<p>anyone know the venn diagram, or the one with x+4 and the diagonal X+8?</p>
<p>choices were 4, 8 16 4root2 i think</p>
<p>anyone know the venn diagram, or the one with x+4 and the diagonal X+8?</p>
<p>choices were 4, 8 16 4root2 i think</p>
<p>Nope, it was a different one, which means that it was experimental (right?)
But I could’ve sworn it was number 18 and then the x/pi one was #20 in the same section.</p>
<p>JNeemz35, the answer was 4root2. Yes.</p>
<p>Sadly, I don’t remember the Venn diagram question.</p>
<p>the x+4 one was 4root2</p>
<p>No, sorry bro.</p>
<p>4 rt 2 and 3 were the answers JNeemz35.</p>
<p>Trublu, did you get the star and perimeter? ANSWER: 24</p>
<p>yep, was that in the same section?
everything is a bit blurred now…</p>
<p>did the consecutive integer one ask for only positive integers cuz i got II and III</p>
<p>I had a writing experimental and I also had the volume + surface question.</p>
<p>Also…to WHICH question was the answer “ALL THREE” as Wolf2400 said? I only remember one question with Roman numerals and I think I answered “II and III”</p>
<p>The answer to the Venn diagram was 3. I’m very positive about that.</p>
<p>@wolf2400 for the median 25 question was it like a graph and all you had to do was use your calculator and do like Median(L1</p>
<p>Smacking, it was a graph (right before the FRQ)</p>
<p>meh didnt know how to do the diaganol one, and the venn diagram question although a very easy number 4 i bet, I had no idea what it was asking so i put 3 haha. thats 1/4 or 5 on my guesses on that test… played the odds i guess</p>
<p>@Smacking, did you have the question where they cut a strip of paper into x/pi pieces, or the y= a(x-2)^2 + k going through point (-1, 4) Find what k could be?</p>
<p>I’m trying to determine which section was the experimental.</p>
<p>Maybe the all three one was to the question regarding the relationship to a and b, with choices (b+1)a and a(b+1) and another choice, and they were all equal. I think I’m explaining it pretty badly lol</p>
<p>The Venn diagram was something like:
A{1,2,3,4}
B{2,4,6,8,10}</p>
<p>1 and 3 fall under A-only, 2 and 4 fall under intersection, 6, 8, 10 fall under B-only. I don’t exactly remember the set of B but I’m fairly certain that I looked over that question to make sure 3 of them were not shared with A.
These don’t sound familiar to me, so I guess that section was experimental.</p>
<p>I’m not sure how you’re supposed to do the diagonal one, but I plugged in 4root2 for x and found that root2(x+4)=x+8, so that was the answer. You could easily rule out the 3 options without any square roots.</p>
<p>does anyone else remember if it was only positive integers</p>
<p>what is this one with all positive integers? i don’t remember it</p>
<p>The math portion was ridiculous. </p>
<p>Hopefully…700</p>
<p>that strip of paper question was experimental- i didnt have it.</p>
<p>@thechosenone which question are you referring to?</p>
<p>Can anyone give me a quick curved score based on these possibilities?</p>
<p>3 wrong omit 3
4 wrong omit 3
4 wrong omit 2
5 wrong omit 3</p>
<p>Thanks guys would be very much appreciated</p>