OCTOBER SAT Subject Test: Literature

<p>Yes, Stasis, I believe thats what I put. :)</p>

<p>how about a choice about relating the lover to weather? was that the correct one?</p>

<p>THats what I put, too. Great minds think alike. :D</p>

<p>whoo yay. :D</p>

<p>can someone compile a list?</p>

<p>Yeah, I'm feeling really great about this test. My 15 practice tests have payed off...so far I haven't missed a single one, but I still need peoples thoughts on: </p>

<p>For the country side passage
- what was the answer for the question about how the story was told- one choice dealt with from humorous to something else, i don't really remember.</p>

<p>I think detached and satirical to loving and tender (?)</p>

<p>"For the uptight women store passage, what was the murmuring contrasting? It was either her convictions or something with idiosyncracies?"</p>

<p>I think I picked like "personal and ..." Someone help us out here?</p>

<p>"dear man" Country perspective – woman? </p>

<p>And the undivined question LOL</p>

<p>lolcats, i think i considered detached and satirical to loving and tender but changed it to another similar option. do you recall any of the other choices?</p>

<ul>
<li><p>YES! That's what I put, thank you for jogiging ym memory (satirical, I mean)</p></li>
<li><p>I haven't the slightest idea what you are talking about. Which passage?</p></li>
</ul>

<p>It was unknown. Thats my story and I'm stickin to it. :)</p>

<p>@cats
-I put detached to loving and tender
-idosyncracies
-undivined=accidental</p>

<p>i picked personal and.. although i wasnt sure</p>

<p>undivined people seemed to be saying "Accidental"
makes sense because undivinded means like.. not divine.. not contrived, therefore accidental.</p>

<p>someone make a list! i would but its painful to see all the questions im missing :(</p>

<p>wasn't it strong habits of mind? or something</p>

<p>Every time I have heard undivined being used, it has been in the context of unknown.</p>

<p>Oh, lol, now I remember the OCD lady passage. I put idiosyncracies.</p>

<p>no no, divine is to predict. So to undivine is to not know, I think. Oh well, it was a tough one.</p>

<p>Butternut, we're talking about Louisa's mumblings. </p>

<p>personal and ...</p>

<p>or the one with idiosyncrasies. I'm pretty such I didn't choose idiosyncrasies, although it was attractive, because the other one was wrong.</p>

<p>Hm, what was the other word though? I'm pretty sure the other word made it wrong, which is why I chose personal and X</p>

<p>gosh, I am completley blanking. Lit was the first test I took- that was a long time ago....</p>

<p>what was the idiosyncrasies question?</p>

<p>For undivined, I put "not understood," since I took it in the context that it wasn't contrived thus it was something with a mysterious nature. However, it's true that divined could also mean predicted, so not predicted would probably have been better. Were they asking you for implications or the denotation? Depending on how the question was worded, answer may be different.</p>

<p>Idiosyncrasies was the question in the Dagget-Louisa passage where it asked you something along the lines of what can we guess for Louisa's character.</p>

<p>the first passage- they had a quote and it meant that she was justifying or something right? near the end fo the passage she describes the necklace as somehting the girls parents gave her and it quoted that phrase and asked what its purpose was. what was the answer?</p>

<p>and aslo the nanny or hwatever was "flirtatious and.. unattentive"?</p>

<p>I thought "clumsy/inexperienced"</p>