Thank you for the advice. Would anyone mind answering this question - Passage says "More often than not, shoplifters are repeat offenders."
Statement - Shoplifters shoplift multiple times.
Would the answer to this be T or F? It seems to me that the statement is stating as if it is a confirmed fact (something that is a certainty) but the passage says that it usually happens but not always. So it should be F. But if you go by the spirit of the statement and the passage, the statement is supported by the information in the passage, so it should be T. What is the right answer?
It's definitely a tricky one, it's a bit hard for me to look at it out of the passage's context and answer.
I would go with T from what you've described, given that even though they don't state it explicitly as a fact in the passage, they do mention that the probability of a shoplifter shoplifting multiple times is greater than only being a one time offender. So in a way, the statement is more true than false. And as you said, this notion is reinforced by the information in the passage.
Just curious, did you study law?
Anyhow, I wanted to mention i got L 9 R 9 W 7 S 9, just to assure you i'm not taking liberties by trying to give you some advice lol. And the 7 was bogus lol.
I just found that when i answered the questions, it was usually the simplest explanation i could find from the passage to either support or not support the statement which was usually correct.