Official Dec 2012 ENGLISH thread

<p>After paragraph 1. The paragraph in no. 75 posed the question, “what happens to the paintings…” Paragraph 2 of the essay answered that question.</p>

<p>It was supposed to go after paragraph 1. The last sentence was something like “where do they put the artwork that aren’t on display”, then paragraph 2 goes on to explain that…</p>

<p>Oh I remember being confident and reading that sentence, putting it after that. I must’ve just forgotten the number of the paragraph lol. Pretty sure it was b though</p>

<p>yeah it was after p1</p>

<p>Does anyone know the answer to the question where there was a colon and then a list of things? I think I got rid of the colon and just kept the verb before it</p>

<p>Pretty sure I did that also. the colon wasn’t necessary</p>

<p>I got rid of the colon, pretty sure about that one.</p>

<p>What about the who/whom one? I first had who, then changed it to whom then. I don’t think I should have changed it…</p>

<p>no colon
10char</p>

<p>Should be who</p>

<p>I put whom. I put whom because I thought that the subject was X while the object was Y. So i put whom but now I’m not sure.</p>

<p>verifying who.</p>

<p>I thought that the rule was that if it is the subject => who. It looks like who did not belong to the subject. Again, that was the one I was LEAST sure about .</p>

<p>Do these questions ring a bell?</p>

<p>1) Which of the following would precisely portray that fewer subscriptions were made for the Collectioner.
I put “only five more”. I think “occasionally” was also an option.</p>

<p>2) I don’t remember this question to well, but it was about the Collectioner. One answer was like “:Collectioner, in 1962, she wrote…”. The other answer was the same thing without the colon nor the commas.</p>

<p>only five more is right. Not sure about the other one… both sound wrong to me.</p>

<p>sorry to bother, but can anybody explain why it was who?</p>

<p>Rule of thumb of the ACT: it is never whom.</p>

<p>wallrus75, you are joking.</p>

<p>Yeah, it’s really rarely whom.</p>

<p>A way to figure it out is to substitute the word “he” and “him.” 95% of the time “he” will work which is equivalent to “who.”</p>

<p>Did you guys get “rather than” or “than” for the collectionner essay.</p>

<p>I am pretty sure it is rather than</p>