AP English Lit on Thursday

<p>I agree that she had a very controlled image; she was a rigid person so it would make sense for her to have contrived anger…</p>

<p>Dreamer- definitely gilt overdusted</p>

<p>@dreamer2012
I put "gilt over-dusted.</p>

<p>I’m pretty sure the count the waves in the frog passage was humor. Ways / Waves was a play on words and introduced some humor as it applied to the frog’s condition.</p>

<p>Was one of the answers in the frog passage about the frog’s inability to change the course of events or something kind of like that?</p>

<p>Also, what is the question where the answer is ‘Blended into his environment’?</p>

<p>Also put gilt overdusted.</p>

<p>But the passage did imply that she was calculating and deceitful. The Sir guy was a “victim” because of it.</p>

<p>Alms I believe meant Achilles past achievements</p>

<p>Her anger was fake, and she rebuked all men’s attempts to get with her, she’s calculated and careful, so it would be coldness</p>

<p>Wait were “contrived anger” and “coldness” answers to different questions or part of the same question?</p>

<p>@Rain202</p>

<p>I think you can add the “touch of nature” question to your list.</p>

<p>Still no explanation as to why the ways/waves thing relates two common events. Anyone?</p>

<p>Achilles - [Shakespeare’s</a> Troilus and Cressida 3.3 - Achilles writes Ajax a letter](<a href=“http://www.shakespeare-online.com/plays/tandc_3_3.html]Shakespeare’s”>Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida 3.3 - Achilles writes Ajax a letter)</p>

<p>Skip to line 150.</p>

<p>I agree with NRNitz1. He says “alms for oblivion” and Achilles was just asking if all his past achievements had been forgotten? So I think it makes sense.</p>

<p>Also, there was a question that was one of those I only, II only, I, II, III … the answers were “straight so narrow”, “the path”, and “the forthright”? Which was the answer??! -chews nails nervously-</p>

<p>For Ulysses, what was the question about Gods’ recognition?</p>

<p>@LiamNeeson I don’t remember that question at all. Which poem was it for? Frog?</p>

<p>Dreamer- it was I II III. All three</p>

<p>@bruceparklee I believe it was connection to his environment. One of the other options was to escape his lonely existence.</p>

<p>I think Rain just keeps writing it wrong. The question was about Ajax and about how it was his current renown, though Gods is in the passage, it was not in the question.</p>

<p>It was connection with the environment @bruce.</p>

<p>And for the paths question, I think all of them were right.</p>

<p>The Ulysses one with I, II, and III was instant way, straight, and path
Instant way wasn’t the answer because way meant “away”, like away with that thought</p>

<p>Brucesoarklee- I think I said repetetive existence</p>

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<p>I’m pretty positive that that isn’t the answer. Subtle humor seems more correct because of the clear play on words.</p>

<p>@Rain202</p>

<p>Yeah, it was the frog one. I think the question was on the bottom left corner of the right page (if the booklet is flat). It was the only question I was really unsure about and I put something about the frog’s inability to change the human condition or something.</p>