<p>hopefully these were experimental, i cant remember. but what was the one that was like which point lies within the interior of this circle and they had a circle. And the other one was like if a square had this, this, and this point, what is a point if it is reflected over the y=-x line</p>
<p>want2beIvy,,can u tell me the exact qeustion of the shaded region?</p>
<p>I didn't have the popcorn question, but I did have the square reflected over the y=-x line, so I am pretty sure it wasn't experimental. The answer was (-3,-3), if I recall correctly.</p>
<p>cool got that.</p>
<p>did the question with the rectangle and the triangle and the popcorn question both in the experimental?---are they even the experimental????</p>
<p>was the rectangle and triangle problem how many triangles are needed to make this rectangle? and i dont recall a popcorn question.</p>
<p>I recall the experimental section - it was the one where it told you do multiply an equation by 2 and divide it by 3. The answer is that it it multiplies by 12.
There was also a question and it asked what RS can't be. The answer was 6.</p>
<p>i seriously do not remember the question about the area of the shaded triangle (the one whose answer is 50) are you sure that wasn't experimental? i don't recall it at all.</p>
<p>christina...the question just said "determine the area of the shaded region within the pentagon" and then there was the shape...think of an irregular pentagon where the left side = 8, the right = 6, and the bottom is separated into 2 segments, 6 and 8, respectively. The two bottom angles were 90degrees. From where the segments met, there were hypotenuses stretching to the corners. </p>
<p>lol...that was thorough</p>
<p>it was 10x10 and then divide by 2. I think I put 100 for that.. I'm not sure... I hope it is the experimental but I don't recall at all.</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the problem where they give u a circle with like........ center (0,4) or something and they're like which point is in the interior of the circle? And was the r^2tu=100 and rtu=40 problem experimental?</p>
<p>art_star...I had 4 writing sections....so i don't think I had math experimental, and I had that question.</p>
<p>yes kevin that was experimental indeed. The answer 6 if your curious</p>
<p>
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it was 10x10 and then divide by 2. I think I put 100 for that.. I'm not sure... I hope it is the experimental but I don't recall at all.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>it isnt experimental. i had a writing experimental, and i had that question.</p>
<p>and keviniscool, i think that was exp.</p>
<p>i didnt have 6 as a answer choice? it was like 5, 10, 20, 30 and 40 lol</p>
<p>I don't remember exactly how.. but I found that the answer had to be multiples of 1,2,4,8 or something like that.</p>
<p>Somebody explained it to me. I didnt get it right, thank god it was experimental. But it said stu are positive integers. the answer was 30, because it was stu=40 right? If st was 30, then t would have been 4/3.</p>
<p>what was the family energy one?</p>
<p>yeah i had an extra writing section as well. i still honestly don't remember it but i guess i'll just go with the flow.</p>
<p>i'm pretty sure my test was experimental math. for those of you who had sec 2 and 3 math, which one was the experimental? </p>
<p>i think it is section 2, due to difficulty.</p>
<p>can anyone who has read the whole thread please say whether it was section 2 or 3?</p>