<p>I don’t remember, sorry.</p>
<p>Sorry, neither do I.</p>
<p>iight …</p>
<p>i just dont rememebr e for number 35 i cant rememebr that question very well is there anywhere we can find that improving paragrpahs passage like people are able to find CR passages</p>
<p>omg so glad about experimental being the one with newyork</p>
<p>i had like 5 no errors on that one, it was so weird, they were all hard</p>
<p>oh shoot… i was really hoping none of the writings were experimentals. they were all so easyy…:/</p>
<p>don’t you hate it though when there’s like five answers in a row that are all D or C or some letter and yet they have to be right???</p>
<p>:D</p>
<p>Wait, the subway one was experimental?</p>
<p>Ughh how was the subway one experimental? I only had 2 writing sections and I had that one… It was extremely easy so I’ll be ****ed if it is.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>The last 2 questions on the entire test. I’m pretty sure writing is always the last one.</p>
<p>Do you guyz remember the question with the romans melting Greek (not sure) gold to sell them back to the Greeks or something. I really don’t remember the question but i think i put ‘to sell them’ because the subject didn’t agree. What did you guyz put?? no error possibly?</p>
<p>^ For that one, I remember that I thought “Briton” was singular and it was followed by a plural verb. I probably got that wrong. :(</p>
<p>@whatisthis…sorry but the new york subway one was not experimental.</p>
<p>^ Sweet. I know I aced that section.</p>
<p>Oh thank god; I liked the subway one. What was the writing experimental then?</p>
<p>^ Hey for one of the writing questions on choosing error or no errors for “During the eve of the American revolution, britian colonists fought england…”</p>
<p>Did you find any error for that? I chose NE</p>
<p>That one was, like-
Because Bill cared more about making money than having fun at work, he spent most of his time in a job that was dull but that paid well.</p>
<p>Yeah. Whatever it was, you had to make sure to match Bill to he, not make “he” sound like the job, if you know what I mean. Also I think one of the answer choices made the time in the job or Bill sound like the thing that was dull but paid well. Be careful with those commas and stuff lol.</p>
<p>And HopefulEagle, I could only settle for No Error on that one as well. It sounded vaguely run-on, but in the end I decided that maybe I was just being paranoid…lol so much for that. I know I failed Critical Reading, def…:(</p>
<p>The SAT critical reading should die. I’ve seen many kids expose their weak point of the critical reading out of their intelligence in which they score 500s. For ex: My friend with a 98 average got a 590.</p>
<p>I’ve taken a Princeton Review version last night just on the CR (disregaurding the math and writing) and got a 550. So hopefully I can pull that one up around there in January (def it will be my finalth time).</p>
<p>It’s like no matter how much you know the words from Barron’s flashcards and Direct Hits, you can still get the sentence completions wrong on the exam, although some people had almost every 19 right.</p>
<p>For the Bill sentence, wasn’t the sentence supposed to be revised and begin with his name instead?</p>
<p>Randomazn14, what did you think about the Math? I thought it was much more difficult than the averaged ones in the blue book… so hopefully the curve’s generous?</p>
<p>The answer was “melt” because it had to be in past tense, “melted”</p>
<p>@katie i agree i put that also. For the tour man, i put the tourguide i put d or something
which ever one was tourguide(comma) discription(comma) and blah blah, i crossed out the things in between the commas and it was still correct. Also I DONOT KNOW but i got wingspan 14 ft blah i underlined once, because swan, once, blah big species. I am unsure because i thought it was big swan (had) once roamed big bird because i thought it was past perfect because it occured sometime in the past and ended sometime in the past. I dunno, i was arguing myself over once and E.</p>
<p>I knew right away that the first section was experimental because it had several of the same wierd errors and it was slightly harder than my practice tests. =)</p>
<p>Interesting. Uh…well, HopefulEagle, I actually found the math a bit easier than I’d expected. Could you clarify which book was the big blue one? lol I just leafed through some intense AMC-10 and GRE math problems and set the timer on. Then I discovered I was probably targeting all the wrong kinds of math…and plus GRE was a bit bewildering haha. Just used my parents’ old study books for that.</p>
<p>In the end, I ended up frantically searching out just any book of practice tests. I have to admit I wasn’t very into the idea of focusing on math…I was only ever really hesitant on the probability problems, and even those I just made a lame unfulfilled commitment to nail them. Oh well. But then I ran off some copies of practice tests from this Princeton Review book (which, like, is totally hating on the collegboard, lol) and scrawled down a few answers at a time during my free-time intervals. That way I didn’t have to sit down and do them. Just kind of an on-the-go thing, that way I found it really stuck.</p>
<p>And so, well, I thought they were slightly relieving in difficulty. I expected something totally mind-wracking and all, but…yeah. And I unfortunately can’t help you in determining relative level to other rounds, since, er, this is also my first SAT testing. But I’m with you on hoping that the curve is lenient. Because really, you, me, him, her, and everyone else could really benefit from a nice generous favoring curve that forgives any one or two slips of the brain while taking the math portion…:/</p>