Official Dec Test (CR-Shakespeare, Autobiography-brother Dennis)

<p>“i think that was the worst prompt ive had out of june, oct, and dec.”</p>

<p>Actually this prompt is very flexible, since so many historical evidence about “unlearning” as truly rewarding can be used. I used slavery, the quantum theory, and Rutherford’s gold foil experiment.</p>

<p>burgueoning/ paucity right</p>

<p>More SCs</p>

<ol>
<li>It was BURGEONING .. PAUCITY</li>
<li>The praise one was SPARRING … EFFUSIVE</li>
</ol>

<p>watson, i had the west coast prompt. it was different from yours.</p>

<p>so was the chesnut tree one blight? and whats the praise one.</p>

<p>“2. The praise one was SPARRING … EFFUSIVE”
wait i thought the teacher had nothing good to say about her/him</p>

<p>What was the paucity one? I think I remember putting that but I’m not sure</p>

<p>yeah…burgeoning, paucity is correct</p>

<p>it put scarcity for that one and blight for chestnut tree. God bless me</p>

<ol>
<li>The praise one was SPARRING … EFFUSIVE what were the other choices here</li>
</ol>

<p>im so mad…i had innocous for the answer then i got rid of it (ommitted it) and for the one about why she was a governess i had 4 then changed it to something else…other than that i think i did pretty good</p>

<p>was there one about…</p>

<p>“facile and slogan?”</p>

<p>I put that but im not sure if its the right answer</p>

<p>Idealistic vs. misguided for Shakespeare is a matter of precedence.
What is the first thing that the author of Passage 2 would say about Passage 1?
His reasoning is illogical. That essentially means he’s misguided.
I see how you can think of him as idealistic - but it’s not supported directly by the passage. For all we know, Passage 1 guy could be extremely practical and no-nonsense guy.</p>

<p>I had 4 CRs… does that mean that one was experimental??</p>

<p>so chestnut tree = blight? anyone?</p>

<p>something with lavish for praise was a choice.</p>

<p>misguided for </p>

<p>me too, I got that one because of the expression “non sequitur”</p>

<p>idealistic is directly supported by Shakespeare passage. The conception in passage one is that edward de vere “perfectly fits” the play as passage two states.</p>

<p>lavish/praise is wrong</p>

<p>blight is correct</p>

<p>ITS NOT MISGUIDED?! ewwwwwwww</p>

<p>no, i think its misguided.</p>

<p>and i have another question: for the dennis passage, what did you guys get for the “shadow” question?</p>

<p>Sorry SAT Maniac, it’s misguided.</p>