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Re: The Battle of Trafalgar in 1805 was, perhaps, the most important Briti [#permalink]
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QUESTION #2

E This Logic question asks why a particular detail was used. The Santisima Trinidad was mentioned in the middle of the passage as an example to support the point that the British fleet was outgunned and that victory did not seem certain. (E) is a good match for this prediction; the British may not have been confident of victory because of the more powerful enemy fleet. (A) is incorrect; all that was said about Nelson's battle plan is that it was "unorthodox." (B) is contradicted by the passage; if this ship was a common design, then it wouldn't be "the most heavily armed ship in the world." (C) may seem tempting, since the ship is used in support of the idea that the British weren't certain that they'd be victorious; however, there's no dis-cussion of what the Spanish thought about their chances in the battle. (D) is too extreme; the British may not have been entirely confi-dent that they'd win, but that doesn't mean Nelson thought that they would lose.
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Re: The Battle of Trafalgar in 1805 was, perhaps, the most important Briti [#permalink]
For question 1, if point III was like "may have lost"(doubtful) instead of "would have lost" can we select this option too
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The Battle of Trafalgar in 1805 was, perhaps, the most important Briti [#permalink]
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No because the inference is such that

Nelson used more conventional and this is false

He used UNconventional tactics and contributed to the victory. Even though not sure 100% they contributed

I hope this helps
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The Battle of Trafalgar in 1805 was, perhaps, the most important Briti [#permalink]
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