I am having difficult time eliminating option A (there is no psychoactive...) and C (Not all substances..).
Please help me,
Thanks,
kpopstar123 Wrote:Hello...
I thought this question was a crafty one...
English is not my first language so I actually have a question about the grammar portion of the stimulus.
More specifically, the usage of "as many as."
This question is all about the last sentence, where I believe, seems to say "there are as many people who consume caffeine as those who takes other psychoactive substances."
This post as well as other posts seem to suggest the following:
when a statement says "there are as many pizzas as tacos," in terms of quantity wise, (for example) there could be 50 pizzas and 50 tacos or 52 pizzas and 50 tacos, but there is no way that there could be 52 tacos and 50 pizzas...
Therefore the last statement is claiming that "there is no way that there are more of those who take psychoactive substances than those who take caffeine."
Am I on the right track???
tz_strawberry Wrote:Hello,
I'd like to double check my understanding with (E)...
So as above poster says,"as many A as B" means A has at least something as B (so A≧B), " as many people consume caffein"=A, "as consume any one of the other...substances"=B, this means those who consume caffein has at least the same number of people as those consume other addictive psychoactive substances, but B cannot have more than A. So (E) is true because even though alcohol is not talked in the stimulus, it is said to be "a physically addictive psychoactive" (the "if" statement in (E)), it cannot have more people than caffein...because it is "the other...substances"=B.
Is this correct?
Thank you