<p>reasoning makes sense</p>
<p>Can someone predict what score this is? :</p>
<p>Math: -2
Crit: -6 or 7
Writing: -3</p>
<p>What do you think the hardest math problems were</p>
<p>I thought the plastic story on critical reading wasn’t that bad. What do u guys think</p>
<p>oh what about the one with the 3 points A B & C, which one can’t be true? </p>
<p>same</p>
<p>@UCschoolsftw</p>
<p>I think it was $4 with 20% sale and an additional %10 off the sale price</p>
<p>@Green1997, You’re right. It’s reverence. The author writes about the decline of it, too, implying there wasn’t too much of a biased, and that it was pretty objective. Excitement would have been too over the top; but yeah, it was listed as a possible answer. You’re solid, I think.</p>
<p>@MovingtoTexas I had the “likewise” one because in the sentence before it, it said that something else was historic.</p>
<p>@assiduous101 I had $2.88 too. You had the 20% sale, then 10% more off the sale price so that should be right.</p>
<p>@UCschoolsftw - It was excitement. In the passage it talked about how the scientists were excited to form anything they want out of the plastic. They didn’t have “respect” for the plastic.</p>
<p>Did any of all have the one that was like 4<sqrt(m)<5
4<cbrt(p)<5
Find the max value of m*p?
(Probably not those exact numbers…)</p>
<p>had a hard time with that too</p>
<p>@Pretzel that was 2976. Since you want the MAX value you just subtract 1 from the square of 5 and cubed of 5.
So its 24, from 25-1, and 124, from 125-1, to give you 2976 :D</p>
<p>@pretzel729</p>
<p>It was 24*124 so 2976</p>
<p>Yeah the m and p one answer was like two thousand something, really high number</p>
<p>@pretzel729 I had that one too. I think I put in 1900 but the values had to be between 16<em>64 and 25</em>125.</p>
<p>Edit: Did it really say the max value? I think I didn’t read the question correctly then.</p>
<p>Yeah it said MAX value. it would be pretty easy if it was just “A” value. It was Integers or else things would get REALLY complicated. Remember the SAT doesnt go too far in the Math part.</p>
<p>At, @UCschoolsftw below me. The 10% as i said in my previous post was from the sales prices since she was an employee. And the original sale’s price off was 20%. If you put that you missed it by .08 :(</p>
<p>@castigations</p>
<p>It wasn’t from the “sale’s price” it was the “sale price”?? What?? $4.00 was the original sale price? .2<em>4=.80 .1</em>4=
.40. .80+.40 = 1.2. 4-1.2 = 2.8??</p>
<p>Was the pedigree of history accurate or exaggerated?</p>
<p>Were m and p only allowed to be integers?? I didn’t remember seeing that so I picked the 25*125 one of whatever. Tbh I don’t remember anymore haha</p>