Anybody knows what test this was recycled from?
were the 5 no errors on the same page?
yes
is carved out of correct grammatically? or should it be carved from
i left it no error, to early for a hard idiom error
were there any idiom errors?
no i guess. couldn’t find any, nor diction.
writing answers for the paragraph please
guys was one of the last few answers “consequently”? for the passage 35 qs.
yes i remember putting consequently
@Suly99 recycled from November
GUYS MORE ANSWERS PLEASE!
READING AND MATH PUT ALL YOU REMEMBER!
I thought thr circles one could be 0,1,2 all of them…
From the deleted December SAT thread:
effort, vestige, voluble, prescient, ambitious, coterie - sentence completion
Ria passage:
Ria thought Danny was presumptuous
Danny was disconsolate
The door - Danny was not self-assured
Many others on the November thread also agreed that it was “not self-assured”
budding relationship
Historians:
thorough and impassive
would add his own thoughts into it and draw his own conclusions
author #2 -> only outstanding historians
Time passage:
point -> pertinent
prominent scientific figures
scientific perception for “seems” and “seem”
unidirectional time arrow
China passage:
ambition and necessity
desperate and desirable
Analogy is people needing food
provide context for discussion
publishers are numerous and available
Photography double passage:
less contrived
Writing:
4 no error (5 people agree = 4 no error)
astronomers A
Yes the circle is I, II, and III because the sphere had a circumference of 20pi.
The one about astronomers did have an error. There was a subject-verb disagreement.
The radii were 4.5, 19.5, and forgot the other one. You just plugged in random values and the radius of the bigger circle had to match after subtracting the length of the triangle from the radii of the two smaller circles. I just put 4.5.
The other math:
-1 for the f(a) and f(a+1)
108 for the unshown angle
4 quarters from 2008 4th quarter triples
the question about rugs the answer was E (6x +2y +6 or something)
sphere and two circles - I, II, III
greatest prime factor is p
ratio of the price and the weight question is 4/3
angle measure of a 100 because b was 80
10 lockers
Could you describe the 145 girls question? I don’t remember that one.
MATH:
GRID IN: question 18 for x … x can be equal to either 2/3 or 0. There are 2 answers for it.
P.S: I’m pretty sure Danny is disconsolate was not the right answer.