In Spanish the word <em>"lógico"</em> refers to something that has sense, something logic. <em>"Ilógico"</em> is the opposite. Using <em>"i"</em> is one of the ways in Spanish to form negatives. Ilógico means that it has no sense.
Based on the reading (maybe attaching it would help) you need to identify whether the conclusions have sense and <u>match to the main ideas of the text.</u>
Silly is the answer it describes the musicians
<em>In the course of my explorations twenty-five years ago,</em><em> </em>I found five sawmills located on or near the lower margin of the Sequoia belt, all of which were cutting more or less Big Tree lumber, which looks like the redwood of the coast, and was sold as redwood. <u>One of the smallest of these mills in the season of 1874 sawed two million feet of Sequoia lumber.</u>
Which statement best describes the point Muir is making in the passage?
<u>Which detail appeals to the reader’s logic?</u>
<em>Which detail establishes credibility?</em>
It was all a guess.
The answers go by how I labeled the questions. (1st is bolded in the passage, second is underlined, third is italicized)
Hope I helped anyway...
Hai. Yes. はい。
Iie. No. いいえ。
O-negai shimasu. Please. おねがいします。
Arigatō. Thank you. ありがとう