November 2009 SAT Math (US only)

<p>Holy crap…</p>

<p>I had 4 math sections and none of the stuff you guys are talking about sounds familiar.</p>

<p>yea c and d was zero thats what i got</p>

<p>The perimeter was 72-- 2D object, no faces. Asked what the area of one parallelogram was.</p>

<p>For the degrees one, mine was</p>

<p>100
120
130</p>

<p>no 110…</p>

<p>The math on my version of the test wasn’t very hard. I do remember some solutions of several problems still.
For #8 on my grid-in, it said that there are two functions, f(x) and g(x), that have the same non-zero slope. Find y in terms of f(x) and g(x) so that it is a zero slope. You should have noticed that f(x) and g(x) are parallel. Therefore, the answer is y = f(x) - g(x).</p>

<p>there was some strange question about odd consective integers - even consecutive integers… i said the answer was 1</p>

<p>anyone on the f(n)=1/square root of n-1000
?</p>

<p>There was a tricky one… Something about 5 integers’ mean was k and then what was the lowest integer? I put k - 5 but I’m not too sure if SAT is trying to trick me from putting the obvious answer.</p>

<p>if i had two grid in sections does that mean that one of them was experimental?</p>

<p>@keekdapolak
Yes.</p>

<p>187 I remember that one too and I put the same thing. Do you remember a question if a line passed through a point P on the y-axis and the line’s slope was 0 (or maybe the slope was assumed I don’t remember) what was one point that HAD to be on the line? I put (-1, 1).</p>

<p>anyone remember a question like this
three points, A C and B. A and C are collinear while B is not. Which of the following is true?
A. AB=CB
B. AB>CB</p>

<p>??? i forget. and i don’t know the answer!</p>

<p>i got ab+bc>ac</p>

<p>YES! i think thats what i got thanks pizda</p>

<p>Basically the three points form a triangle, and the length of one side cannot be equal to or greater than the sum of the other two sides.</p>

<p>anyone remember the answer to that question about 72 angles and wat the sum of the 1st, 13th, and so on were equal too? I think I got 30</p>

<p>yea its the whole triangle rule thing. did you get an answer for the f(n)= 1 divided by the square root of n-1000?</p>

<p>ok sweet. damn this math section was easy, i dont think i’ve found out any that i missed. </p>

<p>how about II and III only for the xy=x one</p>

<p>@pizda
did you have four math sections? if so, that’s from an experimental section. Because I don’t remember that one. </p>

<p>@cacciato-- yes, its 30 degrees.
360/ 72= 5, 5(6)= 30</p>

<p>I got that answer checkmate. I’m pretty damn sure it’s right too.</p>