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sentence from sherlock holmes-inspired text what does the word likely m…

Question

sentence from sherlock holmes-inspired text
what does the word likely mean?
part of speech
what clues helped you?
your sentence

holmes had a keen ability to notice details that others would ignore.
ability to know certain things
adjective
ability to notice details

through deduction, he could connect a footprint to a motive in seconds.
when something get subtracted
noun
reasoning, subtraction

the police opened an inquiry into the suspicious disappearance of the inspector’s notebook.
like questioning something
noun
questioning investigation

the suspect’s motive appeared to be jealousy and fear of exposure.
the reason why the person did the crime
noun
jealousy and fear are reasons

his observation of the muddy footprints led to a...
means what someone...
noun
he saw muddy...

Explanation:

Response

To address this, we analyze each row for accuracy in word meaning, part of speech, and clues:

Row 1: “Holmes had a keen ability to notice details that others would ignore.”
  • Meaning: “Keen” (not the word in question here, but the task is about the underlined word? Wait, the table has “What does the word likely mean?”—assuming a typo, maybe “keen” or another word. If “keen”, meaning “sharp, perceptive” (matches “ability to notice details”). Part of speech: adjective (correct). Clue: “ability to notice details” (supports meaning).
Row 2: “Through deduction, he could connect a footprint to a motive in seconds.”
  • Word: “deduction” (assumed).
  • Meaning: “When something get subtracted” is incorrect. Deduction in logic is “reasoning from general to specific”, not subtraction.
  • Part of speech: noun (correct, but meaning is wrong).
  • Clue: “Reasoning, subtraction” is misleading (subtraction is math, deduction in crime is logical reasoning).
Row 3: “The police opened an inquiry into the suspicious disappearance of the inspector’s notebook.”
  • Word: “inquiry”.
  • Meaning: “Like questioning something” is correct (inquiry = investigation/questioning).
  • Part of speech: noun (correct).
  • Clue: “Questioning investigation” supports this.
Row 4: “The suspect’s motive appeared to be jealousy and fear of exposure.”
  • Word: “motive”.
  • Meaning: “The reason why the person did the crime” is correct (motive = reason for action, especially crime).
  • Part of speech: noun (correct).
  • Clue: “Jealousy and fear are reasons” supports this.

To correct Row 2 (deduction):

  • Meaning: “Logical reasoning to reach a conclusion” (not subtraction).
  • Clue: Replace “subtraction” with “logical reasoning, connecting clues (footprint to motive)”.

For the “Your Sentence” column (example for Row 1): “Holmes’ keen ability let him spot details others missed.”

If the task is to identify errors, Row 2 has a wrong meaning for “deduction”. If it’s to complete, use context clues (e.g., “deduction” in Holmes’ context is logical reasoning, not subtraction).

Final Answer (for correcting Row 2):
  • Meaning: Logical reasoning to draw conclusions
  • Clue: Connecting a footprint to a motive (logical reasoning, not subtraction)

Answer:

To address this, we analyze each row for accuracy in word meaning, part of speech, and clues:

Row 1: “Holmes had a keen ability to notice details that others would ignore.”
  • Meaning: “Keen” (not the word in question here, but the task is about the underlined word? Wait, the table has “What does the word likely mean?”—assuming a typo, maybe “keen” or another word. If “keen”, meaning “sharp, perceptive” (matches “ability to notice details”). Part of speech: adjective (correct). Clue: “ability to notice details” (supports meaning).
Row 2: “Through deduction, he could connect a footprint to a motive in seconds.”
  • Word: “deduction” (assumed).
  • Meaning: “When something get subtracted” is incorrect. Deduction in logic is “reasoning from general to specific”, not subtraction.
  • Part of speech: noun (correct, but meaning is wrong).
  • Clue: “Reasoning, subtraction” is misleading (subtraction is math, deduction in crime is logical reasoning).
Row 3: “The police opened an inquiry into the suspicious disappearance of the inspector’s notebook.”
  • Word: “inquiry”.
  • Meaning: “Like questioning something” is correct (inquiry = investigation/questioning).
  • Part of speech: noun (correct).
  • Clue: “Questioning investigation” supports this.
Row 4: “The suspect’s motive appeared to be jealousy and fear of exposure.”
  • Word: “motive”.
  • Meaning: “The reason why the person did the crime” is correct (motive = reason for action, especially crime).
  • Part of speech: noun (correct).
  • Clue: “Jealousy and fear are reasons” supports this.

To correct Row 2 (deduction):

  • Meaning: “Logical reasoning to reach a conclusion” (not subtraction).
  • Clue: Replace “subtraction” with “logical reasoning, connecting clues (footprint to motive)”.

For the “Your Sentence” column (example for Row 1): “Holmes’ keen ability let him spot details others missed.”

If the task is to identify errors, Row 2 has a wrong meaning for “deduction”. If it’s to complete, use context clues (e.g., “deduction” in Holmes’ context is logical reasoning, not subtraction).

Final Answer (for correcting Row 2):
  • Meaning: Logical reasoning to draw conclusions
  • Clue: Connecting a footprint to a motive (logical reasoning, not subtraction)