<p>I’m pretty sure it was son,XXXXXX,</p>
<p>I’m not too sure, but I put invitingly</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure it was son,XXXXXX,</p>
<p>I’m not too sure, but I put invitingly</p>
<p>same on both hopefully we are right…</p>
<p>yep. Pretty much most of the questions asked here, I’m getting them right. So hopefully I did alright.</p>
<p>invitingly, sincere son,XXXXXX,</p>
<p>last question in the English test: it has?</p>
<p>can anyone confirm hulking as an answer choice?</p>
<p>How did the rest of it go doctor?</p>
<p>yes hulking didn’t fit</p>
<p>it was in the mistletoe section, one of those “which is not acceptable here”</p>
<p>choices I Remember: hulking, immense, profound</p>
<p>nice, and do you remember the last question with the parasite and the tree</p>
<p>it has
they have
they had
it was</p>
<p>I am pretty sure those were the choices</p>
<p>What about the one with the answers that were LEAST acceptable?
The choices (they were going to modify the word ‘effect’):
hulking
immense
profound
and something else</p>
<p>I put profound because that connotes a deeper intellectual/emotional impact. The others just refer to sheer size which I felt was more fitting.</p>
<p>I was leaning between hulking and profound, but ended on hulking.
And it has I believe.</p>
<p>‘It has’ was the only one that made sense for me, and I am glad we agree on that.</p>
<p>To me profound and immense are very similar, but hulking only refers to actual size. But that was only my thought process during the test.</p>
<p>“hulking” was definitely the least acceptable choice, thus it was the answer. The question had to do with the parasite’s effect on the environment. Something can certainly have an “immense effect” as well as a “profound effect,” but “hulking effect” clearly doesn’t match.</p>
<p>Thanks Sam for the reassurance. I was pretty confident when I answered hulking, but I became doubtful when I heard other opinions.</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the full phrase for the last question with the answer(it has)?</p>
<p>For the question about the house made out of boxes, It asked, which of the following words would best describe that the wallpaper used was a variety. Something like that.
I had it down to patchwork and collection. I chose patchwork.
There were a ton of questions I thought asking you to get rid of deadwood (unnecessary words)
For that one question, I put dense too. None of the others made sense because the passage above never said that the witch’s brooms were crowded or jam packed.</p>
<p>for the question on dense, are we looking for the right one?
what were other choices?</p>
<p>does anyone remember the question(s), which asks
if the writing fully satisfies what the author intended to do?
a) yes,…
b) yes,…
c) no,…
d) no,…</p>
<p>Was that about the young businessman and marketing tactics? I said no(I am pretty sure it was C) because the writing never explicitly states specific advice on how to run a company. It was more just motivation, which was choice A I believe, but motivation does not tell you how to run a company.</p>
<p>what was c exactly?</p>
<p>also on that same passage, there was a question about the company
a) “don’t change”
b)
c)
d) mistakes often lead to success</p>
<p>i put a :/</p>
<p>I think I said yes, but I am not sure on which answer…A i think</p>