<p>expand on generalizations
give specific examples
recapitulate ideas given in the first paragraph</p>
<p>are these 3 of the choices? don’t the 1st 2 kinda sound the same?</p>
<p>expand on generalizations
give specific examples
recapitulate ideas given in the first paragraph</p>
<p>are these 3 of the choices? don’t the 1st 2 kinda sound the same?</p>
<p>No specific examples was definitely ruled out.</p>
<p>Thank you Jersey13, yes it was “recapitulate ideas.” I think I see why the generalizations answer is correct now… because the author doesn’t spend the whole time restating his points, he expands upon them with an example. Does this sound right?</p>
<p>was it ruled out because of “examples” instead of example singular?</p>
<p>can someone answer my question?? see previous post</p>
<p>Sorry, don’t remember the specifics, but I recall eliminating that choice early on. I was left with recapitulate themes in first paragraph and expanding on generalizations as the two to choose from and chose the latter.</p>
<p>hey what did everyone get for the yes/no question on the double fiction passage. was it to keep the reader interested or was it to listen to their requests?</p>
<p>I said keep the reader interested; the other choice, to comply with the reader’s requests or something like felt wrong b/c there was no requests</p>
<p>It was “yes, to keep the reader interested”</p>
<p>^ That’s what I chose as well, I’ll add it to the consolidated list unless anyone cares to dispute it</p>
<p>v No experimental section answers included v
Sentence Completion - COMPLETE</p>
<p>Debilitate/Disheartening
Progenitor/Exploit
Penchant/Locution
Bolster
Rancor
Unflappable
Established/Mitigate
Prodigy/Anonymity
Austere/Unadorned
Acute
Emotional/Literal
Cajolery/Undertake
Diversity/Unpalatable
Integral/Extinction
Steadfast
Fraudulent
Altruistic
Impromptu
Precedent For</p>
<p>Reading Questions</p>
<p>Father and Virgil passage:
Father’s face was tender
Wistfulness
Father’s reasons are incomplete
Growing Companionship
Cards to cards - Continuous Sequence
Father’s comparison to cowboy - Wild exuberance
Father refusal to pick up soldier - Disloyal
Example of another reason - Inexpensive motel
Father isn’t fair - Right
Thieves analogy - Unaccustomed freedom
Brand new shoe evokes sensory image
Most surprised about his father’s affection</p>
<p>Humor in Workplace Double Passage:
Businesses use novelty
Two authors agree that humor is not acceptable in all situations
Passage 1 delineates the consequences
Passage 2 views humor in workplace w/ skepticism</p>
<p>Writing fiction double passage:
Writer’s motto comes off as arrogant
Writing a novel Passage 1 was didactic
Assume means take for granted
Passage 1 advises “yes, to keep the reader interested”
Must anticipate a reader’s response
Passage 1 is like 19th century writers
“Bench” is unnecessary concession for the readers
Negative effects of commercial consideration
True writers = genuine writers</p>
<p>Tunisian Tourist Passage:
Traveling by river vs land is different because river is unambiguous
The question from the old man was to emphasize one of the author’s points
Tunisian passage details author’s feelings of being a foreigner
Tunisians walk more modestly
Strange was about appearances
Repetition emphasized the uncertainty of the outcome</p>
<p>Scientist Passage:
Author says how scientists choose to specialize in a field of study is “no matter”
Trick means feat
Thought process distinctive to researchers
To expand on preceding generalizations
The discovery was another clue to the puzzle
Incessant</p>
<p>Cosmology Passage:
Astronomers baffled b/c they are unable to predict observed celestial phenomena</p>
<p>Jersey,</p>
<p>I think you can also add “explain a problem that affected the development of the field” as the answer to the 2nd Cosmology question.</p>
<p>Yea, anyone care to count how many of the questions we now have haha.</p>
<p>Edit: Unless I counted wrong, we have 58/67</p>
<p>v No experimental section answers included v
Sentence Completion - COMPLETE</p>
<p>Debilitate/Disheartening
Progenitor/Exploit
Penchant/Locution
Bolster
Rancor
Unflappable
Established/Mitigate
Prodigy/Anonymity
Austere/Unadorned
Acute
Emotional/Literal
Cajolery/Undertake
Diversity/Unpalatable
Integral/Extinction
Steadfast
Fraudulent
Altruistic
Impromptu
Precedent For</p>
<p>Reading Questions</p>
<p>Father and Virgil passage:
Father’s face was tender
Wistfulness
Father’s reasons are incomplete
Growing Companionship
Cards to cards - Continuous Sequence
Father’s comparison to cowboy - Wild exuberance
Father refusal to pick up soldier - Disloyal
Example of another reason - Inexpensive motel
Father isn’t fair - Right
Thieves analogy - Unaccustomed freedom
Brand new shoe evokes sensory image
Most surprised about his father’s affection</p>
<p>Humor in Workplace Double Passage:
Businesses use novelty
Two authors agree that humor is not acceptable in all situations
Passage 1 delineates the consequences
Passage 2 views humor in workplace w/ skepticism</p>
<p>Writing fiction double passage:
Writer’s motto comes off as arrogant
Writing a novel Passage 1 was didactic
Assume means take for granted
Passage 1 advises “yes, to keep the reader interested”
Must anticipate a reader’s response
Passage 1 is like 19th century writers
“Bench” is unnecessary concession for the readers
Negative effects of commercial consideration
True writers = genuine writers</p>
<p>Tunisian Tourist Passage:
Traveling by river vs land is different because river is unambiguous
The question from the old man was to emphasize one of the author’s points
Tunisian passage details author’s feelings of being a foreigner
Tunisians walk more modestly
Strange was about appearances
Repetition emphasized the uncertainty of the outcome</p>
<p>Scientist Passage:
Author says how scientists choose to specialize in a field of study is “no matter”
Trick means feat
Thought process distinctive to researchers
To expand on preceding generalizations
The discovery was another clue to the puzzle
Incessant</p>
<p>Cosmology Passage:
Astronomers baffled b/c they are unable to predict observed celestial phenomena
Explain a problem that affected the development of the field</p>
<p>We have 59…only 8 more! Aren’t we missing an entire short passage? What was the Cosmology passage paired with?</p>
<p>Jersey,</p>
<p>do you recall if the answer with “observed celestial phenomena” was worded slightly differently? I remember the word “movements” in there…does that sound familiar?</p>
<p>Advertisement passage.
“novelty” was the second question in the advertisement passage, not the humor one.
The first one in the advertisement was pretty easy though I think nobody remembers it because nobody had a problem with it.</p>
<p>
I think the word “movements” was in the passage and that was in the phrase which would lead to the chosen answer. Not entirely sure though. </p>
<p>
Now that I think of it, there was an advertisement paired passage and novelty was an answer in that section. Doesn’t skeptical also belong to that passage?</p>
<p>Allegedprincess, I’m pretty sure you’re right. So the Advertisement passage was next to the Cosmology passage then?</p>
<p>Sentence Completion - COMPLETE</p>
<p>Debilitate/Disheartening
Progenitor/Exploit
Penchant/Locution
Bolster
Rancor
Unflappable
Established/Mitigate
Prodigy/Anonymity
Austere/Unadorned
Acute
Emotional/Literal
Cajolery/Undertake
Diversity/Unpalatable
Integral/Extinction
Steadfast
Fraudulent
Altruistic
Impromptu
Precedent For</p>
<p>Reading Questions</p>
<p>Father and Virgil passage:
Father’s face was tender
Wistfulness
Father’s reasons are incomplete
Growing Companionship
Cards to cards - Continuous Sequence
Father’s comparison to cowboy - Wild exuberance
Father refusal to pick up soldier - Disloyal
Example of another reason - Inexpensive motel
Father isn’t fair - Right
Thieves analogy - Unaccustomed freedom
Brand new shoe evokes sensory image
Most surprised about his father’s affection</p>
<p>Humor in Workplace Double Passage:
Two authors agree that humor is not acceptable in all situations
Passage 1 delineates the consequences
Passage 2 views humor in workplace w/ skepticism</p>
<p>Writing fiction double passage:
Writer’s motto comes off as arrogant
Writing a novel Passage 1 was didactic
Assume means take for granted
Passage 1 advises “yes, to keep the reader interested”
Must anticipate a reader’s response
Passage 1 is like 19th century writers
“Bench” is unnecessary concession for the readers
Negative effects of commercial consideration
True writers = genuine writers</p>
<p>Tunisian Tourist Passage:
Traveling by river vs land is different because river is unambiguous
The question from the old man was to emphasize one of the author’s points
Tunisian passage details author’s feelings of being a foreigner
Tunisians walk more modestly
Strange was about appearances
Repetition emphasized the uncertainty of the outcome</p>
<p>Scientist Passage:
Author says how scientists choose to specialize in a field of study is “no matter”
Trick means feat
Thought process distinctive to researchers
To expand on preceding generalizations
The discovery was another clue to the puzzle
Incessant</p>
<p>Cosmology Passage:
Astronomers baffled b/c they are unable to predict observed celestial phenomena
Explain a problem that affected the development of the field </p>
<p>Advertisement Passage:
Businesses use novelty</p>
<p>there was a question about the bed being as soft as eclairs for the virgil passage</p>
<p>what was the integral/extinction sentence?</p>
<p>“Now that I think of it, there was an advertisement paired passage and novelty was an answer in that section. Doesn’t skeptical also belong to that passage?”</p>
<p>No, I’m pretty skeptical was with the humor paired passages. I think there was an entirely separated advertising passage, just a single one…because “novelty” what businesses use to advertise…or wait, maybe that WAS the humor passages?? I’m confused now ):</p>