**Official April ACT English 2013

<p>@jags5991, #1 would be their</p>

<p>1) it was definitely “their” because the subject was “collies” which was plural so it or your wouldn’t be valid</p>

<p>what was the answer to the question asking which most emphasizes the girl repeating back rules to her mother? Was it that she “parroted back” or she “stated confidently” to her mother?</p>

<p>^parroted back</p>

<p>i said parroted because it fits repeats…</p>

<p>yup, parroted back</p>

<p>Was there a comma before a phrase in quotes that ended with a period? it was in the middle of the english (think in the 40s)</p>

<p>Does anyone remember that question it was like The border collies, became increasingly popular or something like this? I can’t remember what it said, but does anyone remember what their answer was? I know there was an answer that used the word quintessential or a word very similar to it.</p>

<p>For the photography one I put that it takes more than just learning a few steps to take a photograph (or something along those lines).</p>

<p>@pumpkin13 I put quintessential to herding or something like that.</p>

<p>@pumpkin: I chose the answer choice with quintessential in it</p>

<p>oh @pumpkin13 are you talking about the question where it was related to a first sentence in a new paragraph and the question asked which one would be most relevant to the preceding sentences if all of them were true? i chose that the border collies were _____ (something like quintessential) sheep herders or something like that. The others didn’t really relate that much to the paragraph’s focus of the collies gathering up the sheep (i’m pretty sure, but i’m not positive)</p>

<p>Good because I put the quintessential answer too! Does anyone remember the question that followed? Something about the Industrial Revolution. That question really got me because it sounded awkward to me.</p>

<p>@pumpkin13 I think I put like… AS the industrial revolution was growing or something</p>

<p>^ another answer choice was like ", WHICH "</p>

<p>For the question about the whales, did you keep the phrase that says that they migrated from Georgia??</p>

<p>@Cbatarseh No. I left the whole phrase out because it made the sentence sound more confusing. It already mentioned that they were from the North Atlantic</p>

<p>See, I chose to leave it because I thought it made more sense to say where they migrated from since it said where they migrated to. How sure are you about your answer?</p>

<p>I’m pretty confident since the beginning of the sentence included that they were from the North Atlantic.</p>

<p>I agree with ephemeralbliss. I thought that the message was quite redundant.</p>