Civil Rights, Animal Sounds, Dante, Daughter / Grandmother

<p>I thought the answer was sychophant.... only because the girl said that her dad looked almost like a villian....</p>

<p>are you sure it was the media? I could have sworn it was how the daughter viewed her father at some point. I mean if it was the media than it was probably caricature. On the other hand i remember zealot jumped out of me when i read the question. the other 3 choices would be wrong in any context.</p>

<p>but a sycophant is a "yes-man", not a villain. Correct me if im wrong.</p>

<p>zeal·ot Audio pronunciation of "zealot" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (zlt)
n.</p>

<p>1.
1. One who is zealous, especially excessively so.
2. A fanatically committed person.</p>

<p>that could be negative...</p>

<p>yeah, ur right ryan</p>

<p>I'm pretty sure it was "how did the girl think the media portrayed her father in his first television appearance?" And now that I know the meanings of all of the words, caricature seems to be the best coice.</p>

<p>yeah i think you are right, this sucks, im going to get below a 700 on CR.</p>

<p>UGH...I think I did horribly. Good thing I think I did well on math. What are the chances that the grandmother passage was experiemntal??...</p>

<p>We know the sentence completions for the experimental, I think theyw ere on the prior page. Ryan, don't worry, I just completely ommited that one. A few people have said they think there will be a lenient curve on this CR.</p>

<p>The civil rights passage was absolutely 100% caricature. She talked about the shadows accentuating various features of his face, and she even spent 2 sentences naming the features and how they looked longer or shorter or more menacing, until they become almost villainous.</p>

<p>Yes, I'm pretty sure you're right unluckycharms. I ommited it though, because I wasn't sure about any of the other meanings.</p>

<p>wait so which section was experimental for us?</p>

<p>for shroud
im pretty sure it is disguise because
disguise means :to conceal identity or mislead according to websters</p>

<p>disguise or conceal in anonymity</p>

<p>in other words- conceal identity by not knowing their name- that makes sense</p>

<p>also wasn't there a quesstion about a girl and her grandmother differing in temperament or something</p>

<p>About the animal sounds passage . . . </p>

<p>What are some of the answers that people got? I actually found this one to be the most difficult.</p>

<p>I'm pretty sure it's caricature, the secret being that the writer talks about the media exaggerating her dad's qualities. The only answer choice that is specifically the exaggeration of a person is caricature. </p>

<p>I also said disguise, because the anonymity prevented their identities being known.</p>

<p>Envelope not disguise...
"Their names were anonymous, shrounded in a mist of darkness" or something like that...
Disguise is incorrect because you would have to disguise something AS something else...the anonymous where hidden in the mist- enveloped by it...the anonymous were not DISGUISED AS mist...</p>

<p>For the answer to be disguise...the sentence would have to have read: the anonymous were deceptive individuals disguised as munificent contributors to literature.... Disguise implies the intentional use of a cover-up to fool others...</p>

<p>I'm not convinced. But whatever.</p>

<p>if i had passages such as something on lava, shipwreak.. (dont remember the long one - tell me if you remember) isthat experimental CR? if anyone had the same test as I did what were some hard sent.completions from that exper. section</p>

<p>meekchun - that's the one that I had too! I thought the ship passage was pretty hard and if nobody else had the questions we had, maybe it was the experimental section.</p>

<p>oman finally a CR reading discussion that i can relate to! oy... I have a feeling i missed a lot now! >.<</p>