***Official Dec 2014 SAT (US ONLY)***

<p>@Elrulil I’m 90% sure “denied of” was wrong. It should either be “denied the rights” or “deprived of the rights”</p>

<p>Ey it’s not like it matters since you’re checking this anyways. </p>

<p>i wonder how bad a -2 on math will be.</p>

<p>-2 math -2 cr -1 w, 10-12 i bet. hope the cr curve isnt killer</p>

<p>GUYS I FOUND the Alice Birthday passage.</p>

<p>Go to the Amazon page of “The Ropewalk” and press “Look Inside” the book. It’s right at the very beginning.</p>

<p>So do we have consensus on the tenacious… eradicate sentence completion? I unfortunately put, unyielding… fabricate on that one</p>

<p>@Woandering How many SATs have you taken?</p>

<p>I honestly think it could either be “clarify the setting” or “explain her attitude”. Though the attitude answer could be extrapolating a little more, so I guess that could be wrong.</p>

<p>fire what did the question say? and it’s eradicate</p>

<p>@woandering it says at least one. A =670 B=300 170 got both… 670-170=500 300-170=130 that means 130+500 = 630. We were both wrong</p>

<p>@APScholar18 2 before today’s, although 1 one was in middle school so that’s off the record now. So colleges will be seeing today’s and one other one. I’m not bothering a 3rd time. Either I cancel today’s and do another ‘2nd’ time, or I do the ACT instead.</p>

<p>“That faith too, had slipped away from her with casual troubling ease. Like discovering a hole in her pocket through which a precious trinket had dropped and been lost, she could not pinpoint when the miracle had left her.” What was the question/answer in reference to this citation?</p>

<p>@Jackytang23‌ </p>

<p>B is equal to 320, not 300.</p>

<p>@Woandering do you mind sharing what you got the time after middle school and prediction for today?</p>

<p>@fireonice‌ </p>

<p>Something about ‘casual troubling ease.’ I put something along the lines of, she felt bad that she lost these feelings/thoughts without knowing it.</p>

<p>@Woandering so “Out of loyalty, each spring the family still attended the Memorial Day parade, shabbily reinforced over the years by opportunistic floats from other jurisdictions: a pickup truck full of people in Star Trek costumes, a van from the television station in Brattleboro, a Frito-Lay truck from which employees in matching polo shirts tossed bags of chips, a woman in her pink Mary Kay car trailing ribbons like a honeymoon vehicle.” I guess your answer might make more sense, I just don’t think “self-interest” was very good wording. I guess I went by this section too fast.</p>

<p>@APScholar18‌ </p>

<p>MS: 1800
Sophomore: 2210 (800M 710CR 700W)
Today:
W: -3/4 (740?)
R: -1/2 (790?)
M: 0 (800?)</p>

<p>So hopefully, 2330. I’m aiming for 2300+ anyway.</p>

<p>P.S my estimations were based on erikthered’s released SAT curves, and I used the harshest ones.</p>

<p>@Woandering or anyone else do you remember the other options for the “casual troubling ease” question?</p>

<p>@fireonice I’m pretty sure woandering is correct on this</p>

<p>Also, on the PSAT I heard some people asked College Board about specific questions and got responses back. Can you do that for the SAT too, and how? Just curious…</p>

<p>@fireonice‌ </p>

<p>The only real problem about your answer (except that in the question, it is just ‘second best’ and SAT asks for the best answer), is that people usually don’t need to ‘take the opportunity’ to celebrate. Opportunistic people are like people who would kill if given the opportunity JUST to go up the ranks. Not premeditated murder; just that there was the opportunity.</p>