avinashsbajaj wrote:
I do not disagree that E is wrong, but more often than not, the answer to a "primary purpose" is found in the first paragraph. Hence, I found D to be more prominent in this case. Am I missing something?
that's too simplistic. while the first paragraph will certainly contain at least
some, and perhaps
most, of the primary idea, it's not necessarily true that the whole idea will be captured there.
you should, at least, look at
* the opening paragraph
* the FIRST 1-2 SENTENCES OF EACH BODY PARAGRAPH
* the ending
and then, MOST IMPORTANTLY,
PREDICT YOUR ANSWER BEFORE LOOKING AT THE CHOICEShad you done this, i have no doubt that you would have come up with something limited to politics and economics (as is the correct answer).
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I am not very convinced with this. Can someone please clarify this
basically, (d) is way way WAY too general.
* the passage doesn't describe concord's "place in american history"; it's limited to economic and political considerations.
* the passage is also limited to a very small window in time, so "...history post-independence" is too sweeping.
analogy:
if i describe the experience of one minority player in baseball, the main idea is not "the experience of minorities in athletics". too general in 2 different ways.
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- and also, can you please indicate how I could have arrived at this answer in 2 mins, because from what we can read in those few mins, it is sometimes difficult to grasp the passage in its entirety.
well, this is a long passage. we certainly don't expect you to read a long passage in two minutes (!)
you can take 3-4 minutes to read the passage.
if you read english slowly, then concentrate on the specific parts mentioned above (opening, BEGINNING of body paragraphs, and closing).
once you've read the passage, you should be able to answer MAIN IDEA questions in 30-40 seconds, since you're predicting the answer without looking at the choices.