Offical June Act English Section Thread

<p>Does anyone remember the answer to the very first question? I spent about 30 seconds with it…I probably was just over thinking it because it’s normally the easiest question.</p>

<p>I completely agree with that ^^^^</p>

<p>Well the first passage was about the grapevines. I remember the second question asking which one would fit the passage the best. I said no change because all the others didn’t make sense since the passage did talk about those types of fruits.</p>

<p>What did y’all get for the first one on the second page of the grapevine passage. It was like which option contrasted from the beginning of the sentence. It was like messy and neat (or at least that’s what I thought)?</p>

<p>It was something about haphazardly drooped right?</p>

<p>Yeah, I didn’t choose that one though because there wasn’t a contrast with that option.</p>

<p>I think I chose the option that said they were neatly aligned on the table because the first part of the sentence described the grapes in an unorganized way.</p>

<p>the answer was haphazardly drooped because in the beginning it was like : from far away the vines were neatly stacked in rows,etc. contrast would be opposite of neat.</p>

<p>I think it was the opposite. We have the same idea here I think.</p>

<p>I think the grapes were haphazardly dropped neatly on the table.</p>

<p>same here ^</p>

<p>I think all the other options were not contrasting, the neatly lined grapes on the table I think was the answer.</p>

<p>i agree with random, lookingup i think you over thinked it.</p>

<p>it threw me off for a second because i couldn’t determine what was the beginning paragraph, the act has awkward spacing -_-</p>

<p>Yeah, but we’re all on the same page, right?</p>

<p>far away they looked aligned in rows and what not. dropping hazardously made sense.</p>

<p>Wait hold on. I thought they asked you to contrast between the first or second sentence which talked about how there were neat rows of grapes, which means that a contrast would imply messiness or droopiness. </p>

<p>Unless I read the question wrong…</p>

<p>Snayyan, I really think that’s the sentence was opposite - haphazardly then neatly aligned.</p>

<p>yes that is what we are implying the beginning stated about grapevines being neat, and the opposite of that was messy/drooping.</p>

<p>I think the haphazardly part came first then it was the neatly aligned tables.</p>

<p>imadropout, you’re right</p>

<p>I thought that the option that I chose was the neatly aligned on the tables.</p>