<p>I puy 48 pi. It's the ONLY answer that makes ANY sense. Think about it, the radius was what... 10 or something? so 20 x 6 is 120. The answer is a little bit more than 120 since the arcs are curved. Thus 48pi which is baout 150ish</p>
<p>that was my logic. I didn't want to work out any formulas</p>
<p>the next largest ansewr was ridiculous... like 200+. No way.</p>
<p>If robot is talking about the one I'm thinking of, then I omitted the underlined section for that one because it was redundant. Is that right? It was something like reading and literary scholarship.</p>
<p>I don't remember alot of those questions but I had the same passage. Maybe it was a little bit different in the questioning from time zone to time zone.</p>
<p>It was contemplative, I'm pretty positive. </p>
<p>Also, I don't think Danny (I think that was his name) was experiencing anxiety over not knowing some of his relatives, rather he was curious, which was like, choice C or something. The paragraph in question didn't illustrate anxiety, but moreso curiosity.</p>
<p>to Blythe: Yes it does cost money to view early. It is $8 every time you view the scores online. The scores are sent within 4-7 weeks but I always seem to get mine right at 6 weeks for any standardized test.</p>
<p>on the science...if the rate of absorption was higher than the rate of repulsion was lower? or what? i seemed to have missed that detail, which will explain my score of about 3 on the science when i get my results back.</p>
<p>For the intertwined circles, I put the highest number it gave. It said the circumference of each circle was 48pi (so half of it was 24pi, right?). And there were 12 circle halves/arcs bolded, so 12*24pi = 288pi. I think that's what I put...</p>