<p>I made a document collecting “confirmed” answers:
<a href=“Confirmed - Google Docs”>Confirmed - Google Docs;
<p>@MyRealName
What were the other options? I know the question, but I forget what I put.</p>
<p>@JavaCoco I don’t know. Was informative speculation part of that question though?? I think I remember picking something like that.</p>
<p>Has anyone found the ABIJAH Prince Passage???
Please help me find it! I think that was the hardest one. If we find it then we can figure out all the answers.</p>
<p>@novelidea
I’m not even sure if finding it would help us figure out all the answers for that one…</p>
<p>do you guys remember if you got A for the last question on the last writing section. </p>
<p>@cookiemonster112
Do you remember what the question was?</p>
<p>Answers for Writing:</p>
<p>Montenegro question?
Pay phones Question? (With or w/out “had”)?</p>
<p>If you had an ACT style writing section about an Olympic marathon…PLEASE RESPOND</p>
<p>@phendaphen
Do you remember the exact question for the pay phones? I remember doing that one, but I forget how it was worded and what the options were.</p>
<p>@phendaphen</p>
<p>For the pay phones question, I selected the one with “had” because it was more precise: it described an action that started and ended in the past.</p>
<p>For Montenegro question, i put choice A. Idk what it said tho.</p>
<p>Payphones have become obsolete with the increase of mobile devices, but they (had) revolutionized communication.</p>
<p>Narrowed it down to either having had or not had. I believe I said had…common split through cc</p>
<p>@phendaphen
Definitely had.</p>
<p>to play the devils advocate.with our choice, the first clause is in present perfect, second is in past perfect. Is that grammatically acceptable?</p>
<p>@novelidea</p>
<p>I got the Prince passage about the black guy who started buying all the land in the Deerfield region. I thought the question was particularly hard. </p>
<p>What did you guys put down for “What question would challenge the author’s speculation?”</p>
<p>Hmm, not sure… I just saw it as the sentence talking about how the pay phones were becoming obsolete, but in the past they had revolutionized communication.</p>
<p>ok, here are excerpts from the plastics passage ….what were the answers?</p>
<p>1) “For although we talk about plastic as a thing, it doesn’t have that thingness, the kind of grounded organic identity found in natural substances.”</p>
<p>There was a question that asked about what “thingness” referred to. What was the answer?</p>
<p>2) "The quick change artistry of plastic is absolute: it can become buckets as well as jewels. " ABSOLUTE most nearly means….? What was the answer? </p>
<p>I said absolute is something like limitless</p>
<p>another one on the plastics passage……what did the “steep side of learning” refer to?</p>
<p>Did anyone get a long passage about a woman in congress talking about how a president could get impeached?
I think that passage was experimental</p>