<p>yeah it was def "though" not "in fact" because it was showing how the human eye can't see the rainbow or whatever but the other thing could</p>
<p>heyli, that's what I thought as well.</p>
<p>i read "larson's first book"</p>
<p>is there a specific length that we have to have for the essay. Or does it not "matter" as long as you provide enough details to prove your point.</p>
<p>Those "which one is not acceptable" questions in english were really tricky. I put the correction, and when i reviewed, i ended up having to change answers for like ten of them... </p>
<p>math, seemed all right. I could do them. I was horrified when a few days back i was practicing, and i was doing the math section, and I couldn't finish it. but today went all right.</p>
<p>the reading was so-so. i hope i did all right. i finished in time, but i wish i had more time to check my answers.</p>
<p>science made me want to crawl in my bed and cry...i still hope i did ok... i don't want to have to take it over.</p>
<p>I also remember her Larson's first book, name of book</p>
<p>English: Easy
Math: EASY, so much easier than the one I took through state testing in April.
Reading: Okay..I liked the first one though...but I guess everyone else didn't?
Science: It was ehh...I hated the CO2 one because I didn't really have enough time to read through that..and also the electricity one. But I loved the mitosis one, since I actually remembered that stuff from Bio! =p</p>
<p>Writing: Okay too. It was easy, but I thought I could do much better. Well...I really could have...but my head started to hurt by then so I totally wrote whatever came to mind.</p>
<p>I never got my scores back from testing yet (been 7 weeks!!!?!?!!) so I don't know what to expect.
I'm just hoping for around 23-25. I don't know how most of you can get >30...You all are geniuses?? Or have great test taking abilities.</p>
<p>And 19 for the triangle circle thing is correct</p>
<p>The answer was LArson's first book.</p>
<p>For the essay, it's better to use up almost all the space.</p>
<p>Anyone put these:</p>
<p>For Math:</p>
<p>The angle inside the circle when they gave you 80 degrees. I got 50</p>
<p>For the collinear question I got 120. The equilateral question with ABD</p>
<p>I thought for the reading passage, it was Smith.</p>
<p>Everyone is saying Shea/Shia.</p>
<p>"The angle inside the circle when they gave you 80 degrees. I got 50</p>
<p>For the collinear question I got 120. The equilateral question with ABD"</p>
<p>Yes and Yes, though I am not a 100% on the second one</p>
<p>What was the answer to the parabola one?</p>
<p>Shea was the one that said the Neanderthals lived for 250k years compared to humans and their 100k span</p>
<p>I got Shea/Shia.</p>
<p>^Parabola one: 3-rad21 i thought.</p>
<p>All I remember was the answer I put down was B...I don't remember what name it was.</p>
<p>For how the neanderthals kept themselves warm??</p>
<p>Was it their thick layers or w/e?</p>
<p>or-</p>
<p>Was it their bones?</p>
<p>one math problem really bothered me:</p>
<p>how many times does the 8x10 paper have to be shrunk so it fits in 3.5? maybe i am over reading the question. was it 4 or 5??</p>
<p>"What was the answer to the parabola one?"</p>
<p>Which one the one with the zeros of the graph?</p>
<p>In that case it was 3-sqrt(21)</p>
<p>I got 50. I'm not sure about the second one, but I think I put down 120. I don't remember that problem exactly.</p>
<p>Their stockiness kept them warm</p>
<p>and it was 4 times</p>