<p>good! i didnt read the passage but rather went to the questions and skimmed looking for key words, so i dont know the passages too well, but only missed one so far.</p>
<p>Could someone enlighten me on some of the answers to the mangrove questions that haven’t already been posted… I had to skim that one. Thanks.</p>
<p>I think one of them was they were NOT all over 200ft tall</p>
<p>or rather they they ALL had something like a root system of detoxification system of some sort</p>
<p>Yeah, they all had some salt system.</p>
<p>yeah that was it, a salt system. And i also remember that countries would take interest in them if they could be sold as commodoties because of what they can do with carbon</p>
<p>they all had the salt system</p>
<p>how much CO2 did they take in? I was running out of time and I couldn’t find that answer in the passage so I just guessed, anyone remember what it was?</p>
<p>^ one hundred per acre. It was in parenthesis</p>
<p>thanks, I know I put down something per acre so maybe I guessed right</p>
<p>Was one of the answers "they could absorb more CO2 than any other…?</p>
<p>I think so, I remember that option and I think it was correct. I remember Ong saying that they absorb the most CO2 of any plant or tree (or whatever) on the planet.</p>
<p>ok thats what i remembered. I also rembered something in the Chinese passage saying that “his works came out of the most common or mundane circumstances”</p>
<p>Yes, both of those answers are correct.</p>
<p>Ok with regards to the passage about the musician girl, that played softball… What was the answer to the question that had to do with the Girl choosing her piece, but something about her parents thinking it was disrespectful or something like that, anyways, the question had to do with capitalization, and why the Author Chose To Capitalize Each Word Like I am Doing Here. What did you guys choose?</p>
<p>for the capitalization question, the consensus here is that she was saying something that her parents or teacher had said. I’m not sure about the other question</p>
<p>i put “to indicate a harsher tone of voice” but wasnt sure</p>
<p>Predicted curve?</p>
<p>Did anyone say that nations would take interest in mangroves if some sort of Cap and Trade idea was put forward?</p>
<p>Nations would take interest if they could use Carbon as a commodity of trade.</p>
<p>It was not his works came out of the most mundane circumstances. The entire novel was about how the guy was incompetent with English and struggled to become a poet because of that; the most applicable message of the book was that one had to live a literary life in order to publish literature or whatever, especially given he even asks his friend poet that question. It’s one of the themes of the book. Nothing there in the text talked about how mundane his life was; in fact, it wasn’t mundane. He was a Chinese man trying to fit into American society as an immigrant. Mundane would be a kid that grew up playing football at his high school, got a blue collar job when he grew up, and had a typical family with a son and a daughter and a nice golden lab.</p>