@oz4nss i don’t think the dancer had a variety. He focused solely on dancing. Different eras because the twenties was called the roaring twenties, an era. Then another era came after it
@asiankid88
Yeah but “her career” ended before the new era so I’m not sure wheher it “spanned” over eras. She might be lived in both eras but it doesn’t mean that she affected both eras.
Even though the passage was talking about another era, there was no connection between the dancer’s career and new era.
But since I don’t remember the whole passage I may be missing some points, of course… If only somebody could find the passage, we would be able to give precise answers
@asiankid88 I don’t remember the question really, but my only clarification for choosing the second was to decrease words. They both looked so right at the time.
@oz4nss I’m positive it’s not the “spanned over eras” one. It was the other choice you all mentioned up
@asiankid88 it was talking about putting differently aged children in one class. I guess it went like "Unlike other schools, this school placed (children of different ages/differently-aged children) in the same class in order for the older to teach the younger.
1900s-1950 about was when she dominated. That includes a lot of eras, in my opinion. The Roaring Twenties, Great Depression, WWI, WWII, all of those are “eras”. Her career, however ended before the “new era of jazz” or something. Her career spanned many different eras, but it ended when the era of jazz came along (I think “she” was a dude. Lol) @oz4nss
Lots of my classmates who took the test with me were talking about the eras. Additionally, I didn’t really see much about style. (more chronological stuff)
@oz4nss I remembered that it said something about how long he/she dominated, but then she lost her gist/ retired when the era of jazz arose, but then he/she rose up again in the 1970’s? something like that. The reason i didn’t choose variety was because the phrasing of the answer “different varieties of dances”. The passage didn’t mention any “kinds”, only that her style was flexible and different from the traditional ball room dancing.
@Pinguman123 Yeah, it didn’t talk about specific varieties, but the different dates, it showed. what do you usually get or your classmates get on their readings? 700+??
600s, and usually when I’m lucky low 700s.
Based on what everyone’s saying though, I think I might do pretty well though (700s hopefully)
@asainkid88 ^^^^
@asiankid88 You got the point but I think your interpretation is wrong.
Yeah; WWI, The Great Depression and others you mentioned are all eras but we are talking about “specific” eras, like art ones.
She (or he :D) has dominated several decades with her style but when “Jazz era” started, she has lost all her influence so that “her era” has ended. Thus we can say that she didn’t really involved in different eras. This is my opinion.
@asiankid88 dude eras in DANCING and MUSIC. Not all those other things, its just completely irrelevant. If you were right then technically before we took our SATs was a different era from now. It has to be dependent upon the passage. The more I think about it the more certain I become that you’re wrong
I can see your point, abc, but @Vedant12 , what’s your take on this?
Can anyone confirm what was the answer for the New York Botanical Garden one? The question was like this: “The New York Botanical Garden has 250 acres-ground, one of the oldest and largest botanical gardens in the world.” I chose the one with “The New York Botanical Garden is one of the oldest botanical gardens in the world and, with 250 acres-ground, one of the largest.” But I am not sure if the answer is this one or the original one.
@Starior Got that choice for writing. That choice has the best flow.
Hopefully the final questions from me (and my final posts until applying for colleges)
There was one sentence completion that read:
15. Doctor was far from __ his peculiar memorabilia collection was ___
The answer may be “Stodgy…quirky” but I forgot if I put that down. Does anyone know any other choices that were present?
[QUOTE=""]
Blues passage
- The music teacher is portrayed in the passage as ____
“taken aback by, but sympathetic to, students responses” (NOT sure about this one!)
Chinese artist passage (lots of people have been arguing about these questions I think)
5. How do the words “flushed” in lines () and “flush” in lines () differ? (something like this format)
“Elated and abashed” (may have put this down but I forgot if I put it down)
[/QUOTE]
- What is most likely her response to the husband's praising? "surprised but pleased" (did not put this down!)
[QUOTE=""]
Paid for Sports passage
- Passage one views passage two as ___
“appealing but ludicrous” (may have put this down but I forgot if I put it down)
[/QUOTE]
- The student in lines () most likely would agree to __ ~"everyone under the same laws"? (may have put this down but I forgot if I put it down)
Sorry I keep bombarding this post with questions for CR (especially in the middle of talking about CR), but I am so concerned about my CR score. I messed up with a low-600s score once before.
- I think there's also unusual...eccentricity
@Aegon6 Thanks! I was wondering because I feel I chose the answer you just provided.
@Pinguman123 chinese 4: something and skeptical