June SAT Math II Thread

<p>thanks grojos</p>

<p>lets all post our # of omits and # confirmed wrong</p>

<p>I omitted 2 and confirm 1 wrong</p>

<p>btw do u remember what choice tan y was. there was a tanx and tanw in the choice also right. i think it was d or something</p>

<p>it asked for what was equal to tanx, and it was tany as the answer</p>

<p>Does anyone remember the exact wording of the 2k+1 question? The answer could be “2(7) + 1 = 15” or “2 is a prime number,” depending on the wording.</p>

<p>3 wrong no omit.</p>

<p>i was looking through the entire thread and we have covered 38 out of the 50 questions. if anyone remembers a question that wasnt discussed please bring it up even if it was the easiest question.</p>

<p>i remember a question that said f(g(x))=x and g(x)=? and it asked what f(x) equaled. i think i got Choice B but i dont remember.</p>

<p>i omitted that one, so im not bothering with it, but it was “2(7) +1=15 and 15 is not prime” and “2 is a prime number”. it was one of those, and if i was given the exact wording of the question, i could answer. i would guess the first one though because i think the question said “for any integer k, 2k+1 is a prime number” not “for any integer k, any prime number can be represented by 2k+1” (in which case 2 is a prime number would be the answer)</p>

<p>@sccrscrub01 f(x)=3x+2 i think, and then g(x) =(x-2)/3</p>

<p>@sccrscrub01 and 38 out of 50? thats great, you should compile it, i think someone asked for the wording on #1 and i almost remember it: if the product of x, its reciprocal, and its square is 15xxx (something above 15129 because i got a decimal) what is x? (123)</p>

<p>8 omit 1 wrong.</p>

<p>yes i agree…and it did say “for any integer k” so if k=7 it would equal 15 which is not prime. so i think it is that one; however, if it said ALL prime numbers than it could have been “2 is prime” but im almost 100% sure it said for any integer k.</p>

<p>Am i the one with the best raw score so far? (max 47 from 46.75) im a sophomore, im suprised!</p>

<p>For the question that said (x-a)(x-b)(x-c)</p>

<p>Was it the one with 1 arrow pointing up, 1 pointing down, and 3 x-intercepts?</p>

<p>@godzilla there was only one with 3 x intercepts, and that was it. i think it was E for me</p>

<p>No omits, 3 wrong. After scanning this thread (I am secretly a robot) It doesn’t seem like I’ve made any mistakes on anything else. Would you all say that I have a good chance at getting an 800? </p>

<p>Oh and grojoros, we’re in the exact same situation :smiley: (sophomore)</p>

<p>[SAT</a> Facts and FAQs](<a href=“http://www.erikthered.com/tutor/sat-facts-and-faqs.html#resources]SAT”>SAT Facts and FAQs)
puts you at an 800.</p>

<p>@mistervert im in H Pre-calc, you?</p>

<p>I’m pretty sure the question was f(x) = 5x +2, so g(x)= (x-2)/5</p>

<p>@metalliyanks123, it was something like that, but as long as you chose the inverse.
@apmaniac, 6 wrong is 42 raw score. i heard 44 raw score is generally the cutoff, but ive also heard that 6 wrong is too. im confused</p>