<p>Are you pretty sure???I had a CR experimental section so I had only one WR-multiple choice section-Alex and Parrot.Parrot is not experimental~</p>
<p>I think it was like A=random number B=-1 C=random number, D=2 E=1</p>
<p>so the US. test was the same as the International December test ?</p>
<p>reading dummy is about French philosopher guy or something and writing dummy is the one that is not talking about parrot Alex</p>
<p>OH GOD, this is really killing me, thats what I was afraid of, I remember I got 2, but now I cant remember which answer did I grid, 1 or 2, well, 20 days to find out
thanks for the help</p>
<p>did u guys get 16 for the letter arrangements? and what about the graph of f(x-2) I shifted it to the left as I thought that the x gets decreased by 2, now I found out that it goes 2 units to the right, so what did u guys put?</p>
<p>@ 191919 dun worry man if you found out the right answer, 99% of the time, you grid in correctly. Before, even though I knew the answer I thought I grid in wrong. Usually, this happens cause you read people talking about the answers and you are worried that you might get wrong answers but find out your answers are correct, so your worries shift to grid in mistakes. It’s perfectly normal for one person to worry like that but usually they get it right</p>
<p>The graph went two units to the right. I think it was choice B.</p>
<p>Yes I believe the Williams sisters writing section is the experimental one. Boy that was tough. I stumbled at question number 2 lol.</p>
<p>what makes me worry is that I have short term memory problems, well I think so, for instance I would solve a problem and get every variable but then forget to add x for example before gridding the answer as the question entails, the same thing goes for this one, I tried to simulate the steps that I have taken to solve that question, but then my mind became stuck between 1 and 2, f(-3) is equal to -1 ,I remember knowing which number on the x-plane corresponded to f(-3), on the positive side, but its just SO vague
anyways thanks for everything bro, really appreciate it :)</p>
<p>Yeah, I always get confused like that too but what’s done is done and I believe in myself =)))</p>
<p>@ Fluffin: Jenna was understandably distressed right? </p>
<p>I got at least two sentence completion questions wrong because of being too stiff I was about to choose “astonishing/fluid” but then chose “prosaic/nimble” because I didn’t think there are such things as ‘fluid movements’ :(</p>
<p>And the last one as well. I stood between ‘virulent’ and ‘protean’ and eventually chose virulent because it ‘sounds’ more related to virus :(</p>
<p>DinhNuguyen - I really can’t remember. I think it had the word “objected” or a form of it as the second word though.</p>
<p>I also got the prosaic/nimble wrong, and the maths fish 54 wrong.</p>
<p>Apparently there were 2 "8"s for the math section grid-ins, but I don’t recall having them.</p>
<p>does somebody have the 2009 december sat . i need it urgently.can anyone help me</p>
<p>Among CR, Math and Writing, which do you guys think is hardest?</p>
<p>Because a test always has some kinda difficulty balance, voting out the hardest part may help guess the curve.</p>
<p>@ Fluffin you got my name wrong ;)</p>
<p>@ anyone knows when the Q&A will arrive? At the same time with the scores or else?</p>
<p>@ 1919191: I believe the answer is 2, the easiest solution is to look at the graph.</p>
<p>@ DinhNguyen < got it right this time ;)</p>
<p>I personally felt as if Math was the easiest. Writing was hard in the sense that I had no idea whether my answers were correct or not, whereas Critical Reading was hard (some of the questions were pretty tricky) but interesting to go through.</p>
<p>Are we allowed to discuss about the exam now?</p>
<p>UserInvalid - I’m actually not quite sure, but I’m pretty sure most of the internationals are already done with the test.</p>
<p>@ UserInvalid I believe so because this test is kinda a reuse of the Int’ December 2009 test, and CCers have cruciated it.</p>