<p>^what do you normally get on writing?</p>
<p>Well for writing, ive never gotten a paragraph fixing question wrong.</p>
<p>Oh and rereading your earlier post, i think you read the passage wrong. It was more like-</p>
<p>Organic food is more expensive than conventional food. [Indeed], organic food costs 40% more.</p>
<p>Writing was a joke</p>
<p>Can someone confirm these answers? For mother-daughter education in america question, the answer was conviction? And for Kael passage the anecdote served as introduction?</p>
<p>Yes it was conviction. And I don’t remember the latter question so I can’t answer that.</p>
<p>iforget, i confirm the second one.</p>
<p>I’m having trouble remembering what this “anecdote-introduction” question was about. Can someone jog my memory?</p>
<p>In the Kael passage, one question asked what the purpose of the anecdote was. The anecdote was one where the author was with Kael in a veranda. The answer choice was that it was an introduction to discussion about writing.</p>
<p>The CR thread is confusing me… gahh… so let me ask for a couple more confirmations. Trojan war, was it probably or probably not? And was it inevitable or undesirable? I picked probably and undesirable.</p>
<p>
Yes this was the question. The other choices included:
-reflects something about the nature of writing
-offers insight into her character</p>
<p>offers insight into ** the author’s ** character
ftfy</p>
<p>can someone explain why “unanimous” was the answer to the “uniform” question?</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure it was -reflects something about the nature of writing </p>
<p>The whole point of that paragraph was style over substance, and she brought that up to mention that kael always brainstormed with a pencil in hand. While it may have shown something about the author’s character, that certainly wasn’t the main point.</p>
<p>reflects … for sure</p>
<p>@ MrRager: The passage about the Trojan war started off with “It was the almost uniform belief that the Trojan war occurred” or something along those lines, implying that almost everyone in ancient Greece believed the Trojan war had taken place, and therefore meaning that “uniform” means “unanimous” in this case.</p>
<p>I’m mad I put “ebullience” instead of “decorum.” Both were on flashcards I had made in March, but it wasn’t until I was laying in bed about to fall asleep when I had the realization - “CRAP! Decorum = proper behavior!” I hope I did fine on the other questions though, otherwise I’m going to be so bothered by this.</p>
<p>They meant a “uniform” belief in that basically everyone believed it; therefore, it was unanimously believed.</p>
<p>I still also think it was the reflect nature of writing, but I guess we wont know for sure until we get our scores.</p>
<p>I have a question: I ordered the QAS. Will I get it online or through the mail? And when will I get it? What will I get? (first time taking SAT i have no idea)</p>
<p>I got mine in the mail. And it came reeeeeally late, as in, I ordered it for the January SAT, and I got my QAS two days after I took the March SAT (how inconvenient).</p>
<p>Meh, that probably/ probably not question was so tricky. Only now am i convinced the answer was probably not…</p>