Offical June Act English Section Thread

<p>She’s not Indian; She’s American. her father was born in India, so the Indians feel some connection to her. The “Although she is an American citizen” one didn’t make sense because why should they care if she’s American? I’m fairly confident that it’s no change</p>

<p>never said anything bout her from india in the rest of story. Readers cant just assume that</p>

<p>Although she was an American citizen, many Indian people still followed her work or however it went. I jsut find that the fact they randomly pointed out her father was weird. Unless her father wsa famous, which was not in the passage, i think it was my answer. Having a father born in India doesn’t attract attention. The Indian people knowing she was Indian followed her work, not because her father was wrong. I hope im not wrong because i think my answer has a lot more sense to it.</p>

<p>I am confident that it is because her father was from India. I just looked her up on Wikipedia, and it talks about how she was born in America, but her father is from India. In order to establish the fact that India would have interest, it makes sense to say that her father is from there.</p>

<p>I had trouble with the question about conducting maintenance…was it some of which or some of it?</p>

<p>OPening paragraph it stated she was from india. I wasn’t sure beause i was only looking at her last name ( Williams) and then her first name (sh…)</p>

<p>idk man… im mentally drained it could be either. both make sense.</p>

<p>why i dont get is why her father’s birth is so significant to the Indian people unless he was famous or something. and why would her father’s birth place make Indians interested in his daughters work.</p>

<p>Does anyone remember the question about where should a paragraph be? It was for the one with the writer who wrote some stuff on the top of the mountain or whatever.</p>

<p>Answer choices was (not in order) no change, after paragraph 1, 2, 3 or something like that</p>

<p>What about the one about the “nonstandard” bikes? Was it nonstandard?</p>

<p>Was one of the answers “that” or “of which”?</p>

<p>And then in the America passage, where did Paragraph 4 belong?</p>

<p>I put nonstandard</p>

<p>@Amplifired</p>

<p>Wondering the same thing for paragraph 4. </p>

<p>I don’t remember the answer to the bike question but it was whatever was the simplest choice. </p>

<p>I think the answer was “that”</p>

<p>Nonstandard
of which
paragraph 4 no change</p>

<p>I looked on Wikipedia, and her father is actually a renowned neuroanatomist. I put father, but other answers could make sense. I was hesitant toward putting because she was born in the United States, since that doesn’t necessarily establish a link to India.</p>

<p>i put nonstandard
that
paragraph 4 no change (i think, or maybe i put it after paragraph 1)
@Debater1996 okay if he is famous, the story didnt’t tell us so we can’t assume. try to find the actual passage</p>

<p>What is the American Passage you guys are talking about?</p>

<p>superninja, explain why it is of which</p>

<p>For the mountain one it is after paragraph 1, because the first paragraph talked about the ascent, while this paragraph talked about the descent.</p>

<p>For the india question, wasn’t the question asking which provides the best possible reason for why she attracted attention for india? The only plausible explanation was that her father is from india. the other answers didn’t explain why in any way.</p>

<p>For the describe the dramatic setting. I put no change which was at the top of pikes peak I think. Is that right?</p>