I remember putting pedestrian/undistinguished for one sentence completion and featured in/scant for another. Both definitely were not from the same question.
what was the answer to that question in the math with a cube that had an edge of 20 ft and you needed to find the radius of the sphere (I thought that the sphere had to be placed inside of the cube so the answer would be 10, but my friend thought you had to put the sphere inside the cube and put 10 sqrt(3)) Who was right?
i dont think i had the boy taking off his clothes/talking back to his uncle passage
my experimental was about glowing bacteria in squids and fish
My test takes 5 hours and 30 minutes and I only have nine sections while the standard test will have 10 sections and last 3 hours and 45 minutes
@chrysanthemum14 do you remember the other options for the pedestrian/undistinguished question? I don’t remember those words
I didn’t have the passage about the boy and uncle
@aznboi4981
Everyone had an experimental. Everyone gets 2 W sections, 3 CR sections, 3 M sections, and 1 essay. The additional section is the experimental.
The question said that *n is the smallest number that can be added to n so it becomes a perfect square.
and to find the same value as *21.
the choices were something like A. 2, B. 6, C. 12 D. 77…
Huh? We had ten sections but it lasted from approx 8:15 to 12:45. (after filling out the info)
what u get for the history book one that asked, “what is the tone of the 1st 4 lines?”
Did anyone have the question I asked about above^
@mnallamalli97
falsely dramatic
@16elir
I don’t remember any other choices
Sphere apparently had to be inside the cube making the radius 10.
I, however, that the cube was supposed to be inside the sphere which made me put 10 rad 2.
3 hours and 45 minutes is what the cb website says, but that’s not including the time it takes for instructions and breaks etc. so its probably longer than that all together
falsely dramatic
also i dont remember selecting the choice w/ pedestrian, what were the other choices
yeah I said falsely dramatic too
@Chrysanthemum14
thanks
does the collegeboard ever release the test
did anybody get this?
*n is the smallest number that can be added to n so it becomes a perfect square.
find the same value as *21.
the choices were something like A. 2, B. 6, C. 12 D. 77…