OCTOBER SAT Subject Test: Literature

<p>I think neither balance nor personification but apostrophe, if it's the question...</p>

<p>How about the last question? i barely had time to read it- i think i put "c". Also for the shocking poem with the garden/ lovers- was the linking component description of flowers?</p>

<p>butternut - reproduction, possibly?:)</p>

<p>last q was b, I'm almost certain...</p>

<p>Oh dear, I hope I didn't get apostrophe and personification mized up.....</p>

<p>apostrophe - oh my dear book, how much I love thee!
personification - my dear book assassinated me this night, causing me severe injuries</p>

<p>Okay, so I said personification was not used.</p>

<p>Go figure, you recieved severe injuries form being assasinated!</p>

<p>^ yea so, there was definitely repetition right (they used the word kill 100 times), so shouldn't it be balance?</p>

<p>balance was there... at first it seemed he downright condemned all books but then he noted that they have to be really careful in the process of censure as not to 'kill good books'</p>

<p>bleh..i put repetition...I didn't see any.</p>

<p>oh =(. The answer to the first one for that passage was that you should only censure books cautiously.<br>
Was another answer that books are a vital resource?
For the indian passage with the jasmine in the hair, what did that signify?</p>

<p>i agree, balance was definitely there. does anyone recall the last question for the country passage? it was an except question. three of the choices seemed all related.</p>

<p>anonymous -- vital resource is what i put. jasmine in the hair -- what were the choices again?</p>

<p>What was the answer to the very first question? Was it objective narration or something?</p>

<p>um for the jasmine one i put "foreshadows things to come" or something to that effect? Not happily married one.</p>

<p>objective narration yes. wasn't that for the crime one?</p>

<p>yea it was</p>

<p>anonymous, for jasmine, i dont recall putting foreshadows things to come. i might have put the wrong answer though. do you remember the last question for the country passage?</p>

<p>i'm afraid not- i would rather like to repress that passage lol, I'm sure many of my errors will come from there.<br>
for the passage with the "fastidious" lady and the suitor was one of the answers that the setting was too "confined" for the guy?</p>

<p>for flowers in hair, it signified what she would become (that other nature that her husband and prof. higgins were transforming her into). </p>

<p>Atleast, that's what i put.</p>

<p>the sweet room was confined, the sweet air was a relief..something like that.</p>