<p>okay awesome.
a rect had to be area 32 perimeter 24, can anyone confirm answer=4 (so 8x4)
56xy-8xy something??? look familiar
-6|-2+8|or something? what was the answer
plug in for that f(x) was like 8(x)^2
and 8a-4b+2c i think thats wrong but anyone remember the right thing</p>
<p>guys i dont remember a few…can someone remind me what:</p>
<p>560 largest
4 determinant (was that one of the last ones? like…55-60?</p>
<p>-3a -4b +8c maybe?</p>
<p>also…the one that was like…5 units away from three in the absolute value …was that x-3 or x+3 in the absolute value = 5??</p>
<p>Does anyone happen to remember the exact lead in for the question with y=-ax+c and y=ax+c and you have to say what they will do?</p>
<p>From the 3 choices I went with all of them, because of you make a=0 then you would have two of the same line.</p>
<p>Is the same line technically considered to by parallel to itself? Since it has the same slope I guess so. </p>
<p>Was there a stipulation ensuring a≠0? If so, then, only intersecting would be right.</p>
<p>Also, to the person above x+3 was in the absolute value.</p>
<p>ya i think it said a b and c are positive integers</p>
<p>miller thats right i think what quetion was x+3 was that like at the end</p>
<p>ya it was the last problem I think</p>
<p>oh and wasnt there like .75 percent one too? i remember i put like 3.5 for that…it had something to do with diameter</p>
<p>i’m pretty sure the lines were parallel. i believe that both of the slopes were the same, but they had different y intercepts.</p>
<p>y=ax+c
y=ax-c</p>
<p>also, i got a 35 on the april part of the math, and i thought june’s math test was much more challenging.</p>
<p>the question was in like ax+by=c and ax-by=c i think</p>
<p>Yeah It was the opposite- c the same slopes opposite</p>
<p>I said ii only</p>
<p>There was one that gave you two similar y=mx+b equations that had different signs. I graphed them and they intersected ONLY</p>
<p>the choices were like</p>
<p>I parallel
II perpendicular
III intersects</p>
<p>and it was like the intersect one ONLY</p>
<p>I agree that they interesect for every number, except for 0 at which they are the same line. I think one person has suggested, and I truly dont remember, that they said for all posotive values of a, b, and c.</p>
<p>Also- I got a 36 on Math in April, I wouldnt say this test was much harder, Id say they had some more ambogious questions (Ambigious may not be the word, but, they had some that were less to the point.)</p>
<p>hey guys on the on that you guys are saying is 1:3 it is actually 1:4 because it was comparing the larger parallelegram to the smaller one in the middle. it wasn’t comparing the shaded region vs the non shaded. therefore the big one included the small on so that was 4 parallelegrams instead of 3.</p>
<p>No, I’m pretty sure it was 1:3. It was comparing shaded/nonshaded.</p>
<p>Man, I missed at least 2. The finding ‘m’ one and the chord one. Darn geometry…</p>
<p>I thought it was a lot harder than the practice test, but I suppose they need to get harder every year.</p>
<p>Were there alot of D’s in the last 10 questions?</p>
<p>i also thought that the parallellogram one was 1:4</p>
<p>also i thought that the one with the 2 lines was parallel</p>
<p>I thought it was 1:4 at first but I read it again and…</p>
<p>the question asked the ratio of “non shaded to shaded”. If I recall correctly, the rectangle was divided into 8 portions. 6 of them shaded, 2 of them unshaded. 2:6 = 1:3</p>
<p>WHat about the question that gave an equation and asked what possible quadrants it could be in. Quadrants one, three and four, right?</p>