<p>In the short passage that mentioned Oprah’s Book Club what was the quote doing in the passage?</p>
<p>support previous claim?</p>
<p>Yes I put illustrate a claim supported earlier or whatever</p>
<p>Edit* Maybe I put that for the one about the Indian Woman who started listing what she did to help out new immigrants… I think so. Confusing these questions now o_O One day and my memory is like gone</p>
<p>i believe the “reform” in the second passage was referring to a change from citizen journalism to professional journalism. i mean the answer choice did not say specifically what reform they meant…i thought reform could be applied to a change from regular people writing their own news to professionals who know what they r doing. So both authors were in a way justifying why they thought a reform was needed</p>
<p>And i thought the first passage was not really talking about the potential impact of citizen journalism but more why professional journalism is bad. i don’t know…guess im wrong for that one though i see both ways</p>
<p>@you wrote this, it’s not morally flexible. sure the architect was being flexible by incorporating both modern and old aspects BUT that is not “moral”. Moral is more like right and wrong. He incorporated plenty of historical components to his design</p>
<p>the answer to the liberal question is definitely broad-minded. Morally flexible and plentiful make no sense. Look up liberal in a thesaurus and broad-minded is a synonym.</p>
<p>“Broad-minded use …” makes sense to you?</p>
<p>My case for it being morally flexible is that he didn’t abuse going in between and make anything stupid as a result. But I’m not even sure anymore… December 21st please make this a Merry Christmas -_-</p>
<p>@tlively, plentiful is a synonym of liberal.
in the context of the text, “… known for his plentiful use of [technique]…” makes the most sense, imo.</p>
<p>Where is the support for skeptical/satisfied in the Indian author passage? It says the editor was surprised by the reception, which seems to fit bewildered better.</p>
<p>Oh man, I registered just to say: anybody else get the umpire passage? Come on, I’d thought more people would have had that! As for the questions… I barely remember. Anybody else had it?</p>
<p>Nope, no umpire passage.</p>
<p>Anybody remember the other answer choices for the sentence completion with the answer “prolific”? I thought people were just messing it up with prodigious.</p>
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<p>The support for skeptical is the passage when it talks about the editor initially not liking the idea. Then when it became successful she ended up liking the idea aka satisfied.</p>
<p>I just wanted to say that I’m too freaking scared to look at the compiled answers :x</p>
<p>for the question that asked how Seva will react to the questions…
The passage says she did not enlist the help of a team of psychologists for a technically accurate answer. She rather dispensed “commonsense” advice a “loving” sister might offer.
Doesn’t this mean that she gave a careful or caring advice to people?
I can’t remember the exact wording for that answer but I know there was a word careful or caring it in. Can anyone confirm or remember the choices for this question?</p>
<p>^The wrong choices either had Seva acting as a prick or having her refer the reader to a website. The correct answer was her telling a person that it was OK and that she could get through it and that others had the same problems.</p>
<p>314159265,</p>
<p>yes but I don’t remember if the word “reassure” was in my answer…
I just said she gave careful advice… and can’t remember after that
maybe I chose the right answer since the other choices just talk about she doing something or doing st with website and stuff…</p>
<p>Surprise doesn’t mean bewildered. Bewildered is more like confused or perplexed.</p>
<p>what did you get for the first question on the Milky Way/Ignorance passage? it was as to what the opening quote’s purpose was, and the quote was something about the greatest discovery of science being that humans are ignorant.
I remember putting down the first option (maybe 2nd?) that was “reasserting [something]”</p>
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<p>You probably got it right; the 4 wrong choices were pretty obvious. The wrong choices were Seva not really giving a crap and the right choice was Seva being nice and reassuring/calming the person.</p>
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<p>Which question is this?</p>