November SAT test A Thread

<p>guys what was the vocab with the lady and the investigation
and what were the other choices for the egg one besides inert and homogenous?
andddd… what were the other choices for the bonnie and clyde</p>

<p>i messed up vocab so badly omg</p>

<p>and i dont think so, then it could be almost any integer</p>

<p>Did you guys get the truck tickets being worth $2.5 more than the car tickets in that toll road? </p>

<p>“Fixed means unchanging?
Yes.
Solid means substantial?
Yes.
Tricky means difficult?
Yes.
Humor as a defense for a novel concept
I said it was Flippant to show an undesirable situation. Unsure Though.<br>
common sense can’t always be right?
Yes.
Impertinent but others think impromptu? Why?
I said Impromptu because it kind of sounded like she had asked everything on the list, but wanted to keep the interview going, so on a whim asked his age. It couldn’t have been impertinent because I saw no indication that asking a sensei his age was disrespectful: they knew the ages of all the past sensis, why not this one?
People in the scientific theory one believe that as long as an object is moving up it has an upward force?”
Yes</p>

<p>for bonnie and clyde i got doctor history and whatever went with doctor</p>

<p>what did you guys put for answers for the (x+a)(x+b) math question? because shouldn’t it be x= -a, -b so the answer would be the opposite of -2 and 3?</p>

<p>no it asked what “x” could be, meaning the mystery number…
yes for the 2.5</p>

<p>Did you guys get the truck tickets being worth $2.5 more than the car tickets in that toll road?
–yes</p>

<p>“Fixed means unchanging?-
Yes. --yes
Solid means substantial?
Yes. --yes
Tricky means difficult?
Yes.–yes
Humor as a defense for a novel concept --thats what the forum has concluded
I said it was Flippant to show an undesirable situation. Unsure Though.
common sense can’t always be right?
Yes. --also yes
Impertinent but others think impromptu? Why?
I said Impromptu because it kind of sounded like she had asked everything on the list, but wanted to keep the interview going, so on a whim asked his age. It couldn’t have been impertinent because I saw no indication that asking a sensei his age was disrespectful: they knew the ages of all the past sensis, why not this one?
–i dont remember what i put but it was not impromtu. and her asking him his age was disrespectful, which was further made clear by the deragatory nickname of “young sensei” she gave him. The question was a pointed one that was similar to a jibe
People in the scientific theory one believe that as long as an object is moving up it has an upward force?”
Yes – i dont know which question this is. the passage stated that most people believe that to be true, though it is actually false. that might help if you remember the context of the question</p>

<p>but impertinent’s main definition is irrelevant and asking his age was completely irrelevant? goshhhh I hate the SAT sometimes</p>

<p>it was -3,2 i still have it in my calculator haha</p>

<p>@kendoll: yea, obviously 27, 28, 29 if it were asking for the SEVENTH integer…</p>

<p>but i read the question like at least five times, and it said what can one of the SIX NUMBERS (the six numbers that have the sum of 135). I thought this question didn’t make any sense because it could be any numbers… and it didn’t say integers btw.</p>

<p>i put 27 just in case… because even what i read was right… 27 might as well work haha</p>

<p>impromptu- the clause before it was like, exhausting all the questions… so at that point she’s just adlibbing practically.</p>

<p>…sometimes?i think always :p</p>

<p>i put deliberate for the one that was comparing passages.</p>

<p>well… you could think of it that way. The title and position of sensei is one that is greatly revered and, usually, earned with age and wisdom. It also stated in the passage that he is the 2nd youngest sensei ever (by a wide margin), and the only one who was younger than him started the whole competition in the first place and was clearly a very talented/incredible person. so the main gist you get from that is that sensei’s are older by nature or at least have the wisdom.
So in the passage no but in its context i believe age is very important. i dont remember what i put for that though</p>

<p>heart2
it happens that you read questions wrong. I read one about a circle incorrectly by confusing diameter and radius. It happens
but the sat would not ask that question, because the range is far too large</p>

<p>What did u guys get for the number of women who spoke chinese? 60 percent are women and 10 percent speak chinese</p>

<p>Sent from my SGH-T959 using CC App</p>

<p>i got that there wasnt enough information to answer the question</p>

<p>And kendoll…it was definitely impromptu for that one, it was an on the spot question… Theres no evidence that it’s disrespectful to ask his age. </p>

<p>Sent from my SGH-T959 using CC App</p>

<p>I got that 2. Not enough info</p>

<p>Sent from my SGH-T959 using CC App</p>

<p>For the “truism” sentence in the passage about physics and what people assume (I think it was there, not sure), was it “commonplace”? I remember wondering if it was “childish” for some reason.</p>

<p>Yeah, impromptu because she was out of questions. Apparently it was cool for him that he was the 2nd-youngest, and also if he was that young it’s not so rude (or impertinent, if you prefer) to ask about age.</p>

<p>yes for commonplace.</p>