<p>Yeah pure water freezes at 0 C, but that really wasn’t anywhere in the passage.
Did anybody else find that English, Math, and Reading were a breeze and the science had like 3 or 4 questions that were pretty difficult?
Also, for the photograph one it was I recognized. If you read the sentence like “I recognized the woman from the photographs (pause) as my mother” it makes a lot more sense than the other ones.</p>
<p>Mendel - it was the historical context thing.
The scientists weren’t disputing the validity because he was so old or anything…</p>
<p>yeah that jeans thing was dumb. i spent a good ten minutes on that one when i was done going through the section. im positive it was the only one with “seemingly” in it.</p>
<p>@elau</p>
<p>I dont think it was validity because during Mendel’s lifetime, his work was disregarded</p>
<p>the passage said it was like around that time (I think the 1900s) that Mendels theories were being accepted</p>
<p>and I think I deleted the “to remember” part</p>
<p>When did the seemingly laid back question come up in the jeans essay?</p>
<p>Can someone provide the context of the jeans question?</p>
<p>@user83248324 - It wasn’t when his ideas were valid because it stated earlier in the passage that his views weren’t accepted until after his death</p>
<p>BlaineR - I also put that, but according to other people, it stated in the passage that it freezes at 4 C…I don’t remember it though</p>
<p>Re: livnlaughw</p>
<p>DELETEEE!! because it’s redundant. memories (you already remember…duh)</p>
<p>It was talking about how the jeans were like exempletory of a seemingly laid-back professionalism, and that’s correct since something like seeming professionalism doesn’t make sense.</p>
<p>I also don’t remember that the passage said water freezes at 4C, I thought that we were supposed to assume that it freezes at 0C…</p>
<p>Water freezes as 0C</p>
<p>it never mentioned it but its common sense</p>
<p>Oh i see, oh wells, I was kinda skimming it.</p>
<p>@aguapatty i thought it wasn’t mentioned in the intro. o.o</p>
<p>WATER IS MOST DENSE AT 4C. AND IT FREEZES AT 0C. come on, it’s common sense.</p>
<p>@elau0493 I put the answer that went with 0 C too, but people earlier in the thread were saying that pure/distilled water freezes at 4 C</p>
<p>@Aqua</p>
<p>u put 89% right?</p>
<p>Eh, I think the guy who said it was 4 said he got it mixed up with the density.</p>
<p>@mabsjenbu123 Yep
Anyone remember something where the answers were like 3 C and 7 C? I put that it was closest to 3 C because the line was around 4…I have no clue what the question was</p>
<p>89% sounds familiar</p>
<p>You were supposed to just look at the graph and see what matches up with pure water, or water with 0% concentration…</p>
<p>The test isn’t to see if you know the freezing point of water, its realizing that the information is on the graph. The 0% value matched up with the 89% value.</p>
<p>Now I’m beginning to question how much science we really need to know. I think there was one question about freezing and melting temp, and I wouldn’t have been able to do it without prior chem knowledge.</p>
<p>what about the order of the size in the different droplets question?</p>