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Re: Most educated people of the eighteenth century, such as the [#permalink]
How is Q3 E??

Can anyone please explain. Carcass
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Most educated people of the eighteenth century, such as the [#permalink]
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Frankly I do not like this passage at all. However, this is my only personal stance

3) According to the passage, what would the Ninth Amendment imply about a right to "a trial by jury", guaranteed in the Seventh Amendment of the US Constitution?

(A) The Ninth Amendment would provide direct support for this right. Just the opposite stated in the passage.
(B) The Ninth Amendment would not support this right directly, but would support all the logistics that would allow citizens to exercise this right. Nope..!!
(C) The Ninth Amendment would apply to trials that fall outside the jurisdiction of Federal Courts. Not inferable
(D) The Ninth Amendment would apply to all trials that do not involve Constitutional Law. Opposite
(E) The Ninth Amendment is irrelevant to any right mentioned explicitly in the Bill of Rights. > Exactly what the passage states

Basically the 9 amendment is a residual hypothesis to contemplate rights that were not enlisted in the others or was not possible to conceive at the time by the founding fathers.

It is not a question that , in my opinion, solves reading the passage. but by POE

During the passage, for instance, we do have two types of interpretations: one more conservative and one more broad. So for instance the second choice could not be inferred but also it has not completely the chance to being ruled out.

In the real GRE 99.99% of the choices can be proven or not. The accuracy is almost perfect.

Her is not the case
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Re: Most educated people of the eighteenth century, such as the [#permalink]
Hello from the GRE Prep Club VerbalBot!

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Re: Most educated people of the eighteenth century, such as the [#permalink]
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