<p>I think it showed her transitory nature…how she kept moving around…</p>
<p>ugh… i thought i’d done so well, but i think i bombed the math.
flibb, for the .3 and box question i got .333333333repeated cause i put 5/15. i dont think i read the question right.</p>
<p>trunk - was that something like she wasn’t settled…
passage 2 refutes passage 1-
did anyone get innocuous on a SC about a jellyfish?</p>
<p>Then there was a number line A–B–C–D–E–F. They asked us to find the location of X such that A–X was twice of X–F…so the answer was between D and E</p>
<p>I thought it’s the opposite X–F was twice the A–X
so it is between B–C</p>
<p>one Critical Reading Quetions
it’s the last Sentence completion question of that section
A is sympathy, compassion, E is trust , naivete.
which one is correct?</p>
<p>it’s trust…naivete. it was supposed to a fault of his.</p>
<p>the trunk is for “unsettle lifestyle”</p>
<p>and that one question why author describe how the young man fell in love with the governess?
I chose “other man did the same thing” Is this right?</p>
<p>One para-passage the 4 question one
about internet, rail
the 1st question is that
what the both passage imply
I chose the internet investor are both greedy</p>
<p>and the 3rd question
compared to p2 the p1 is ?
I chose “glib”</p>
<p>what is the correct answer?</p>
<p>for the short passage i thought it was the one with all of them losing their investments.
and i got 8/100 not 8/25
and for the magician one with the howling kid, is it the extent to which the children tried to pretend?
and in the shakespeare passage, is the word indeed used to concede a point in passage 1</p>
<p>I think it’s losing their investments. The second passage does not mention greediness. And also extent is probably right for the howling kid.
Since “concede” means yielding to a point, the word “indeed” agrees that Shakesphere’s works comprise a wide range of knowledge.</p>
<p>
Actually it didn’t ask for why he fell in love. The question mentioned something about the description of his appearance. But I chose the same answer.</p>
<p>
I agree with all of your answers(although some of my friends disagreed with the temper and I’m not so sure myself) except for the Shakesphere question. Passage 1 drew conclusions rather than impose questions. Passage 2 “refuted” those hasty conclusions.</p>
<p>
Yep.
Innocuous in a physiological sense means that it is without poison.</p>
<p>for the “indeed” in shakespear
what is the content of the correct answer choice.</p>
<p>We can’t quote questions, so I’ll just reiterate: The author of passage 2 concedes to some of the points made in passage 1. But I’m not 100% sure it’s the correct answer.</p>
<p>i chose fundamental…of recent discovery</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>I chose “somber,” but I think you’re right. I didn’t know what the word meant.</p>
<p>**Lotsa questions ** :)</p>
<ol>
<li><p>The Internet/Railroad question - was the people Passage 2 have in common with Passage 1 “multimillionaire investors” ??</p></li>
<li><p>In math… How many combinations of 5, 10, and 25 cents can make 30 cents? (I think I put 5 or smth)</p></li>
<li><p>I had Writing in Section 2, 5, and 10… which one was experimental? (Hoping it’s 2)</p></li>
</ol>
<p>I got concede as well!</p>
<p>And yes…it was definitely innocuous!</p>
<p>Oh…just remembered another one! There was one about a bell and a horn ringing after 3 minutes and 5 minutes…so the next time they rang together was after 15 minutes!</p>
<p>and i now remember the relation between passage 1 and 2…maybe it was that passage 2 refuted passage 1
1</p>
<p>“2. In math… How many combinations of 5, 10, and 25 cents can make 30 cents? (I think I put 5 or smth)”</p>
<p>I also got the same! Anyone got a higher number? Though i think its not possible!</p>
<p>Btw, glib means:</p>
<p>1.
1. Performed with a natural, offhand ease: glib conversation.
2. Showing little thought, preparation, or concern: a glib response to a complex question.
2. Marked by ease and fluency of speech or writing that often suggests or stems from insincerity, superficiality, or deceitfulness.</p>
<p>Are you sure? I also chose glib, but I dont think the author was writing while giving it little thought!</p>