Digital SAT Command of Evidence Questions: Practice Drill #9
This SAT exercise features a special type of SAT Command of Evidence question involving literature. Includes strategy brief, key vocabulary, and detailed answer explanations!
This SAT Reading & Writing practice drill is tailored for those looking to conquer digital SAT “Command of Evidence” questions.
I've coined a term that I think better describes this question type: Logical Operations: Support (LO:S). To master this challenging question type, dive into my comprehensive strategy guide on LO:S questions.
The question in this drill is a special type of LO:S question, as it involves literature. I call this subtype Logical Operations: Support, Literature (LO:S Lit). In addition to detailed answer explanations, premium subscribers will find a strategy brief for LO:S Lit questions below the fold.
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Drill
The Picture of Dorian Gray is an 1890 novel by Oscar Wilde. In this novel, the young and impressionable Dorian Gray falls under the influence of the hedonistic Lord Henry Wotton. This leads Dorian to pursue a life of excess and moral recklessness, which can be clearly seen when he declares to Lord Henry, ______
Which quotation from a translation of The Picture of Dorian Gray most effectively illustrates the claim?
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