<p>yeah, "when passing" is incorrect.</p>
<p>what was the answer to the prides, or groups, of lions....tigers</p>
<p>I think I said "Where as lions travel in prides, or groups, tigers travel..."</p>
<p>There were a few tricky ones...</p>
<p>i thought writing i was majority easy and a few like 5 of them a bit confusing.</p>
<p>jcl --> does your name mean Junior Classics League?</p>
<p>Anyway, I said the about the same thing since they were checking to see if you know parallelism.</p>
<p>nah its just an acronym for names...</p>
<p>HOw do we know that Motown/SusanBanthony was experimental?</p>
<p>Sorry if this was already answered; I didn't see anyone explain why it would be</p>
<p>I don't think Susan B. Anthony and Motown is experimental since I only had 2 Writing MCs, and I got it. Sorry >__></p>
<p>Did anyone confirm number of NEs? lol I got 4...</p>
<p>Ah, shoot. That's definitely not good. :[</p>
<p>So what I'm hearing is that we STILL don't know which writing was experimental?</p>
<p>The one that was NOT Susan B Anthony; aka, the one I aced. </p>
<hr>
<p>Susan B Anthony? Okay, there is no way I can remember a specific question from a writing section.</p>
<p>? I thought we confirmed that it was Susan B Anthony, the sentence ID right? With Motown paragraph correction?
That should be the real one...</p>
<p>Yeah, it is. I was saying the experimental was the one WITHOUT Anthony, the one with teh african paragraph completion thing.</p>
<p>Haha my exp was crazy hard, with Boy/Dad/Stove/Self-reliance paragraph completion.</p>
<p>The non-experimental was an IP on Motown.</p>
<p>My essay was kind of poor. I only made one real point and it compared how the British armies during the revolutionary war failed to unlearn what they had been taught about war and ended up losing to the Americans. It related this to how we must learn somethings from scratch as what we know can become wrong over time.</p>
<p>I think I got 2-3 no errors...one with the "even though", and the other one on the page adjacent to the Motown, I think .</p>
<p>^ My essay didn't even refer to history. It just referred to my own experience, and it was a pretty blah experience at that. But I do trust my sentence structures</p>
<p>Hey guys, I'm still wondering about this question: If we had knowledge of the future, our lives would be predictable. </p>
<p>Was it "If we had" or "If we have"? I thought I read "If we had" but it might've been "If we have"</p>
<p>It was "Were we to have." You needed to use the subjunctive in that one..</p>