<p>...isn't there a way to submit a complaint to the CollegeBoard about the question(s)? With such strong numbers and reasoning for both sides, I think we have a legitimate shot.</p>
<p>puzzlement and fabricating ftw.</p>
<p>Edifying/enigma FTW. :(</p>
<p>x2 puzzlement and fab</p>
<p>puzzlement and fabricating too :)</p>
<p>but i'm probably wrong so watch out!</p>
<p>yay i put puzzlement&fabricating too :)</p>
<p>puzzlement and fabricating!</p>
<p>puzzlement and fabricating</p>
<p>I put puzzlement and fabricating...</p>
<p>I'm sticking to my guns. Fabricating still doesn't make sense. He was using facts from his father's essays and stories his mom told him, he wasn't making stuff up to fill in the blanks.</p>
<p>Enigmatic/edifying!</p>
<p>Someone write to College Board.</p>
<p>Edifying/enigma!!!</p>
<p>Can haz flame wars plz?</p>
<p>Yay! A fellow enigma/edifying supporter! :)</p>
<p>Nope. This is a perfectly sane, intellectual debate with good intentions on both sides. </p>
<p>Define "Controversial - Hypothesis" lol :)</p>
<p>I'm also for enigma/edifying. The puzzle/fabricating one was too literal a meaning for the passage. The entire thing was written with metaphors.</p>
<p>puzzlement & fabricating...i wracked my brain for this one</p>
<p>fables edify, its what they do</p>
<p>^ Just because the words connect together doesn't mean it's used properly in the context of the question.</p>
<p>Jesus Christ...To be honest, people, I will feel so vindicated when the correct answer is edifying, because simply believing that fable is always a fake story is hard to accept....I mean, every dictionary and NY times reference define fable as a story from which to learn something... Falsewhood is like secondary or tertiary definition for that...</p>
<p>P.S: I believe the narrator expresses his concern about representing something false about his father (or fabrication if you guys would like to use) but while that was the general context, he was using metaphors to contrast - his jumbling "rough sequence" is enigmatic (hard to understand) and it is not fable that he expected (something to learn about his father). Peace.</p>
<p>Tell me what lesson he's learning, and i'll agree with edifying for fable. Till then, puzzling-fabricating ftw.</p>