<p>for which one @jpqwert </p>
<p>I didn’t put variegation I think I put extrapolate…or is that another question? Haha not too sure</p>
<p>So set the number of hours equal to x. You have the rate times x plus the rate of the other times x equal to one pool. If that makes sense…</p>
<p>@Marrissa me too</p>
<p>It was a sentence completion about fish? I think @Hazzan97 </p>
<p>I got 1.2</p>
<p>hi @skieurope, just wondering why google docs arent allowed but we’re allowed to talk on this thread? </p>
<p>@Necrosympath for which? The pool?</p>
<p>@TheCalculator no way will the math curve be that lenient. -1 could very well be 790. But 780, 760, 750 after that won’t happen. At best, it will be 800,790,770,750,730. Most likely, 800,780-790,760,740,730</p>
<p>So was it “confident and measured” or “genial and ingratiating”? </p>
<p>I put confident and measured @FuzzyPeaches22 </p>
<p>Some kid walked out mid test and cancelled his scores. It was right after the experimental section and I seriously contemplated on whether I should follow him. Lol</p>
<p>@blubrrybanana22 haha I put no error but acknowledging was definitely spelt wrong right? </p>
<p>I put confident and measured, but I’m pretty sure it’s genial and ingratiating.</p>
<p>I got 135 and used a circle for it but idk</p>
<p>Most people are saying the math was hard and the reading/writing easy, but I found it to be the exact opposite. I got a 760 on my first sat reading and thought this one was quite difficult!</p>
<p>Hmm I didn’t like the word “ingratiating”…I mean was he really trying to flAtter them? I guess he did “congratulate them”. The word genial was perfect.</p>
<p>On the other hand, I didn’t like the word measuring. That sounded a little too cold and shrewd for the dealer (who had quite the boisterous personality).</p>
<p>Yep, that’s what I got
i plugged in values, and made a pool 6 gallons,
the 3 hour one flows at 2 gall/hour
2 hour one flows at 3 gall/hr
total 5 gal/her
6/5= 1.2</p>
<p>@Marrissa I was about ready to walk out after reading the essay prompt :D</p>
<p>What would the author of the gymnastics passage agree with?</p>
<p>was the triangle in a circle with one angle x=50, and the other one was 50 too? </p>