<p>sheieet...another effed up passage...:((((</p>
<p>i got self-mocking, intense pleasure, confrontational, forceful and direct, trivial, suspicions usually have a negative connotation</p>
<p>how was she forceful? she claraly said they boy could call her wahtever he wanted</p>
<p>The wife had described her as hard or something... and you could see it in her shoulders. Or something. So yes, forceful.</p>
<p>And brainpolice, that's exactly it. Was that all the questions for that one?</p>
<p>forceful and direct
negative connotation
intense pleasure
self mocking tact
confrontational
light = trivial</p>
<p>i'm pretty sure about all of them... this was one passage i did well in (or felt i did well). i'm better at the narrative passages than the weird ones about community and folklores...</p>
<p>I like narratives; they're simply easier to read. More interesting than a dry nonfiction passage about television broadcasters or something.</p>
<p>hey guys..
for the George + Island passage i got
(something) and Imposing
suspions are not negative
intense pleasure
self-mocking tact
confrontational</p>
<p>^ (something) = statuesque</p>
<p>lol she wasnt statuesque at all she was barely 5 ft</p>
<p>What was the "confrontational" question about?</p>
<p>^ The passage suggests that his wife's relationship w/ her great aunt was once _______.</p>
<p>Ohh, what was the question, it was like the first paragraph was _____ in relation to the 2nd one. I think I put the first one was describing something in sweeping generalizations and the first one was very specific? Was that one right? Or was it the first one was preparing for an experience and the 2nd one was remembering the memory?</p>
<p>You are quite right--sweeping outline and specific experience.</p>
<p>Yessss, got another one right :p</p>
<p>I put preparing for an experience and remembering the memory.
That was a question I wasn't 100% sure about, though..</p>
<p>it was the general and the specific answer.</p>
<p>first paragraph about his outlook of the house
second about the aunts</p>