Math Question Compilation for June 2008 SAT

<p>
[quote]
It pretty much just comes down to whether or not you counted points on the line, because those were the ones that made it true or false. I only counted points in the interior but IDK

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Yea. If you include the parabola itself, the answer's None, but if you don't, the answer's II and III. Dumb question, in my opinion.</p>

<p>^ It all depends whether you consider points that were ON line the line as being in the interior.</p>

<p>Balloon I put 4, other one was 5/44</p>

<p>And to godfatherbob, I put none! Damn! Cause I found nothing that fit. ***.</p>

<p>Someone define interior's meaning in mathematics. It was vague in my opinion, I took it as just meaning all points bound by the shaded region (including the value X=2, y=4). If interior does have some obscure definition in math, why are they testing our vocab on the MATH SAT. it was probably none.</p>

<p>Just because it says the area is "bounded" by made me think interior meant only things within the area. If you're in the interior of your house, you aren't straddling the wall. But that was just my fuzzy logic</p>

<p>0 > x > 2 > y
):</p>

<p>I think if I had a circle around the origin of radius = 1, I wouldn't say (0,1) is a point inside the circle.</p>

<p>I got .65x6000 to be 3900 for one, I dont remember</p>

<p>and i got y^3 and x^6 for another.....</p>

<p>elanorcia i do not remember the question can u specify or remember the question please lol</p>

<p>for the one (n-1)/n wasnt it from 5 to 45?
I got 5/45 not 5/44 as the answer</p>

<p>GOD
did everyone put 11 first polygon problem?</p>

<p>Q. a pylon with perimeter of 100 m and each side is less than 1, least # of sides?</p>

<p>I put 11 first but I changed it to 20 because 10/11 came out to be some ridiculous number :/</p>

<p>the answer to the polygon problem was 11.</p>

<p>0 > x > 2 > y</p>

<p>(y-x)/(xy) > 0</p>

<p>I'm pretty sure it was 11. Each side just has to be less than one, right? No matter how stupid the number?</p>

<p>@ aim42006...n had to be less than 45...so it can't 5/45....5/44 is correct.</p>

<p>for the one (n-1)/n wasnt it from 5 to 45?
n was larger than five and less than 45, non-inclusive</p>

<p>The 0 > x > 2 > y question: It gave a list of statements and asked which had to be true. I didn't really know what to do; I just plugged numbers in and tried to disprove them one by one.</p>

<p>for the </p>

<p>I xy > 0
II y>x^2
III abs(x) < 2</p>

<p>problem i'm absolutly positive that it was II and III. That's right CCers, you heard it directly from XiΞiX! :D</p>

<p>lmao....</p>

<p>Elanorci I think the question was which of the following is the greatest?</p>

<p>it was B or something. can't remember. you just had to plug **** in</p>

<p>I got .65x6000 to be 3900 for one, I dont remember</p>

<p>and i got y^3 and x^6 for another.....</p>

<p>BUMP ON THIS^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^</p>