OCTOBER SAT Subject Test: Literature

<p>yes i believe i put that.</p>

<p>what was the other option for that confined question? it had the word liberating in it</p>

<p>^ yes thats what i meant.
What was the answer for what prakash and her had in common- i remember one of the answer choices was that they both did not listen to an elder, that seemed to limiting to me but it was the only one i found true.</p>

<p>the confined one was about how he felt in her bedroom.
What did you say about the awkward little laugh?
Also how about "beating" one? saying she is special and perculiar?
For the different passage, about the meaning of undivine magic- was it accidental?</p>

<p>i put accidental for undivined. for the awkward little laugh, what were the choices? for the beat one, i said she is special and peculiar yes. </p>

<p>for what prakash and her had in common, i put they both did not listen to an older man's advice</p>

<p>I thought the test was pretty damn hard. Hated that one passage about the guy and the girl in the countryside.</p>

<p>Shall we get an answer list going?</p>

<p>Criminal
Indian marriage
Guy + girl in country
Fields of golden hay
Woman who owns the store</p>

<p>What else was there?</p>

<p>I don't think I put objective narration. I put one of the later choices...personal something since objective is typically defined as "undistorted by emotion or personal bias" and this guy was obviously creating excuses for his theft.</p>

<p>accidental- indevined
both didnt listen to elder man
jasmine in hair- symbolized who she would become
self serving
confided and free (sweet room and sweet..outdoors?)
objective narration for the first q</p>

<p>wait was it subjective or objective?</p>

<p>btw mariamare i put personal somehting too and im pretty srue its right but it doesnt seem to be the generel consensus</p>

<p>no, ugh, stasis i said monologue for that one. dang</p>

<p>i think i might've read it as subjective and chosen that one mistakenly.</p>

<p>Ok, well I thought it wasn't too hard...the passages were great and easy, but the wording of the questions was a little...weird, so idk how I did.</p>

<p>Here is what I have for some of the questions previously asked:</p>

<p>Dragon teeth – retribution (nothing else made sense lol!)
Appalled - she definitely wasn't appalled
Indian woman's husband was Self serving (displaying her to his friends)
"You beat everything" – because she is both peculiar and special
Apostrophe (direct address) was not in poem
Previous criminal act
Previous knowledge of jewelry (he knew how much it was worth)</p>

<p>Here are the ones I'm not sure about, can anyone tell me what they put?</p>

<p>"dear man" Country perspective – woman?
Passage two, periodic sentences or extended simile?
Jasmine in hair – her new life?
First question – objective narration? or a monologue? I didn't think it was objective in the slightest...after all it was ONLY his viewpoint, and he was justifying robbery!! I put monologue
Undivined – unexpected/unforeseen? that's what I put, not accidental.</p>

<p>Criminal
-objective narration</p>

<p>Indian Marriage
-both didn't listen to elder man
-jasmine in hair symbolized who she would become
-self serving</p>

<p>Fields of golden hay</p>

<p>Man + woman in countryside</p>

<p>Woman who owns store (Louisa + Guy)
-confided and free</p>

<p>Feel free to copy/paste and just add to the list.</p>

<p>I completely disagree about it being objective....that's like the exact opposite of what it is. Would you consider him an objective witness at his own trial for robbery? </p>

<p>And what was the question for field of golden hay? If it was what sheaves meant...I put harvested and left on the ground</p>

<p>yeah. i don't think it was objective at all either; although i put it.</p>

<p>I put monologue- objective didn't make sense, because he was justifiying his actions, not just stating them. </p>

<p>Yeah, I put harvested and left on the ground.</p>

<p>i didn't put objective either...</p>

<p>monologue was probably it. Butternut what'd you put for "undivined"?</p>

<p>What about: </p>

<p>"dear man" Country perspective – woman?
Passage two, periodic sentences or extended simile?
Undivined – unexpected/unforeseen? that's what I put, not accidental</p>