<p>@wildy are u sure about the sequoia trees one? whats wrong with “in which” without a comma?</p>
<p>Nothing wrong about in which…</p>
<p>The sequioa tree one had another error.</p>
<p>do u remember was the other error was?</p>
<p>In all the practice I have done, the collegeboard places “in which” only after commas. It was just a pattern I noticed by CB. Personally, I think “in which” sounds correct, but CB apparently thinks that instead of “in which”, “that” should be used. And at the end of the day, the opinion of CB is right.</p>
<p>I thought there was a clearer answer in that one tho</p>
<p>There was another error… so your wrong.</p>
<p>The cellphone one was “just by” because there was a clause after that saying “YOU can save energy” or whatever.</p>
<p>Well, maybe I’m wrong, I’m human so it happens. Well thats the only error I’ve found so far in the Writing (that problem could very well be one of the three problems I usually miss in the Writing Section).</p>
<p>I thought “just” sounded better</p>
<p>Moxess… there was no “you” in that sentence. I specifically looked for “you”, and it wasn’t there. </p>
<p>Just turning off cell phones saves power.</p>
<p>does anybody remember
section 10 2nd to the last question?</p>
<p>It’s definitely “just”. Also, “in which” was what I got. I also got “for example” (the car one).</p>
<p>I got “these”</p>
<p>one of the improving paragraphs was keep the original the same right? A?</p>
<p>I think it was something with carbon dioxide…</p>
<p>what was the 1952 question with the 33 year old writer? i got A but i remember i was torn between two answers.</p>
<p>***, either I remember it wrong or I can’t read… Honestly it’s more likely that I forget/am thinking about another one so let’s hope so lol. I’ve been wrong before though</p>
<p>Greek and Roman literature… </p>
<p>Is this singular or plural?</p>
<p>Cross, it’s plural.</p>
<p>If I remember correctly the answer was “which” or something?</p>