<p>B was most change in votes from 2002 to 2004</p>
<p>I don’t remember this question completely, but wasn’t it C?</p>
<p>B was most change in votes from 2002 to 2004</p>
<p>I don’t remember this question completely, but wasn’t it C?</p>
<p>It was a grid in though I think.</p>
<p>yea matt the answer was 16 i think. that is what i put.</p>
<p>I think i got 1.6 x 10^3… <_<</p>
<p>20 for the 10th term in the 3 digit question</p>
<p>I also don’t remember this question, but I do remember something like this</p>
<p>-1,0,1,so it would be 0,1,2,3,7,12,22 not 20?</p>
<p>you added wrong ^ it’d be -1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 6, 11, 20</p>
<p>NVM i remember putting 20. I Just woke up lol so prolly didnt realize. </p>
<p>but for the 2002 -2004 I remember putting C</p>
<p>it was definitely B.</p>
<p>Guys what would you expect for -2?</p>
<p>Was B the point on the graph that was the highest( I mean in terms of elevation)? That’s the one i put.</p>
<p>B was the one where the increase in votes was the most, so probably.
-2 should be 760-770</p>
<p>Consolidated List (43/54):
NO EXPERIMENTAL QUESTIONS</p>
<p>88 for median temperature
8pi/3 for the shaded region of the circle
15 ice cream possibilities
20 for the 10th term in the 3 digit question
10.6 or 53/5 for the y coordinate when the slope was 6/5
800 largest square
65 degrees value of X
x = 3 for when f(x) * g(2) = 6
1 million in profit
60 is area of triangle in cylinder
2 is the answer for value of k when 2x^1/2 - x^(k-3/2) = x^1/2
(5,0) is x-intercept of parabola
4 is absolute minimum of 3|x-4| + 2
Sqr(2) is distance between the midpoints of the two lines
20% increase on price of bagels
10r = p
K - 4 is answer for (x-4)(x+4)
11/17/23/5 for one of two positive prime numbers that add to 28
5 workers needed to finish the job in 2 hours
0.4 probability of picking a value that is also in the second set
c = 0 when k = 3
1520 is x value
4 is Double root of semi root
N is divisible by 2 and 4
I is only way TANYA can be spelled
MP and NP are equal
43 Degrees in the two parallel lines
110 Degrees for angle in isosceles triangle
3 is the number of right angles that aren’t possible in a quadrilateral
xz is the smallest
6 is perimeter of triangle which crosses through the centers of the circles
100 + (J + K + L)/3
150 coffee flavored candies
(10, 9) is Point C on the square
B was most change in votes from 2002 to 2004
0 is difference in average students at both schools
sqr(15) is x when volume of cube is 90
16 is the value for x * 10^3
Rp - pr = 0
9/25 is Oak to Maple ratio
1 is the remainder of x + 3
9 is difference of similar triangle perimeters
108 is the fourth term in the sequence of multiples of 3 </p>
<p>QUESTION! for the answer “20 for the 10th term in the 3 digit question” was the question specifying the term or the sum? I might have put 37 by accident. There goes my 800 >.<</p>
<p>It wanted the 10th term (the sum of the three before it, not the total sum).</p>
<p>I don’t remember the multiples of 3 question, are we sure it wasn’t experimental?</p>
<p>that wasn’t experimental sententia.</p>
<p>I had the multiples of 3 question too. Which section was the experimental? </p>
<p>I also got the multiple of 7 question wrong too. I could have sworn it said what was the remainder after divided by 5…>.<</p>
<p>The experimental section = a venn diagram with physics/chemistry, knitting question, pentagon.</p>
<p>January Curve was brutal
54 800
53 770
52 740
51 720
50 700
everything else was less than 700</p>
<p>So if this test was easier, won’t the curve be even worse</p>
<p>I’m hoping that a raw score of 49 is also 700</p>
<p>fack. I think I got -2 so far. I thought 200 was the area of the biggest square and we’re looking for the area of the smallest one.</p>
<p>And I don’t want to go through all the pages but I think I made a stupid mistake on the -1,0,1 problem.</p>
<p>everything else looks good. damn it .___.</p>
<p>EDIT: nvm. I think I got the -1,0,1 problem right. yay :)</p>
<p>Yeah I’m at -2 cause I didn’t answer the questions they asked. Great. >.<</p>
<p>Was multiples of 3/108 one of the first couple questions then?</p>