<p>it was 40+root something.</p>
<p>it was a 40 + 40 root 5 cus u knew 2 of the sides were 20 each, and then u k new the sides of square were 40, the angled lines formed at the midpoint of hte lines of the square, making each side of the mid point 20, the line of the hex we knew was 20, so 10 on hte other sides of it, then i made a triangle that was 10, 20 and x. i did pothagorean and got 10 root 5, multiplied it by 4 and got 40 root 5, i said a</p>
<p>It was emigrate…I feel so stupid now. =/</p>
<p>Couple Qs</p>
<p>On the alchemy one, there was a list of stuff to substitute for “nonplants” (arsenic, salt, etc)</p>
<p>Did you include the list?</p>
<p>The guy was taking photos of PEOPLE marching, right? Not just of marching?</p>
<p>Also, on the one about presence, did “lost” mean defeated or absorbed?</p>
<p>Finally, I think Scientist 3 had the most accurate (my friend in ap chem told me.) Is that right?</p>
<ul>
<li>I included the specific “nonmetals” so I included the list.</li>
<li>“people” marching</li>
<li>“lost” meaning “defeated”.</li>
</ul>
<p>For the 1st question on english you are discussing, what exactly was that question? The one about emigrated/departed? Was it like which is not correct or which is the best replacement? and for either, what was the word being replaced/corrected?</p>
<p>The answer was definitely emigrate. You don’t “depart from” a country.</p>
<p>Is the english curve usually -2=35 or -2=34?</p>
<p>On science what did you say for why different LED lights were used? Different dyes or detergents</p>
<p>^ Neither, different colors.</p>
<p>Are u sure? And was that the choice instead of different dyes?</p>
<p>It’s because the dyes were different colors.</p>
<p>Here is why I don’t think the answer was emigrate. The question said “____ from Czech to America”. The separation of the prepositional phrases suggests that the verb must apply to both. You can’t emigrate “to” America. You immigrate to America. However, you can depart from Czech, and you can depart to America. If the answer were indeed emigrate, you would say “My grandpa emigrated form Czech to immigrate to America”.</p>
<p>I agree I think its depart. But why is it colors? I changed it from color to detergent at the last sec :(</p>
<p>^ Note the number of search results. “Emigrate to” has been used in thousands of sentences before.
<a href=“emigrate to[/url] - Google Search”>emigrate to - Google Search;
<p>The first experiment had like a purple dye with a yellow light. In the second experiment, it said that everything was kept the same except a blue dye was used with an orange led light. The only thing changed other than the LED was the dye, so that is the correct answer.</p>
<p>ACTTester, are you saying that’s a lot or not a lot of results? Depart to has a lot more.</p>
<p>Hmm are you 100% sure?</p>
<p>On the reading section, there was a question about the newsreel passage… It was somehting like, “which of the following proves the popularity of newsreels” or seomthing like that. what did you guys put as the answer for that?</p>
<p>
We’re debating if “emigrating to” is grammatically correct or not. It has been used in thousands of sentences before.</p>
<p>Can we all just agree it was a bad question? I ruled emigrate out because I initially saw emigrated from. I typically think of immigrate from instead of that :(</p>