<p>draw a line.
you’ll find two (there’s a diagram in this thread)</p>
<p>Did anyone get a writing question involving “pollutants”?
I seem to be the only one. :(</p>
<p>draw a line.
you’ll find two (there’s a diagram in this thread)</p>
<p>Did anyone get a writing question involving “pollutants”?
I seem to be the only one. :(</p>
<p>As the train pulls into the station, the people stand, hoping to be first onto the platform." Where’s the error?</p>
<p>There was the word “each” in the sentence and it made one of the verbs, I believe stand(s), singular.</p>
<p>@pencilz</p>
<ol>
<li>There were two points.
i found one point intersecting where x was positive and y was positive
the second point wasn’t so obvious because x and y were not integers, but the question never asked for integer points.
the function intersected the x axis at, lets say (-2,0) and the graph ended at the bottom left hand corner at, lets say (-6,-7)
(sorry i don’t know the exact points, but this is how i reasoned it out)
because at (-2,0) the point is OVER the line y=x and because at (-6,-7) the point is UNDER the line y=x, and the function is continuous the whole time, there was one point on that side of the graph </li>
</ol>
<p>im sorry if it sounds a bit complicated but thats just how i did it. (i also drew a line y=x but that apparently was not a good enough reason for me + i had quite a bit of extra time on my math sections)</p>
<p>Question about the actor wanting chess in the movie? What did you guys put</p>
<p>There were definitely two points: people just forgot to extend y=x to the fourth quadrant.</p>
<p>What was the answer to the cube one. How many small cubes have only two sides. I said 12</p>
<p>@dchoiiii
Hi I completely understand your logic and by your reasoning, the correct answer is undoubtedly 2.
However, I too, had a lot of time to check over the math sections and the point in my quadrant III without a doubt was (-3,-2.5). This point connected to a line that crossed the negative x-axis, and thus had to have been “over” the function y=x.
Is it possible that they gave us different problems???</p>
<p>@pencilz</p>
<ol>
<li>I believe the correct phrase of the sentence should be “in which” instead of “that”
but i may be mistaken about which question you are talking about.</li>
</ol>
<p>@pencilz
Was (-3,-2.5) your lowest point on the negative x-axis side of the graph?
because if it is, then our questions may have been different
but if it extended to another point on the function given where the y-value of the point is more negative than the x-value, then that would be a point of intersection
in that case, our questions were probably not different</p>
<p>For the max S-Distance, did you guys get point C? (S-distance of 4; (2,2))</p>
<p>I drew y=x and the graphs definitely intersected twice</p>
<p>@tbradsworth</p>
<p>I got the S-distance of 4 as well.</p>
<p>Yep, S distance of 4.</p>
<p>^ what question was that</p>
<p>pencilz- it could be possible there are just two completely different versions of the test, and therefore only one intersection on yours</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the last grid-in question?</p>
<p>it was 2/5, about the 15+5k=something or something,…</p>
<p>Ah the one that was supposed to be no solution?</p>
<p>What was the question with tv advertising exactly? It deals with ad companies and jaded viewers? What were the choices for this answer?</p>
<p>What was the exact question where it said something about employers were blank to hire the prospects of their employees when they heard that the employees were doing really well? The choices here in my opinion were solicitous and sanguine.</p>
<p>Anyone else put ostentation to humility? The other choice was complacent to apprehension. I did not like the word apprehension.</p>
<p>Did anyone have the question where there was a graph and it had a point and asked which point of the answers is closest to this point?</p>
<p>For the S Distance question, what did it refer to as the S distance? Wasn’t (-3,1) because 3^2+1^2>2^2 +2^2.</p>