<p>I also got -2 so far, so do any of you guys think that the curve will not be as harsh as the Jan one, where -2 was a 790?</p>
<p>Okay, I have a question, because I could NOT figure out this answer:</p>
<p>In the passage with the lawyer and diamond, there was a question that said “lines 19-40” or something like that. At any rate the lines it referred to were a LOT, way more than I’d ever seen on the SAT before. What was the answer to that? Because I’m not remotely sure of it, I nearly blacked out when I got to that section. Remind me to sleep better next time.</p>
<p>Oh, and I’m not 100% sure, but the “only” question seemed pretty clear to me as “brevity”. Following only was a time interval, both times. Why would it be uniqueness, again?</p>
<p>The March test had a brutal curve for a CR section that was similar in difficulty to this one, so I’m expecting the worst. I’m just hoping that the brevity/unique question ends up being unique, so I only have -1.</p>
<p>I remember that - and remember having the same reaction (I usually bracket any lines that are referenced in questions, so I was at a loss as to what to do for that one)…however, I do not remember the question or answer. Anyone else?</p>
<p>@Jimmy797: The question was asking what the other guy told the butler to do during those lines… I remember choosing something about how he wanted everyone to compile ideas into a single story.</p>
<p>I think I chose something like, to verify his information/story or something. Didn’t he tell him at one point: “you’re the man most likely to know about this subject”?</p>
<p>hey for the last part with 14 questions / 10 min.
was the answer cliche or omen?
i chose cliche and i’m pretty sure it wasn’t the last 3.</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure it was an omen…</p>
<p>cliche - a trite, stereotyped expression; a sentence or phrase, usually expressing a popular or common thought or idea, that has lost originality, ingenuity, and impact by long overuse, as </p>
<p>omen - anything perceived or happening that is believed to portend a good or evil event or circumstance in the future; portent</p>
<p>the message was about something something strength?</p>
<p>Hmmm… The whole passage is somewhere in the thread if you’d like to see it again. He basically talked at the end about how the quote was a prophecy, that he opened the book to the page with the quote by accident, and then at the end how the quote ended up applying to what he was doing at the moment. More of an omen than a cliche, in my opinion. Sorry if that was a terrible explanation.</p>
<p>It was omen, and I’m it wasn’t in the writing section either =/ I think it was section 9 for me, maybe 7. (CR)</p>
<p>can someone plzzz tell me the question for lawyer determines true feeling</p>
<p>duermo- I’m fairly certain it was unique. I don’t even remember that question seeming difficult… he repeated ‘only’ twice, and after both described a very unique occurrence. He said that only the night before he randomly opened Robinson Crusoe to that page and read that quote, and then only that morning the guy randomly showed up at his house… That seems unique to me, but I could of course be wrong.</p>
<p>It seems like it happened really close together… hence the repetition… hence the brevity of the incident.</p>
<p>The question about lawyer determining true feelings referenced lines where the narrator talked about feigning modesty and saying he wouldn’t be able to contribute to the story, but the lawyer was able to see through what he was saying and determine his true feelings.</p>
<p>what was the experimental??</p>
<p>also, does anyone have an estimate of how many wrong would be a 750?</p>
<p>-4 to -6 would be a 750 depending on the curve</p>
<p>what was the explanation to the question about the innocent people being accused, why was it defamed and not guilt</p>