<p>Can anyone remember in which passage the sentence completion question containing the words "dissolute" and "Stalin" was? Was it in the art critic one?</p>
<p>I think the section containing the art-critic passage was not experimental. I can't find a reason why collegeboard would use a section for some international students that they used as an "experimental" section for others. Unless, of course, they are running out of passages for tests.</p>
<p>stalin? o_O</p>
<p>Oh...The Stalin one was another question. I Mixed up. I meant the question whose answer was licentious. I got it wrong. Was it in one of the possible experimental sections?</p>
<p>no i mean i dont remember if there was anything about stalin on the test <em>_</em> funny..what did they say bout him?))</p>
<p>ok guys, </p>
<p>yea i took the SAT saturday in Canada and i had the monarch, the art critic and hmm the george one... i dont think i had any other CR one... can someone refresh my memory? Anyway, i got 0 for the last question for the gridding one where it was like f(x) is more than 7 or something like that... what sis one possible value for x... i think you could have put 0 to like 0.5 or something like that. Am i right?</p>
<p>This one math question completely stumped me as sad as it is.... it was the cube question.... where each face had a different shape... i felt we werent given enough information but idk i may have missed something. it was like ' what shape is opposite to this shape' .. something like that.</p>
<p>For the cube one, basically you know it couldn't have been rotated... err... vertically, because the top face didn't change, and so you also know that the bottom face stayed the same both times, so the bottom face is the one that never showed. That's 2 faces eliminated.
Then you notice that since the face that was originally on the right didn't come to the front, the cube must have been turned to the left. That should give you the answer. Iirc it was the white circle. C or something.</p>
<p>I got art critic, butterflies, george and his wife, japanese-americans and villages, architecture, don't remember the rest :(</p>
<p>yeah u r always given enough information. Look at the shape, you'll see that the top and the bottom of 2 cube are the same, the next thing you should do is to imagine 2 cubes in your mind and rotate it 180 horizontally. You'll have the clear answer: O</p>
<p>does the thing with more then one SAT version happen only in december and why not in october for example?</p>
<p>oh, was it the face with circle? unbelievable, seems like i guessed this one right. oh man</p>
<p>yea i think i guessed right... so far every answer that cc ppl have come to agree, i got right... except the aplomb question where i put diffident even though i knew it couldn't be right. </p>
<p>O JUST REMEMBERED ONE QUESTION!</p>
<p>Ok, this was the math question where it was like which one cannot be positive. i think this was the last or second last question in the section. It was like, which one cannot be positive:</p>
<p>ac
ab
abc
something else
something else</p>
<p>I put ac because i know ab and abc are not right and the others didnt make sense to me.</p>
<p>^i put ac, too</p>
<p>I don't remember what I put, but it wasn't ac for sure.</p>
<p>The question went something like this:</p>
<p>ab^2c^3</p>
<p>That meant a could be positive or negative, and b could be positive or negative. Let's say a was positive and c was positive, that would make ac positive.</p>
<p>I think I put the last one, but I can't remember.</p>
<p>and were there any restrictions?..</p>
<p>Well, you can't just assume a was positive or negative. You have to leave it open for both. I clearly remember one option that worked regardless of a, b, or c being positive or negative.</p>
<p>umm i am not understanding what you are saying shadowx. can you please elaborate. It is NOT ab or abc .. i am 95% sure. if i got this wrong that brings my mark down like 30 points. not good</p>
<p>i mean, in the assignment? was there anything else, or just "you are given a, b, and c. which cannot be positive?"</p>
<p>I think the question was like this: a(b^2)(c^3) > 0</p>
<p>To me that meant that A and C^3 have to have the same sign, either positive OR negative, since b^2 is always going to be positive. </p>
<p>So if A and C have the same sign, AC will always be positive, so I picked that. I could be wrong though, but that's what I guessed.</p>
<p>There was also a choice for A(C^2), which I almost picked, but then realized that if A and C are both negative, that expression would be negative.</p>
<p>Anyone else pick AC?</p>
<p>Wait, but the question was which cannot be POSITIVE. So if A and C had the same signs, that would make (A)(C) positive. That's why it can't be ac, abc, or bc. It was one of the two that none of us can remember.</p>
<p>^ That notation doesn't make a difference to the math. Either way, the answer is ac.</p>