We want an answer that can’t be true.
A is very tricky. “Unsliced loaves” in this sentence doesn’t necessarily mean plural.
For example, I could say “did all of the applicants score well on the LSAT?”. And the answer could be “Yes, there’s only one applicant, and she scored very well”.
So if I say “the unsliced loaves” are oatmeal, I’m not necessarily saying they’re plural until I tell you how many there are.
So we could have one unsliced oatmeal loaf, and five sliced wheat loaves, for example.
B could be true. We could have four unsliced oatmeal, one unsliced rye, and one sliced rye.
C is CORRECT. We need an unsliced oatmeal loaf, too (rule 4).
D could be true. One unsliced oatmeal loaf, three unsliced rye loaves, two sliced wheat loaves.
E could be true. One unsliced oatmeal loaf, one unsliced rye loaf, four sliced wheat loaves.
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