<p>I have a feeling it was consecutive prime numbers i got it wrong anyways since i panicked and put 11<em>13</em>17. One of the 2 mistakes i’ve identified till now…</p>
<p>^ wrong, is was 18. 3 factorial times 3.</p>
<p>Say you got 5 wrong and omitted 3, what does that leave you with? (About)</p>
<p>The 3 6 7 8 was 18. </p>
<p>greater than 5 so first term can be 3 possibilities.
second term can be 3 as well and
third can be 2 possibilities
and last can only be 1 </p>
<p>3<em>3</em>2*1=18</p>
<p>I took it two times already, so i need to cancel if i dont get what i want</p>
<p>Do you guys remember the question that was like y^5=50 and like y^10*X^-1 or something… If you do what was the answer and the full question?</p>
<p>is there a consolidated list of correct answers yet?</p>
<p>did u guys get 0 for a grid in?</p>
<p>Can someone give me a better idea of the question labeled on this thread as “the coffee one”, where the answer was 3.84. What was it asking?</p>
<p>I have a feeling i put 3.84 but cant rly remember clearly</p>
<p>do u guys remember that I, II, III question about linda and the beach.</p>
<p>@LedbyExample</p>
<p>Question was: if x^5=50 and y^2 = 10, what is x^10*y^-2 . I got 250.</p>
<p>omg copy paste the consolidated… this is the most pathetic SAT showing i have seen yet… and i think you guys are right about the consecutive integers thing. it appeared in the question but i don’t think it said consecutive primes.</p>
<p>Consolidated:</p>
<p>1.Pyramid…C (square inside square, both in the same orientation).
2.ab and A+B… y/x
3.v and A … a^(3/2)
4.prime numbers 3,5,11 = 165
5. graph: x+h) k … f(0)=-5
6.250 for x^5z^-2
7.3.84 for coffee</p>
<p>^Shamoil: It was something like, "Coffee costs twice the price of fruit (it wasn’t fruit, but I can’t remember what exactly it was) per pound. If she gets one pound of coffee and 3 pounds of fruit and the bill totals $20 (NOT the actual value, but, again, I can’t remember the exact number), how much does she pay for coffee?</p>
<p>Set up the equation 2x + 3x = 20
Solve for x, and multiply it by 2 to get the price of one pound of coffee</p>
<p>…I don’t know why everyone’s freaking out; it really wasn’t a hard problem.</p>
<p>and what is this question with 18 as the answer or w.e? i dont remember it? i put like 6? idr. what was the full question.</p>
<p>anyone know what 2 wrongs and 2 omits equates to? 2 omits and 1 wrong?</p>
<p>@Shamoil: Coffee one was something like this</p>
<p>She spent $9.5 on beef and coffee.Coffee per pound is 2 times as much as beef per pound. She bought 3 times as much beef as she did coffee. How much did she pay for coffee per pound?</p>
<p>Answer was $3.84 because, to find total spent, you multiply pounds bought by price per pound. So I set it up as 3(x) + 1(2*x) = 9.6 because, using 3 and 1 as your pounds bought, 5x = 9.6, so x = 1.92, thus 2x = 3.84. Something like that.</p>
<p>@NspiredOne it was like How many combinations of 3 digit numbers can you make greater then 500 with 3,6,7,8</p>
<p>1.Pyramid…C (square inside square, both in the same orientation).
2.ab and A+B… y/x
3.v and A … a^(3/2)
4.prime numbers 3,5,11 = 165
5. graph: a(x+h)+k… f(0)=-5
6.250 for x^5z^-2
7.3.84 for coffee
8. pi (problem with arcs and half the circle was 4pi)</p>
<p>NspiredOne I don’t think you should include the prime numbers one on the list until there is a more definite response either saying there was or was not “consecutive integers” stipulated in the problem</p>
<p>what was the question about degrees that people aid was 10? i remember one degree question with like different parts like 2x 3x 4x or something and then there was this other with two triangles not drawn to scale or something. wasn’t there some answer that was 20 degrees?</p>