<p>@chewydog: Well, I think they purposely make the wording ambiguous in some cases just to mess with the test-takers.</p>
<p>Wasn’t it “180 divides n^k”? Which is the same as “n^k is divisible by 180”?</p>
<p>@cortana: It was 90. 2 x 5 x 9</p>
<p>^That’s the one. that was D</p>
<p>@Daisie: Yeah that sounds right. And I think your answer is right too now that I analyze the diction. 180 is the subject and n^k is the direct object, which means that 180 is doing the dividing and n^k is the thing that is being divided.</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the exact question of the question with an exponent of -2x asking like how many times it crossed the x axis?</p>
<p>I was just looking up the average scoring and if I did get all 26 I answered right I could get a 640 which I would be thrilled with hahaha So hopefully I will crack a 600 by some miracle like i wanted to.</p>
<p>Also does it matter if i accidnetally used the 2nd page of my answer sheet instead of the 1st page? I accidentally flipped to the second page (the one without all the cursive writing at the bottom). It’ll still be scored right?</p>
<p>I have a question, is there a limit to the number of times u can cancel ur SAT scores?</p>
<p>on my test it said n/2 n/6 n/9. i put E for that.</p>
<p>Also, on the sides of each test i filled in the test center. does it matter if i only filled in 2 of the 3 tests</p>
<p>NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO thats not right!!!its" 180divided BY n^k"!!!</p>
<p>^ no it said “which does 180 divide” meaning which one can be divided by 180.</p>
<p>“7 is a divisor of 42 because 42 / 7 = 6, so we can say . It can also be said that 42 is divisible by 7, 42 is a multiple of 7, 7 divides 42, or 7 is a factor of 42.”</p>
<p>[Divisor</a> - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divisor]Divisor”>Divisor - Wikipedia)</p>
<p>The “180 divided by n^k” would not work because for k= 1 all or nearly all of the options would work. So by default is has to be n^k / 180.</p>
<p>urghhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!■■!!!why cant CB stop playing word games…12#?!@#?%@!
$%?
^?43%&</p>
<p>the n/2, n/3, n/6, n/9 one was D, right? (2<em>5</em>9)</p>
<p>At which points does f(x)=? equal to 1 </p>
<p>wasn’t that just 0? i graphed it and y was only 1 when x was 0…</p>
<p>^ yes @ liv4physicz</p>
<p>I got 0 and 2/3 for that one. Why wasn’t 2/3 an answer? O.o</p>
<p>if the answer was 2<em>5</em>9 then in the question there must have been a n/5</p>