<p>The cardboard question was asking how many intergers would there be if you did the square root of one, then two, then three so on and so forth until you got to the square root of 100.</p>
<p>The answer was 10/100</p>
<p>The cardboard question was asking how many intergers would there be if you did the square root of one, then two, then three so on and so forth until you got to the square root of 100.</p>
<p>The answer was 10/100</p>
<p>Ah that one. Yea it would be 10/100 since between 1 and 100 you have the squares of the first ten integers so ten of those square roots will be integers.</p>
<p>Boat Question:</p>
<p>Does anyone remember what the answer letter was?</p>
<p>i wanna say B with some certainty</p>
<p>Hey briguy – we were discussing this on another thread, and I see you’re also from Ohio – it seems that everyone from Ohio was at a test center with the multi-colored booklets and different tests. This still doesn’t answer WHY, but it gives some method to the madness…</p>
<p>:D</p>
<p>did anyone else start panicking when they used the law of cosines and it kept being 2700+ or something? (forgot to take the square root lol.) i’m ■■■■■■■■. :P</p>
<p>XiΞiX i freaked out as well</p>
<p>can someone describe the boat one? i cant remember.</p>
<p>and anyone remember the kWh equation one? 1 + .062(x)… C??</p>
<p>11+(first rate w/e it was)(1500)+(second rate)(x-1500)</p>
<p>@ XiΞiX. I was like ***? then I took the square root… haha…</p>
<p>XiΞiX - It was B (52)</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the question where there was a solid line drawn underneath and the question was asking which number gives the most cuts or something similiar to that? I had no clue what they were asking …</p>
<p>Also for the question above that, I believe it was asking for the sin of the smallest angle in a 45 degree triangle of ACD (or something similiar to that, but there was no figure drawn???)</p>
<p>sky – you had to draw it yourself from the scatter plot at the top of the page
I think it was 7/sqrt(58)</p>
<p>Hmm wait.</p>
<p>Was that the one on the graph? Where it was asking for the Cos of the smallest angle? </p>
<p>I think I got 7/sqrt(53) or something. I was debating between taht answer and the “3/sqrt(53)” chioce. not sure.</p>
<p>And there was another question about there being 4 points… and how many lines can be drawn that contain AT LEAST 2 of the 4 points. I put 6 (I assumed line = straight line, not curved)</p>
<p>Yea. They mean straight lines. If they ever started asking about curved lines the answer would be infinity LOL. The cos one was 7/sqrrt58 cause the smallest angle had a side that was seven long adjacent to it and if you got the length of hyp using pythagorean theorem or distance formula (which are technically the same thing) you get sqrrt58 cause one side was 7 and one 3 so 7^2 + 3^2 = c ^ 2 = 58 so the hypotenuse was sqrrt58 and cos is adjacent over hypotenuse.</p>
<p>i owned this section.</p>
<p>what was the answer to the square root of c^2?
possible choices were:
1/2
pi
3
etc…</p>
<p>^^^^^
it was definitely 3</p>
<p>It was definitly 3 because it had to be an integer, so that left only -1, -2, and 3. But since its the square root of a square, thats equal to the absolute value of c, so it would have to be positive, leaving only 3</p>
<p>what about the fan that was divided into 5 parts? it was asking the angle of rotation, anyone put 72?</p>