<p>it wasn’t i am suspected? passive?</p>
<p>Suspicor is a deponent verb.
I agree with redhotPEA’s answer. I got a chain of D’s too.</p>
<p>i heard from one of my friends that you can omit like 6 or 9 problems (i forget which)
and still get an 800? is this true?</p>
<p>Ugh I think I messed that one up. I don’t know why but it tricked me for some reason.</p>
<p>I think the curve is ~ -8 raw score for an 800. By the way the REA CD practice test scoring sucked. It told me I got a 480 and 490, but I manually scored myself and got a 610 and 620 -_-</p>
<p>ok thanks for agreeing with the chain of D’s. i forgot it was deponent. crap, i got 2 derivatives wrong. i put gens for legend, as in, something that is remembered through race/clans. whatever. but yes that is true, you can omit 8 and get a 800. yes.</p>
<p>i remember gettig like 5 B’s in a row in the first column… anyone else??</p>
<p>According to dictionary.com:</p>
<p>facsimile
1655–65; earlier fac simile make the like, equiv. to L fac (impv. of facere) + simile, n. use of neut. of similis like</p>
<p>itinerant
1560–70; < LL itinerant- (s. of itinerāns), prp. of itinerārī to journey, equiv. to itiner- (s. of iter) journey (see iter) + -ant- -ant</p>
<p>legendary
1300–50; 1900–05 for def. 4; ME legende written account of a saint’s life < ML legenda lit., (lesson) to be read, n. use of fem. of L legendus, ger. of legere to read</p>
<p>intact
1400–50; late ME < L intāctus untouched, equiv. to in- in-3 + tāctus, ptp. of tangere to touch</p>
<p>yes i got a chain of 5 bs too :DDDD</p>
<p>coronae, regi is a double dative construction. coronae is dative of purpose and regi is dative of reference</p>
<p>you can omit 6, i got a chain of D’s and then a chain of B’s.</p>
<p>I didn’t have one long chain, but I had moments of three or so Bs and Ds in a row. I still can’t believe I got itinerant wrong, I feel like a dummy.</p>
<p>What did you guys get for the very last problem about Penelope’s mindset or something?</p>
<p>I put though-out because of the certe ego, and she analyzed that Ulysses might be with other women, especially since she would be so old.</p>
<p>But I remember the “stulte,” which is making me unsure now…</p>
<p>Oh, was another answer for the eloquence passage that if you only imitate new authors, you will never be better than the old authors or something like that? I don’t remember the phrasing exactly.</p>
<p>yes im pretty sure that was the answer, that if you keep on imitating, you will never be better, and thats the law of nature. honestly, everything else on the test was simple (except for derivatives) i CANT BELIEVE i put gens for legend (as in race/clan) - i didnt think about lego which is the OBVIOUS one. BAHHH. and i put fas for facsimile crappp. i cant wait for june 24th</p>
<p>I can wait -_- I don’t really know what I’m aiming for, but I think if I get 700+ I’l be content. Under 700 (I guess, I don’t really know) and I’ll retake in December.</p>
<p>So um Caesar’s funeral wasn’t 7 days, it definitely said the comet fulsit, shone per septem dies, through seven days. also, at the beginning of the sentence it said post funera or something.</p>
<p>about the penelope and old woman question, did she think she was gonna look old?</p>
<p>that was so hard its not even funny. i ran out of time so i left 5 blank at the end.</p>
<p>and at crzygmer, the imitiate authors thing is that one will never equal them because it said par</p>
<p>and why wouldnt intact come from tego, doesnt tego mean to break? so in-tego would mean not broken. damn i hate this test</p>
<p>Was there a question about case & number for funera? Vaguely remember it. Caesar passage btw.</p>
<p>@sillynilly, it comes from tango, tangere, tegi, tactus. Not tego (whatever the other principle parts are.)</p>
<p>
Yeah, I thought that was weird. It’s the first time I’ve ever seen five identical answers in a row on a multiple-choice test.</p>