<p>"as in"</p>
<p>that's what i put</p>
<p>was the common theme for the passage about the library</p>
<p>simulating a comparison?</p>
<p>the dad was passionate about civil rights</p>
<p>"as in"</p>
<p>that's what i put</p>
<p>was the common theme for the passage about the library</p>
<p>simulating a comparison?</p>
<p>the dad was passionate about civil rights</p>
<p>Yes the dad was indeed passionate</p>
<p>how bout that one, "conducive to lives" or "bereft of lives"</p>
<p>yes passionate
i said "as inhabit", otherwise sentence parrallelism gets all messed up or whatever.</p>
<p>battlecruiser, your definition of a variable is wrong, 2 is a possible answer</p>
<p>bereft</p>
<p>what did you get for the litttle girl who said that she wanted to be a renaissance artist?</p>
<p>Did you say that it was a spark of inspiration, sign of early talent, common child ambition, or foolish goal?</p>
<p>^ Apparently those aren't the exact words used, but you get the idea it is trying to convey</p>
<p>i didnt put simulating a comparasion, i put somethign else.....what was the other answer choices again??</p>
<p>Bereft is correct.</p>
<p>oh that one was hard
i ended up going with spark of inspiration</p>
<p>i don't remember a common theme question for the library, only that the globe/map of africa reminded her of issues whateverblablablah</p>
<p>"how bout that one, "conducive to lives" or "bereft of lives""</p>
<p>Definitely bereft, because you were looking for a choice that harmed life. Conducive means it is helpful. Bereft means it is bad to life. So I chose bereft.</p>
<p>I put "sign of early talent" because it didn't talk about her after her early age.</p>
<p>I agree with bereft</p>
<p>its "foolish ambition"</p>
<p>i said that grandiose one ( i think thats the foolish goal one)</p>
<p>what did you guys say for the one that asked what the tone of her quoting little women about christmas. I cant remember the choices.</p>
<p>bereft was the answer</p>
<p>I said grandiose as well. Anybody sure about the "than" one?</p>
<p>did everyone get the same essay topic about materialism?</p>
<p>yes, everyone had materialism</p>
<p>was the foolish ambition/childhood dream question a critical reading or writing section?</p>
<p>"its "foolish ambition""</p>
<p>Where did it say that it was a foolish ambition? </p>
<p>If that really is the answer, then thats a retarded question. Its possible for the person to become a renaisannce man or whatever.</p>
<p>critical reading</p>
<p>I didn't put foolish ambition because the tone of the author didn't really make the renaissance thing seem stupid. It was more naive and grand.</p>
<p>it's not a spark fo itnerest because her spark of interest was something else, that book about girls occured way down the line of her experience. it sunmularted a comparison between how blacks viewed themselves and how they are no different form whites.</p>
<p>now that i think about it, with raciail themes, that might've been experiemental.</p>
<p>it didnt say foolish ambition it was naive and grandoise ambition</p>