What did you guys say for the zen passage: rationalizing a practice or finding the origins of a practice?
Rationale
I am pretty sure. That’s what I got
Trust me guys, you don’t want nor need the link, its a google docs page, with a bunch of idiots writing on it, it is unbearable, the majority of the people writing on it are illiterate and can barely spell grade school words right. It is just people begging for the answers and debating which answer was right or wrong, just like on here. No one knows for sure.
What abt explicit in 1 but not 2: the popularity not subdue in modern time right?
There actually is, there was an asterisk after the word Gulliver and at the end of the passage, it defined Gulliver as a some myth where there was a shipwreck and Gulliver was left with creatures that were 6 inches tall, which relates to him mentioning he was too big to help.
Sinuous?
Perfectly describes author in passage 1?
Amoeba understand remarkable nature?
What did you guys put for the math question with the semicircles and we’re supposed to calculate the radius or something?
Anybody else think sinuous was correctly used and the answer was “no error”? I’m holding out hope since @grparker21 says answer was no error.
For the ominous or the geniune confusion one, I got unlikely xxx, which is B. To me, the quote just doesn’t fit into the theme of the paragraph.
Not st about shipwreck???
Zaffre: the radius is 4
What was the answer to the last question for the 16 question section? I know if has been narrowed down to either 36 or 54. I said 54, am I right?
I put “no error” on that one @ambitionsquared
Does anybody know what the whole sinuous question? I don’t remember even seeing that.
@RealMadrid07 It’s 36. The question said 6 multiplied by an even integer, so 6 * 6 = 36 which isn’t divisible by 8
@zacle1234 okay thanks!
Do you remember what the question asked?
9 isn’t an even integer so how would that work?