Home » Logical Reasoning » Statement and Assumption

Figurative language and implied belief: Understanding the sentence "Like a mad man, I decided to follow him" and deciding which assumption is implicit

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Only assumption I is implicit

Explanation:


Given data

  • Statement: Like a mad man, I decided to follow him.
  • Assumption I: The speaker is not actually a mad man.
  • Assumption II: The speaker is a mad man.

Concept/Approach

Similes ('like a mad man') compare behavior while implying the subject is not literally that thing.


Step-by-Step reasoning
1) The construction indicates resemblance, not identity ⇒ I is implicit.2) II directly contradicts the sense of the simile; it is not implied.


Verification/Alternative

If the speaker were actually mad, the natural phrasing would omit 'like' and say 'being a mad man...'


Common pitfalls

  • Misreading figurative speech as literal classification.

Final Answer
Only assumption I is implicit.

← Previous Question Next Question→

More Questions from Statement and Assumption

Discussion & Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!
Join Discussion