<p>I didn’t change it for that one.</p>
<p>I was surprised to not see any OMIT answer choices.</p>
<p>I’ve heard that the june test has the best curve because a lot of athletes take it since it is their last time to bolster their score and get the scholarship they want. I know that to be true in the region I live in so it maybe?? I took the ACT last june and got a 35 on science (no clue how that happened) so I feel like it is somehow the best date to take it</p>
<p>Lol, if that is the case then wow that is so stupid (but very beneficial to me :))</p>
<p>In some strange way, that actually makes sense. The ACT uses a bell curve when creating their curve, so that would work.</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure the ACT has the curves set before we take the test.</p>
<p>A bell-curve?</p>
<p>No, curves on how they will score each section.</p>
<p>I’m asking what is a bell-curve. I was too lazy to ask the whole question, dammit. lol</p>
<p>Think of a bell curve. Grades of the ACT up to 36 going across the x-axis and going up the y-axis is the number of students receiving x scores. That is a bell curve, but I don’t see how the ACT possibly uses that info besides when creating percentiles.</p>
<p>Well, I’ve seen a graph like that before for the ACT lol.</p>
<p>What did you guys get for the one with the ship and the little camera or whatever sent to find it? I said it couldn’t work only where it was. What about you guys?</p>
<p>The first question did NOT need commas because it was essential. However, because the title was the last set of words before the quotation, there needed to be a comma at the end. Thus, it follows as such:</p>
<p>… This Is the Title, “Quote.”</p>
<p>Shimmering, colored lights is also correct.</p>
<p>@hahalolk
“What did you guys get for the one with the ship and the little camera or whatever sent to find it? I said it couldn’t work only where it was. What about you guys?”</p>
<p>I said the same thing. Everything else made complete sense.</p>
<p>I disagree with you rootbeer.</p>
<p>Rootbeer…it was nonessential. It was a collection of her first works. Because there can only be one “first,” it is unnecessary to know the title. It could be referring to only one anyway. </p>
<p>Like saying: “My oldest brother, Tim, plays football well.”
There is only one oldest.
However: “My brother Tim plays football well.”
There could be more than one.</p>
<p>So what was the proper punctuation needed for that?</p>
<p>Because it was nonessential, it was correct to put the title of her first collection between two commas.</p>
<p>It needed two commas.</p>
<p>2 commas, foo.</p>