Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT138 S1 P1 Q3 Explanation

The Corrido

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsInferenceHumanities

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Passage

The corrido, a type of narrative folk song, comes from a region half in Mexico and half in the United States known as the Lower Rio Grande Border. Corridos, which flourished from about 1836 to the late 1930s, are part of a long-standing ballad tradition that has roots in eighteenth-century Spain. Sung heavy reliance on familiar linguistic and thematic conventions served to affirm the cohesiveness of Border communities.

Corridos take their name from the Spanish verb correr, meaning to run or to flow, for corridos tell their stories simply and swiftly, without embellishments. Figures of speech such as metaphors are generally rare in corridos, and when metaphors are used, they usually incorporate everyday images that are familiar to the songs’ conventional and readily recognizable to corrido listeners, reflects and strengthens the continuity of the corrido tradition.

The corrido is composed not only of familiar images but also of certain ready-made lines that travel easily from one ballad to another. This is most evident in the corrido’s formal closing verse, or despedida. The despedida of one variant of “Gregorio Cortez” is translated as follows: “Now with this I say the corrido’s maker asserts that the task of relating an authentic Border tale has been accomplished.

What this question is testing

Inference

Your task

Find what must be true based on what the passage or stimulus states.

Common trap

Answers that are plausible or likely but not actually guaranteed by the text.

Winning move

Keep only the choice the statements fully support — eliminate anything that requires an extra assumption.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
3.

Given its tone and content, from which one of the following was the passage

Answer choices

  1. Trap11% picked this

    a brochure for contemporary tourists to the Lower Rio

  2. Trap5% picked this

    a study focusing on the ballad's influence on the music of

  3. Trap9% picked this

    an editorial in a contemporary newspaper from the Lower Rio

  4. Trap1% picked this

    a treatise on the lives of famous natives of the Lower

  5. Correct74% picked this

    a book describing various North American folk

    Why this is right

    Answer E is correct.

    Skill tested: Inference · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

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