March 12 SAT Compilation of verified answers - Verbal

<p>^ What I put...some question on monkeys and the rain forest</p>

<p>Yeah, yeah, them and their <em>arboreal</em> habitat. Lol. Sentense completions were a tad bit hard.</p>

<p>Is everyone sure about the disingenous charlatan? Or was it prosaic for that one? I put disingenuous, but i might've changed it, hope not!!!</p>

<p>Also: for the father question, was it with the colon ":"?</p>

<p>I put debilitating. ._. Prosaic ain't so. Last time I checked it meant ordinary, boring, blah. Not sure about disingenuous, since ingenuous is supposed to be smart. But hey.</p>

<p>probably not..
its not very popular to list 1 thing after colon</p>

<p>It should be the colon one. Sounded good.</p>

<p>gay, i missed 3 on sc already.</p>

<p>kilini-I'm pretty sure disingenuous was the answer. Ingenuous means naive and innocent; disingenuous means not straigtfoward, insincere. I put the colon one too.</p>

<p>Damn it. :(
And debilitating sounded so evil...
I'll never mess ingenuous with ingenious up again...</p>

<p>Ingenuous is insincere...in*genious* is smart. Well, you know what they say...mistakes are good, they help you grow and learn and all that. They also suck for your score; that's the downside, so...</p>

<p>Was this the correct choice to a writing question?:</p>

<p>Tsetse flies do not have brains, for everything they need to know is in their central nervous system.</p>

<p>or was it
;since, everything...</p>

<p>That wiriting question may have been experimental because I did have the experimental writing section.</p>

<p>"For everything" is what I put</p>

<p>For is right. The original was a fragment.</p>

<p>
[quote]

That wiriting question may have been experimental because I did have the experimental writing section.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>No, I don't think it was. I remember the tsetse flies question and I only had one 35-q writing section.</p>

<p>i think its deprecate rather than disparage - deprecate means to condemn, disparage means to refer dissaprovingly</p>

<p>does anyone remember the complete answer, as well as some other choices for the convention-disparage question. I don't remember what I put.</p>

<p>for the fly one i put ";since"</p>

<p>i put "for" for the tsetse fly question</p>

<p>it can't be since... Since would create an incomplete sentence which cannot follow a semi colon.</p>

<p>Can you say, Since the boys ran?</p>

<p>Raging, 'for' is a conjunction meaning 'because,' joining the first main clause (tsetse flies do not need a brain) to the second main clause:</p>

<p>
[quote]

everything they need to know is in their central nervous system.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Subject, verb, all there, and a preposition and subordinate clause to boot.</p>