Offical Nov Sat I - Math Experimental

<p>i still cant believe i changed my answer on the average problem from 75 to 60. finishing 12 minutes early leaves doubts in your head <em>angry</em>!!</p>

<p>I finished like 15 mins early as well and did the whole section over again backwards.</p>

<p>ebony, it wasnt a probability question. they arent asking the probability of getting green or anything like that. they ask how much does he need to remove to be 100% certain that he has 7 at least. In the worst case scenario, if his chances sucked... he would draw 10 reds, 10 blues, 10 yellows, then there would be 10 greens left, and he would draw 7 of them then stop, because he would know that in the worst case scenario he got all the reds, all the blues, all the yellows, and there were 3 greens still in the bag. think about it :)</p>

<p>Alright someone verify this for me. For the 45% siblings problem, answers went:</p>

<p>A. 25%
B. 35%
C. 45%
D. 65%
E. 85% </p>

<p>Or something like that? Because I remember gridding C...</p>

<p>newport beach</p>

<p>i cant believe you guys remember not only the problems, but the layout of the answers :D</p>

<p>
[quote]
Wilma Carther, in (novel title), portrayed western people, characterizing them AS either...</p>

<p>Not the exact, but that's what it boiled down to. In (novel title), portrayed, characterizing, and D were underlined (D was obviously wrong...was something ridiculous)

[/quote]

Yup. It was Willa Cather, in her 1917 novel O Pioneer!, blahblah, portrayed western people, characterizing them including....
I remember this because I re-read it forever. It was the "including," which was D.</p>

<p>What was the final answer to the probability one with 4 different colored cards?</p>

<p>Cards is a verified 37</p>

<p>37 / 40</p>

<p>is the cards question on the same section with the trepazoid? does everyone have the it?</p>

<p>d3!ty I just remember gridding C for 45%... so yes, you're fine</p>

<p>so wait which math was experimental?</p>

<p>quote
thanks for sticking to the guidelines (sarcasm)</p>

<p>anyway well YES it has been confirmed A is the answer...and 1.01 is acceptable the answer must be between 1 and 1.5. Please do not reiterate this question again and </p>

<p>hmm does that mean 1 and 1.5 are considered right</p>

<p>no, it must be between 1 and 1.5, exclusive. the problem said it could not touch the squares. it would touch the inside square if r = 1 and the outside square if r = 1.5, so it has to be between those two numbers, exclusively.</p>

<p>ahhh oh well, i was going to put 1.51 anyways lol</p>

<p>Can someone help me put together these 6 answers? I had a tough time w/ this. What I remember putting is:</p>

<p>-Keep sentence as is (the one w/ "too")
-One combining sentences one but that was easy.
-Add sentence after sentence 10 or 11...I believe I put 11 (does anyone remember the context)
-The last question asked about what should be added at the end. I put something about Dragonwings being a good story and the character was glad to have read it. Others put stuff about Chinatown & biography but I didn't think those were supported by anything...</p>

<p>...and there's 2 more. Any confirmation on the ones I mentioned or does anyone remember the other 2?</p>

<p>anyone out there? :(</p>

<p>Alright for Physics passage:</p>

<p>Theories were "provisional" because theories could never be 100% right because of skewed visualization or something like that?</p>

<p>The very last quesiton showed the guy moved around and made noises while he worked?</p>

<p>did anyone have a probability question with a 6-sectioned spinner? was the answer 15/36?</p>

<p>Digamma that was experimental. CB must be recycling its questions; I specifically remember that 15/36 question from the Blue Book.</p>