<p>@theman755 - Yes, for the last paragraph about bicycles that said something about millions of bicycles being sold today.</p>
<p>^I thought it made more sense to add a semicolon.</p>
<p>EDIT: Wait, can anyone give me a general idea of what the sentence after it was about?</p>
<p>^^^yup i also put deleted for the millions of bicycles. it seemed irrelevant in the context of the passage.</p>
<p>Does anyone remember what the sentence right after the deleted sentence said? I vividly remember thinking that there was a sort of connection, so I chose the semicolon, but maybe I misread…</p>
<p>^The first sentence talked about how there was a million or so bikers as of -some time period.- Then the sentence after talked about women, thus the first sentence was irrelevant and should be deleted</p>
<p>I thought it was more appropriate to move it to the beginning of the passage? Or was the sentence too broad/irrelevant for that to be appropriate?</p>
<p>A good online resource that has high school resources is comparable to COURSES in which the teacher and students are in the same room.</p>
<p>i left it that way and i’m pretty sure thats right, can someone confirm?</p>
<p>“I think you’re allowed to use “little to no” or “little or no” interchangeably…”</p>
<p>^ This made me want to kill myself. I eventually left it as is because I convinced myself that the “to no” was more colloquial. How about the one that said increased european unity? I left it with no errors but something tells me that maybe “increasing” worked better than increased.</p>
<p>hey guys is it
accelerated rate of science and math has or have?</p>
<p>and did you guys get for the cycle question the ansswer: In turn, during the 1920’s?</p>
<p>@Magic, the correct answer, according to the consensus, is “those of courses”</p>
<p>Rate HAS, not have</p>
<p>Hey guys was the second to last identifying error question, i put E (no error)</p>
<p>Rayquaza – It’s “has,” because “rate” is singular even if it describes two things. The cycle question should be the one that was something like “In the 1920s, however,”</p>
<p>Magic – That’s a classic SAT/PSAT trick. It should be “those of courses” as Pencil stated.</p>
<p>^ true that is the answer, can someone answer my previous question though?</p>
<p>etennis12
Do you remember the sentence?</p>
<p>Was that “courses” question experimental? I didn’t have it.</p>
<p>^The course question was not experimental, it was the last question in section 10.</p>
<p>I honestly do not remember that question and can assure you it was not my last one.</p>
<p>i dont remember the sentence, i kno it was b4 the “interest to refer” question</p>