Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
{
"stimulusAnalysis": "Plants have two kinds of chemicals: primary ones they need to grow, and secondary ones that don’t help growth but give each plant its smell and taste. These secondary chemicals usually came from random mutations; if a mutation helped a plant survive—by attracting helpful insects like pollinators or by deterring or harming plant-eating insects—natural selection kept it. Over millions of years plants and insects have been in a back-and-forth: plants evolved defenses, insects evolved ways to handle or avoid them, and as a result many insects now eat only a few closely related kinds of plants.",
"correctAnswer": "A",
"correctExplanation": "",
"wrongAnswerExplanations": {
"A": "",
"B": "",
"C": "",
"D": "",
"E": ""
},
"questionType": "Summary",
"difficulty": "easy"
}
"stimulusAnalysis": "Plants have two kinds of chemicals: primary ones they need to grow, and secondary ones that don’t help growth but give each plant its smell and taste. These secondary chemicals usually came from random mutations; if a mutation helped a plant survive—by attracting helpful insects like pollinators or by deterring or harming plant-eating insects—natural selection kept it. Over millions of years plants and insects have been in a back-and-forth: plants evolved defenses, insects evolved ways to handle or avoid them, and as a result many insects now eat only a few closely related kinds of plants.",
"correctAnswer": "A",
"correctExplanation": "",
"wrongAnswerExplanations": {
"A": "",
"B": "",
"C": "",
"D": "",
"E": ""
},
"questionType": "Summary",
"difficulty": "easy"
}
Logic Breakdown
Identify the primary-vs-secondary distinction: primaries are required and found in all plants; secondaries are nonessential, occur variably, and give distinctive tastes/odors. Choose the answer with that same required-vs-optional, distinguishing-feature relationship.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage12.Which one of the following describes a set of relationships that is most closely analogous to the relationships between plants and their primary and secondary substances?
Correct Answer
B
The passage states that "The primary substances ... are required for growth and proper functioning and are found in all plants" and that "It is these secondary substances that give plants their distinctive tastes and smells." Option B parallels this: engines and transmissions are necessary for a car to run (like primary substances), while paint and taillights are not required for operation, vary among cars, and give a car its distinctive appearance (like secondary substances).
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