<p>What was the answer to the math question that said there was a wire 60 inches long that was cut into a square and circle?</p>
<p>2p-2 or something like that, if i recall.</p>
<p>Na it was 60-8pi</p>
<p>Theundertaken which one are you talking about?</p>
<p>it was 60-8pi because u just take the circumference of the circle and subtract it from 60… and resemble is wrong because it says it ________ as a lobby. i made the same mistake as u and resemble but the answer was doubled</p>
<p>And what was the answer in the reading about which one the ice ISNT, was it the answer about commonwealth park or the answer about the summer heat?</p>
<p>the question with the hospital… i guess it originally said doubled, then answers were like resembled, imitate. but supposedly resemble wasn’t correct because of something later in sentence like “as”? idk.</p>
<p>and what was the “letter B” question referring to? was that a question where I was deciding between putting it on B or C, where B was on one page, then C was on next page, but I chose B because letter C was something to do w/ the animal’s history?</p>
<p>yea that one was B</p>
<p>there was a question for which was not acceptable…</p>
<p>it said that she was decorated with the medal of honor</p>
<p>answers were like A. no change B. given C. presented with and D. embellished with</p>
<p>I put presented with because embellished with seems the same as “decorated with”?</p>
<p>the answer was embellished with… it means like to decorate so it obv was wrong in that context</p>
<p>yea me too. Even though I don’t really know what embellished means none of the other 3 seemed to make sense. There was one before that that was like which one is best to emphasis that she received the award in 1948? I put , 1948</p>
<p>it was , in 1948 clearly because it said when he/she received reward… so yeah ur right i think</p>
<p>Phew. I almost didn’t catch that it was emphasizing on when she received it and would have gotten it wrong</p>
<p>WITH THE RHETORICAL QUESTIONS YOU HAVE TO READ VERY CAREFULLY something i learned as i kept taking practices… the answers are in the questions</p>
<p>it was she fought in the war for this in 1942 she received the medal of honor something like that</p>
<p>For the science question about the way to get the best acceleration of the lava flow, or somthing like that, did you choose the one with the highest angle, or the highest flux</p>
<p>i didn’t take it today but took june. How many of the following kinds of questions were on the English test today?</p>
<p>1) Should the author add the folowing sentence
2) Should the author delete or keep the following phrase</p>
<p>IN june there were at least 5 of those…just wondering if that held true today, too.</p>
<p>the one with decorated with the medal of honor
the correct answer that would not fit was “presented with”</p>
<p>a person cant really be “presented with” a medal of honor unless they were literally part of package that was being presented</p>
<p>however, a person can be “presented” a medal of honor</p>
<p>the correct answer was “presented with”</p>
<p>nope i think your wrong… embellished with makes no sense and @seasmart it was increase angle</p>
<p>presented with would work, the answer was embellished with
you cant embellish a person with a medal.
however you can use presented with. for example, “Last night, President Obama was presented wit the Medal of Honor.”</p>
<p>i am 100 percent sure the answer was embellished with.</p>