The best mobile study app for

LSAT Practice Questions

  • Content from Best Selling LSAT Study Guide "Master the LSAT" by NOVA Press
  • 300+ Practice Questions
  • Detailed explanation for every question
  • Study Mode and Test Mode
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Description

With over 300 LSAT practice questions, this App offers the most comprehensive and rigorous set of LSAT Test Questions available

  • Thorough analysis of the questions, with all correct and incorrect answers explained in detail
  • Questions available in Study Mode and Test Mode
  • Very intuitive polished user interface. No squinting needed, change the font size as you go
  • Points to Remember: Reviewing these points is the easiest and fastest way to learn and remember the key concepts for the exam.

We have taken the content from the BEST LSAT Prep book in the market "Master The LSAT" by NOVA Press and made it available in an easy to use, interactive app.

"I've read nearly all of them. This one is truly the best."

"The best of of its kind"

"Probably the best money can buy,"

"Most comprehensive book out there"

"Currently the Best LSAT Book On the Market!!!"

"No Better Preparation Than This"

"A must-have for your LSAT prep"

"This is for the person who needs EVERYTHING explained.,"

"Best Explanation for the Reasoning Behind Answers"

-- Reviews on Amazon

Author

Nova Press publishes the finest, most comprehensive test-prep materials available.

http://www.novapress.net

Exam

The LSAT is an aptitude test. Like all aptitude tests, it must choose a medium in which to measure intellectual ability. The LSAT has chosen logic. Although this makes the LSAT hard, it also makes the test predictable--it is based on fundamental principles of logic.

The Law School Admission Test (LSAT) is a half-day, standardized test administered four times each year at designated testing centers throughout the world. The test is an integral part of the law school admission process in the United States, Canada, and a growing number of other countries. It provides a standard measure of acquired reading and verbal reasoning skills that law schools can use as one of several factors in assessing applicants.

Visit LSAT page for more details