<p>Oohhh i understand it now dammit....-1 ftl</p>
<p>Great, any other maths</p>
<p>IHaveAHobbie: do you remember the second part of aggravate/____?
I remember not choosing aggravate because it would mean that it irritated/intensified blood pressure regulation.</p>
<p>lol ok disregard that comment.</p>
<p>also, for grid ins, the last two answers, did anyone get 7 then 8 or 8 then 7?</p>
<p>uhh i think the 2000$ questions was the second to last one, so that wouldnt have been a 7 or 8</p>
<p>I dunno, i think it might've been just an experimental section. Did you have 4 CRs?</p>
<p>area of a graph by adding square and triangle is 21 btw</p>
<p>No, I mean the aswer was 7 then 8 or the other way around, two one digit answers</p>
<p>for the judge courts CR, about the european courts, wasn't the judge used to prevent biases or something like that?</p>
<p>Critical Reading
1. Mexican Girl Marta who asked for her father's permission to go to HS..
. Resignation when he talked with the fisherman
. Dumbfounded when fisherman is consulted on something so important
. Father is sociable-reserved
. Final sentence makes story significant by showing Marta fulfilled her promise
. Earnest when asking father initially to go to school</p>
<ol>
<li><p>Mini-Pair on advertising on the internet versus advertising on TV
. Second passage shows people avoiding ads
. Passage 1 would learn from passage 2 by not placing internet ads on unpopular websites</p></li>
<li><p>One Paragraph about the writing of Chesnutt
. The metaphor on woodcutting shows his writing was deep/penetrating
. The comments are reactions by his contemporaries.</p></li>
<li><p>One Paragraph about what is natural
. Purpose is to dispel a misconception
. Colloquial statement "Vaccine ain't" = to back up assertion</p></li>
<li><p>Passage about the architecture of a museum
. Crass social consumerism or something like that = theme park
. Competition makes museums do things they arent suited for
. Building's fundamental character = the spirit
. "circumstantial requirements" = Legal height of building
. Center of museum = the art on display
. List of places in museum = to show museum's many facets
. Taking old, unrecognized works and displaying them is not what the author perceives most museums to be doing
. Ornate museum would be a put-off to society
. Museum = civic = responsibility to society (unlike private)</p></li>
<li><p>Passage about the adversarial nature of US justice system
. European courts = prevent manipulation of facts
. Critic said that people would lose confidence in societal institutions
. Claim = assertion</p></li>
<li><p>Paired Passage about the nature of the human brain
. Take = outlook (a modern outlook)
. Two authors were both something like "appealing but not correct"
. Ending sentences = cautionary v. stirring
. Descrates dignified --> added philosophy to</p></li>
</ol>
<p>Sentence Completions - Complete!
1. Guy on the cover of Time Magazine was RECOGNIZED for his GROUNDBREAKING work.
2. Guy mistook a woman for a man and was thus ERRONEOUS
3. Indefatigable = SLEEP
4. Nothing affects her = PLACID
5. Verve = PANACHE
6. Art = EPITOME
7. Teachers/students = COMMENDABLE/EXEMPLARY i think those were the choices
8. Blood pressure = IMPAIR/MINIMIZE
9. APOCRYPHAL because the writing was of dubious authenticity
10. Person's temperament changed from EFFUSIVE to RETICENCE
11. DISPROVE...REFUTE
12. CURTAIL - I believe because of a lack of funds
13. INDIGENOUS
14. SCORN ..DEIGN (They SCORNED her because she didn't have a PhD and would not DEIGN to look at her work
15. ADVOCATES...CRITICS
16. RESISTANT .. POPULAR (had to do with acid rain and glass)
17. FOREBODING .. ELATION (answer called for a pair of antonyms. SC had to do with a person who moved from one place to another)
18. George Eliot did a PROFOUND analysis
19. COMPARATIVE .. ABSOLUTE (had to do with the concept of best seller)</p>
<p>Writing
. Were we to change = correct --- currently under debate
. Diction error = insure --- assure
. the editor "would have followed her instincts and run the story if not for the legal trouble" The problem gave "ran", but it needs to be "run" since it goes with "have"
. Life as a Dog: I think no error - "had he adopted an adult POV" is correct as is
TWO NO ERRORS</p>
<p>Math
. Honeycomb = equilateral triangle...sure it was a hexagon, but not regular
. Upside down parabolas --- c = -17 c as in c the constant, but the choice is e.
. Constant of 5 sequence (1243) 28th digit = 3
. 50th day after sunday = Monday lolololoollo
. Sum of x + y +z = 13/6 of x
. Average of the 30 numbers = 9.1
. Antifreeze = 40% graph interp lol
. ABCD with rectangle and two congruent triangles = area of 25
. Set A = even numbers, Set B = 2 digit mult of 7 ---> 7 numbers intersect
. Length of rectangle with length 3x and width x in yards = 315
. Segment tangent to circle --- area = 1/8 of circle
. Three parallel lines, the fifth can make = ZERO triangles
. Most common price = $4.50
. 5% tax --> cost $2000 originally
. Root 153 was distance between intercepts
. Rectangle box = volume of 15000
. Diamond formed by radii within two intersecting circles, perimeter = 20
. 2 points where abs (g(x)) > f(x)
. 2z = 4z, so 8z = 0
. x/p, x/r, x/t, where p, r, t are prime numbers and x/p, x/r are integers...x = pr^2
. 0.N and 0.M5 --- sum = 7
. 5 integers sum to 100, smallest = 10, largest = 54
. 3p = 4m, p cannot = 2 for m to be an integer
. Adding square and triangle gives area of 21
. 3a + b = 19, a+b = 7
. 2 hours distance = 4a + 8</p>
<p>yes^ manipulation of facts</p>
<p>akahmed: im pretty sure last two for mine were 2000 and 153
hobbie: was that another question other than the one listed, because i dont remember that choice for euro courts</p>
<p>can anyone else verify the two authors in mind-body dualism presenting it as appealing but incorrect (not exactly, some other word that was like it)?</p>
<p>Also, one question about the museums...i think one of the answers to one of the questions was "Private galleries are not mandated to view their art to the public"</p>
<p>I don't think that the answer to european courts is "don't fabricate evidence"
they're merely puffing up their defense and exaggerating it. I don't think they would go to an extent where they are making up evidence. my 2 cents</p>
<p>Yeah I got 200 and 153, perhaps the 7 and 8 werent that last two but they were grid ins</p>
<p>But right before it it mentioned American lawyers should 'mend' facts for a strong defense</p>
<p>try to remember akahmed lol</p>
<p>I think the private galleries was in the "museums have responsibility to the public" --- I dont know if your answer choice was exactly what was in the book...but if it is, then that is viable... idk lol my memory is getting hazy at this point</p>
<p>remember?</p>
<p>Not fabricate facts, the word was manipulate</p>
<p>i remember putting down "manipulation of facts" i just don't remember "dont fabricate evidence" i'm trying to disprove the latter.</p>
<p>lol hobbie, you have to take what i have down with a grain of salt, some of them are by no means the real answer verbatim - its fixed now</p>
<p>on another note, can you both verify that appealing/"incorrect" view of dualism?</p>