<p>it was soldiers’ feet because “soldiers” is plural and the feet is the object, so the apostrophe goes after the “s”.</p>
<p>I put drop to.</p>
<p>i had drop than changed it to dropping… not good</p>
<p>The other option I think was “soldier’s feet” but that cannot be the answer, because the word soldier’s is referring to one solider and his feet.</p>
<p>If I recall correctly the passage was talking about a field of soldiers.</p>
<p>it has to be soldiers’</p>
<p>17 soldiers in a triangle formation ;)</p>
<p>i put that as letter C i think between 1 and 2(sentences)</p>
<p>^Yeah, a field or more than one.</p>
<p>There was a second answer with “soldiers’ feet” I’m pretty sure it had an unnecessary comma thrown in there.</p>
<p>yea it did, i remember that. no comma</p>
<p>set out or set about?</p>
<p>set out from Florida</p>
<p>im not sure what i put for that one, set out sounds right but idk what the context is</p>
<p>Set out. </p>
<p>10char.</p>
<p>StanfordCS set about Florida (does not sound right)</p>
<p>Set about = to start doing something
Set out = to go somewhere, i.e. journey</p>
<p>it’s i think became its, im not sure what the second thing youre referencing to is?</p>
<p>Yes it should have.</p>
<p>What was the answer to the one in the passage about the tree and “my garden changed for the better” or something? It was one of those keep/delete ones.</p>
<p>i kept it as a transition</p>
<p>I think that’s what I went with too, but I spent some time trying to figure out if it would be considered digressing.</p>