<p>A colon can introduce a dependent or an independent clause–unlike the semicolon. I wouldn’t have even considered the comma if they had not underlined it</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>@AlaskanDebater44: This was precisely my reasoning. I think the “must” is what makes the sentence sour. It seems to be ambiguous whether the levels of antioxidants that need to be produced by organic plants are being compared to a) the levels of antioxidants CURRENTLY being produced by normal plants or b) the levels of antioxidants that NEED to be produced by normal plants to have the desired effect.</p>
<p>For example:</p>
<p>In order to win, you must eat more broccoli than do I. (possible error) </p>
<p>versus:</p>
<p>You tend to eat more broccoli than do I. (no error)</p>
<p>The original sentence, for reference:
</p>
<p>I doubt the College Board will be that nitpicky about the organic plant sentence; I would assume that it is no error (unless it’s something to do with parallelism.</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the one about downloading pictures that included
“you may not think that downloading pictures for powerpoints (or something) is fine, but doing it may be copyright infringement, therefore being illegal.” Was there no error or was “therefore being illegal” the error?</p>
<p>“Known to many only as…”</p>
<p>I put A, doesn’t it need to be “know by many…”?</p>
<p>Someone once told me that if you have “being” in the SAT grammar it’s usually wrong.</p>
<p>I posted this earlier in the thread, but the Lawrence one is as follows:
There was a question about Lawrence whatever. It read, Most people know Lawrence ONLY AS the character from blahblahblah but he has something or other not hinted at in the movies.</p>
<p>I thought no error, after debating with myself for a while as to whether or not the correct idiom was “know as only” instead.</p>
<p>Is the sentence “hint at in the film” correct or not?</p>
<p>can you just say phenomenon that sand blabhblah instead of a colon?</p>
<p>wait, do you guys remember the question about
you could buy movie tix … all for 25 cents ?</p>
<p>Sorry if this has already been discussed, but I got 2 No Errors on the section with the underlined parts of the sentence? Does that resonate with everyone?</p>
<p>wha’ts the highest you can get with maybe an 8 or 9 essay and -2 on the mc?</p>
<p>which two no errors did you get? do you remember hte question?</p>
<p>nope, I don’t remember the questions at all</p>
<p>I think the consensus is that there were 2 no errors near the end (I believe with 1 in between).</p>
<p>waht about the all 25 cents one???
was the answer
“where” when it should have been “when” ???</p>
<p>^Yeppppppp</p>
<p>@fastsauce, that’s exactly what I got, thanks. I was getting scared because I hadn’t seen any no-errors until that point</p>
<p>so in conclusion, the two no errors are
- the lawrence one
- the organic plant one…</p>
<p>wait so what were the answers to the pluto question? and the sand one??</p>
<p>also, for the paragraphs one… what did you guys get for the correcting the sentence that had something like “don’t forgot about other money costs … insurance, gas…etc” i forgot how the sentence went.</p>
<p>I’m not sure if this was talked about but what was the answer to the first improving paragraphs one? I got something about the difference between buying an used car and buying a new car.</p>