June English Thread

<p>Yes. I got a bunch in a row on it. I don’t remember how many to be exact.</p>

<p>@MetalMeatwad: Yes; that was also a choice. </p>

<p>I’m sad I can’t remember too many of my answers, but I do think I put “shimmering, colored.” I know it was a passage about Aurora Borealis and Australis.</p>

<p>It was altogether pretty easy. A few of the “however” ones were tricky, as has already been said. I don’t want to get overconfident though, as I thought the last practice test I took was pretty easy, and ended up missing a good number of English questions.</p>

<p>Yeah I got on that too! </p>

<p>I had “on what” maybe that’s what you’re talking about killers?</p>

<p>I missed 3 at the most on this…
I am arguing with myself to remember what I wrote for the shimmering, colored lights one.
I kept changing my answer since I finished a bit early and I can’t remember what I put for it.
On my practice I got a 32 on this section. I am hoping i got around there.</p>

<p>how about the one that talked about his nickname? i dont know if you guys remember what i’m talking about. it was quoted…</p>

<p>I think I got a 36 on this section!!!</p>

<p>I don’t know if this is what you’re talking about Mich, butfor the a-word, I put, “necessary b/c it clarifies definition”.</p>

<p>Idk remember the question exactly but it was like the second one in the dog paragraph and it was like which phrase clarifies and supports the preceding sentence and i was between two answers, no change and like dominating the others or something like that haha sorry for my vagueness but my brain is fried lol</p>

<p>I don’t know if this is what you’re talking about Mich, butfor the a-word, I put, “necessary b/c it clarifies definition”. </p>

<p>that was one of the answers</p>

<p>Does anyone remember “on what” being an answer?</p>

<p>Idk remember the question exactly but it was like the second one in the dog paragraph and it was like which phrase clarifies and supports the preceding sentence and i was between two answers, no change and like dominating the others or something like that haha sorry for my vagueness but my brain is fried lol </p>

<p>I remember this too. It was “dominating the others”</p>

<p>Who remembers the very first question of the English section where it said something like:</p>

<p>A girl said the following from her first collection of essays, Collection Title, “Quote begins here…”</p>

<p>I was debating on whether to choose NO CHANGE or to choose the option with no commas because it seemed to go from general to specific.</p>

<p>A girl said the following from her first collection of essays, Collection Title, “Quote begins here…”</p>

<p>I was debating on whether to choose NO CHANGE or to choose the option with no commas because it seemed to go from general to specific. </p>

<p>I put the one that said --A girl said the following from her first collection of essays Collection Title, “Quote begins here…”</p>

<p>I thought it would be shimmering colored lights because shimmering was modifying colored not lights. </p>

<p>For the one that asked about the phrase “at the site”, all would’ve been acceptable except for the first one, right?</p>

<p>@Socceryan, “NO CHANGE” was the answer.</p>

<p>@fresh101: Yes!! That is what I ended up putting too but I’m definitely not 100% sure that it’s right.</p>

<p>did the dog sentence talking about how she “called him back” or something go after sentence 4?</p>

<p>@Socceryan, “NO CHANGE” was the answer. </p>

<p>I don’t think so. The name of the title is important so you can’t have the title between the two commas.</p>

<p>@fresh101 </p>

<p>I thought it was that, darn it! When I was going over that question and I finally realized that my answer was wrong, they said time…</p>

<p>For the “a—” word</p>

<p>I put it was unnecessary because it distracts from the passage;s focus on shipwrecks</p>

<p>The other choice was that it was unnecessary because it provided unneeded details about how stuff was transported in ancient times</p>

<p>For the “a—” word</p>

<p>I put it was unnecessary because it distracts from the passage;s focus on shipwrecks</p>

<p>The other choice was that it was unnecessary because it provided unneeded details about how stuff was transported in ancient times </p>

<p>It definitely was necessary because it would help clarify what amphora meant to someone who didn’t know what it meant. Did you know what amphora meant?</p>