<p>what answer choice was that (2 commas)? Was that no change (a)?</p>
<p>No, I think it was like B or C</p>
<p>ahhh…$#*&^$@!!!
Is is possible to get a 34 with a minus 3?</p>
<p>Not on English.</p>
<p>How much can you miss to still get a 29 on English?</p>
<p>Hey guys, when do SCORES come out?</p>
<p>June 28th online and 3-4 weeks after that by mail.</p>
<p>^^ The 2 parenthetical comma option for the first question was no change.</p>
<p>“Is is possible to get a 34 with a minus 3?”</p>
<p>According to Princeton Review, yes. On their first English practice test, I missed 3 and according to their curve it came out to be a 35.</p>
<p>Somehow, from my observation, PR inflates the score. On my actual sat I took in Jan, I missed exactly 6 questions on the writing and got a 650. Looking at PR, the score was a 740if I had missed 6…
@Jr5570: That’s what I put (A), I just can’t remember if the sentence already had two commas or not.</p>
<p>@Jumper101: I’m about 99 percent sure that it already had 2 parenthetical commas, so no change (A) would be the correct answer.</p>
<p>^It didn’t, I’m 100% sure.</p>
<p>^ are we talking about the first question of the section? because if that’s the case the answer, I believe, was C. There was another question that dealt with parenthetical commas though, and the answer to that was A.</p>
<p>Yes, C.</p>
<p>I don’t remember the question but the answers were like
(a) –
(b) ;
(c) ,
(d) .</p>
<p>I put –</p>
<p>Also, can anybody answer my question? How many can I miss to still get a 28/29?</p>
<p>You can probably get a 28 with a -9. For the most part from 28-36 you won’t see more than one point difference between questions missed and score.</p>
<p>Then I hope I did not miss more than 9! Haha</p>
<p>Yeah, -9 seems about right in order to score a 28.</p>
<p>So what did you guys get on the question where it was like</p>
<p>a. –
b. ;
c. ,
d. .</p>
<p>Or something like that… I remember it was the only question that offered a “–” and I kept it like that.</p>
<p>Somone 99% sure that it was A and someone else 100% sure it was C…Ok, I’m confused…
Is there a possibility that we had tests with same questions but with a different order of choices?</p>
<p>I don’t remember a question with --…</p>