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</p>
<p>I don’t know about that logic. :)</p>
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</p>
<p>I don’t know about that logic. :)</p>
<p>The choice that I brought up was choice A and the answer on the consolidated list is Choice C. Now that I think of it, those two were the last ones. Any other opinions people?</p>
<p>Haha, well silverturtle, I guess I meant “it’s correct” as in yes, it should be on the list and is not in dispute.</p>
<p>can u mark the disputed ones again?</p>
<p>does anyone remember the answer choices for the
father isn’t “fair”
the meaning of fair?
i know the answer is “right” but i forgot the other choices…</p>
<p>if I was a betting man, I would bet that not every single answer “on the list” is correct :p</p>
<p>but then again, I might end up losing money… especially going against such a strong and intelligent majority as can be found consolidating this list</p>
<p>Do you remember that question Silverturtle? The one with the options of yes or no in hte double fiction passage, where the answer was like yes, to keep the reader interestd yet i think there is an answer that was listen to or predict the reader’s reactions</p>
<p>cjester,
I would be extremely surprised if more than one or two questions on that list is incorrect. And as we all know, silverturtle is like a god and is thus infallible, so his opinion is supreme
haha</p>
<p>Anybody remember the question for which the answer is: “negative effects of commercial consideration”?</p>
<p>It was from the passage about the father teaching the daughter how to write.</p>
<p>“cjester,
I would be extremely surprised if more than one or two questions on that list is incorrect. And as we all know, silverturtle is like a god and is thus infallible, so his opinion is supreme
haha”</p>
<p>I would also be rather surprised if more than two are wrong, but I think one, maybe two is likely. as for like a god… idk haha. silverturtle is definitely highly intelligent, but no one is infallible</p>
<p>I would not call silverturtle infallible; but he is really smart.
I wouldn’t be too surprised if one thing ended up wrong, but I’m hoping not because I got almost all the same answers as that list. All, except I forgot what I put for one or two of them.</p>
<p>cjester, I was kidding
lol. and i think saying “likely” is a bit of a stretch lol. maybe “possibly”</p>
<p>And if silverturtle is a god, he should be able to figure out the 3 questions that are not on that list >.< thinkkkkkkkkk!</p>
<p>call it hopefulness or arrogance, but I have more than a reasonable doubt that austere/unadorned is correct haha.</p>
<p>cjester,</p>
<p>I chose plain/ornate initially, but then I read through the question multiple times, and it didn’t fit. It was definitely austere/unadorned.</p>
<p>we’ll see…</p>
<p>so was this anybody else’s first time taking the SAT? The only thing I have to compare it to is the PSAT, and I thought in general the question difficulty on this SAT was easier than that of the PSAT</p>
<p>I’m almost certain the wording was “The ancient greek statues were plain and __<strong><em>, but the later ones with pigment weren’t so </em></strong>” What do you think the wording was cjester?</p>
<p>quoting myself from about 20 pages ago: “Many people find the white, <em>(other adjective here)</em> Greek statues widely found in museums to be _<strong><em>, yet newly discovered statues containing traces of bright pigments do not seem quite so _</em></strong>.”</p>
<p>and my interpretation:
The gist of the sentence was this: “Many people find the white Greek statues widely found in museums to be ___<strong><em>, YET newly discovered statues- EVEN THOUGH they have traces of bright pigments do not seem quite AS </em></strong> AS THE OLD ONES.”</p>
<p>Okay can anyone just quickly tell me the question for which the answer is: “negative effects of commercial consideration”?</p>
<p>It’ll help a lot! Thanks!</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>The ACTUAL sentence was something more to this effect:
Many people find that the white, (something) Greek statues found in museums to be ____<strong><em>, yet newly discovered statues with traces of bright pigments do not seem so _</em></strong>__.</p>
<p>You added in the “even though”. It was not there before.</p>