15, H and J are interchangeable in this diagram. So we can switch H and J between Monday and Wednesday to match what this question is asking:
Now let’s look through the answers to see if any could be true in this diagram. Note that J and H are still interchangeable on Thursday.
A-D aren’t true in this diagram. But E could be: we could place Joe in the first shift on Tuesday. So E is CORRECT.
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GABBY says
Noticed a small error in second to last sentence of explanation:
“But E could be: we could place Joe in the first shift on Tuesday”.
This should read: “But E could be: we could place Joe in the first shift on THURSDAY”.
GABBY says
Noticed a small error in second to last sentence of explanation:
“But E could be: we could place Joe in the first shift on Tuesday”.
This should read: “But E ccould be: we could place Joe in the first shift on THURSDAY”.
Sean W. says
Other than “could be true” questions, what other types of questions will cue you to go back to prior work/answers to help solve the problem? I have not established this skill yet, and it is clear to me that some questions become so easy if I do it instead of starting from scratch.