<p>i got some about whether or not we should gather knowledge first before taking action, or taking action first… something along the lines of that</p>
<p>Ok…I was beginning to worry that i’d miss read the question…i got a question along the lines of is it better to think about a situation before you take action or take action without thinking</p>
<p>qn: where should sentence be placed? before sentence 11, 13,15 etc something like that. i got C. right?</p>
<p>@Ownage11: If you are talking about the cars and hybrids question it is before sentence 14 which was E?</p>
<p>how about historical speculation?</p>
<p>i think that all the internationals got the knowledge topic</p>
<p>^That was from the CR.</p>
<p>@Ownage11: That was a reading question concerning what the author was doing by referring to Mercator in the “Space Passage.” I chose historical speculation in any case because Mercator was a historical figure and the author was speculating on what he would have thought had he known digitally mapped outer space photos would have come from his work.</p>
<p>what about what women and aristocrats have in common?</p>
<p>what was the answer to the lemon question?</p>
<p>@Ownage11: I believe i put something about it being a full-time endeavor, but i’ve heard arguments about social position holding them back, which doesnt make sense for aristocrats.</p>
<p>it is definitely full-time endeavor. though art being time consuming may not be the entire point of the paragraph, it is a significant point and explicitly taken from the last 10-or-so lines.</p>
<p>When did this become the Critical Reading topic? Also, for the last time, is “know about” the proper idiom, or “know of”?</p>
<p>What was the answer to the sentence (the ones where you pick which word is the error) that had the words “created(i think?)” and “has sponsored”</p>
<p>Sorry that’s really vague lol</p>
<p>i think the answer for “john is the only one of three of my friends of high school who still WRITE to me” question was no error. WRITE in this sentence is used to describe MY FRIENDS, not JOHN. I remember doing a similar problem from CB</p>
<p>^@oron33:</p>
<p>I’d have to disagree with you. It would be WRITES because it’s referring to “one of my friends”. You would say one of my friends “writes” to me, not one of my friends “write” to me, because of the “one”.</p>
<p>Yeah take out everything in between John and the verb. John…writes to me. Subject-verb agreement.</p>
<p>Blindest posters I’ve ever seen. Meh.</p>
<p>I’m not saying saying one of my friends “writes” to me is wrong. I am saying you cannot be sure for whom that description is used for. Since it can be both “one” of friends who write to me or “one” of friends who “writes” to me, in grammar correction i think no error is right.</p>
<p>I’m trying to find that similar question from cb that I did. Ill post it up as soon as i find it.</p>