<p>I am almost certain that “one of” was wrong on the lion passage…so there was error there</p>
<p>^ I agree. The lion sentence had an error in it. I think the other two are no errors though.</p>
<p>^I thought we established that “one of” worked since it was talking about species</p>
<p>idk</p>
<p>I put “one of” as the error but I think I may be wrong now</p>
<p>how was this test compared to the jan test? i thot it was harder for june than it was for jan…</p>
<p>yea and this one was also harder than march’s.</p>
<p>no “of one” doesnt work</p>
<p>^RT
do u mean “one of” should be “some of”</p>
<p>or “among”,</p>
<p>how about the question of the speed skater and Mark Spitz in the last section? anyone remember their answers for those ones?</p>
<p>Well, some of would work. The question was like mountain lions are one of the most dangerous animals in the rocky mountains. Just listen to the sentence…your ears should tell you “some of” is correct = D.</p>
<p>^^ I second.</p>
<p>Yes, “some of” works. The only issue is pronoun-antecedent agreement; “mountain lions” is plural while “one” is singular.</p>
<p>Lol this convo has been going on since yesterday. Look up pierced teeth, and see if it exists b/c some people keep bringing that up (I think that’s wrong too).</p>
<p>Personally, I think “one of” was the error, but people don’t want to admit fault. IT IS WRONG. IT IS OKAY THAT YOU MISSED IT.</p>
<p>I thought it was " mountain lions are one of the most dangerous SPECIES in the rocky mountains"</p>
<p>idk
I hope I’m wrong ( I chose “one of” but I think I maybe wrong)</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>I want to say that both of those are incorrect. The key word there is species; because that is singular you have to say, “The mountain lion is…,” not “Mountain lions are one of…” or “Mountain lions are some of…”</p>
<p>If I recall correctly the SAT question read, “Mountain lions are one of the most dangerous animals,” or something of that nature. Here the key word is “animals,” so you have to say, “Mountain lions are some of the most dangerous animals.”</p>
<p>^ See that’s what I said.
It’s one question, and people are freaking out.</p>
<p>Well that sentence is just blatantly wrong. It should read either “The lion is one of the most dangerous animals in the world” or “Lions are some of the most dangerous animals in the world.”</p>
<p>Regarding BeautifulNerd’s statement, while I am not 100 percent sure that our “camp” is right on this problem, I would bet 100 dollars that we are. We all need to just move on. For example, I missed the one about the city, I fought it for a while, admitted defeat, and moved on. We have debated this stupid question for around idk 15/31 pages. It was a hard question, but one SAT question doesnt warrant this must debate.</p>
<p>LMAO look at this: [Is</a> this which is grammatically correct? - Yahoo! Answers](<a href=“http://■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■/question/index?qid=20090606155628AAU9A3F]Is”>http://■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■/question/index?qid=20090606155628AAU9A3F)</p>
<p>^ ^ ^ @rtgrove- I’m not betting anything lol. I’m like a DNA test on this on (could be 99.99999% correct, but we could also be 99.9999% incorrect). I’m pretty sure the answer is our child and not theirs. Wow. </p>
<p>I need to quit the analogy.</p>
<p>again, does anyone remember the questions about Mark SPitz and the speed skater, what did you all get for those?</p>