***June 2014 SAT (US ONLY)***

<p>@humbugs orly? I don’t really remember the sentence that well, unfortunately. Perhaps there’s still hope! :D</p>

<p>I put showplace because that needed to be plural</p>

<p>Which math section was experimental?</p>

<p>How many versions of the test were there?
I thought there were only 2</p>

<p>AGHHHHHH my essay sucked. But I feel generally okay…</p>

<p>I thought the Throeau Lincoln one was easy, so I hope not, because that’s the one I’m confident on :frowning: @shinchang</p>

<p>and @humbugs I had that one.</p>

<p>@wchristen89 I did not have the Lincoln one so that means that it was experimental right?</p>

<p>ugh i’m terrified
i mean i’m estimating 18-1900s,
but that doesn’t mean i’m ok with such a low score lol</p>

<p>@captainamerica‌ @humbugs yeah i was really really hoping for a 2400 too QQ
And I was so sure I could pull it off
Until after I finished taking the test
and then I was just like “…oh.”
Humility + (1/0)</p>

<p>@wchristen89‌ Not completely sure whether I read the doc correctly,
but apparently the CR with the graph had questions that referred to earlier questions?
That’s what the Lincoln/Thoreau did, too,
and I’ve never seen that done in my practice tests.
+that was my easiest section too lol but too bad</p>

<p>I’m trying to not predict a score because it’ll be most likely much higher than I actually get and I’ll be devastated </p>

<p>@jellybae Lol that makes me feel like I’ll get lower than 18-1900s OTL
Hope not</p>

<p>@wchristen89 The answer for that writing question is NOT “as it had” because if you read carefully right after the underlined section was the word “had” so there is no way that same word could be repeated twice. If the underlined portion was “as it had” then it would be “as it had had” which would not make sense. I think I either chose “as it has” or “as it have” I don’t really remember.</p>

<p>@hellousername123‌ I’m not exactly sure about the question you’re talking about, but “had had” isn’t grammatically incorrect. The first “had” indicates past perfect tense</p>

<p>Just want clarify about the math experimental section again. Did any of you have the section which had a scatter plot and a best fit line thru it where you had to estimate the percentage difference? that may have been the experimental i think</p>

<p>That was definitely experimental @cookieslover‌ </p>

<p>@Jellybae‌ @shinchang‌ There’s just so many questions i could’ve gotten wrong through careless error (easy questions that nobody bothered to talk about) that it’s just not worth it for me to try to predict my score</p>

<p>i don’t know how im going to wait until the 26th for our scores :(</p>

<p>@cookieslover‌ ? I don’t remember that. (Not that you should trust my memory)</p>

<p>Again, does anyone know how many experimental sections / test versions there are?
I thought there were only 2 lol</p>

<p>@humbugs‌ IKR QQ The wait is killing me</p>

<p>What other questions were in that section?</p>

<p>@Jellybae‌ Thank you soo much!!I actually ended up leaving a few blank on that one because I ran out of time so I’m relieved now.</p>

<p>@shinchang There are multiple experimental sections so what you had may not be the same as someone else has. I had four math sections so I know that one of those was experimental.</p>

<p>@hellousername123 I’m pretty sure you can have two "had"s in a row. One is the required part of the past perfect tense and the second is the actual verb being conjugated. It’s awkward but not necessarily incorrect. I noticed it too but it was the best possible answer in my opinion. But, of course, I could be wrong.</p>

<p>Is 1.33 the same as 4/3 for the GI’s or will they not count that?</p>

<p>@mizejonathan17‌ They count it
@riverseden oh lol I thought there were just 2</p>