<p>Cuve: (June, 1995)
50-800 .....
43-800
42-790</p>
<p>Drops 10 points per raw point below that until you get to 26 (it gets weird there)</p>
<p>Cuve: (June, 1995)
50-800 .....
43-800
42-790</p>
<p>Drops 10 points per raw point below that until you get to 26 (it gets weird there)</p>
<p>thanks ssnack =) that makes a lot more sense.. i did some weird thing on the test that didn't give me any of the answers.. so i started plugging in the choices lol. i think i put D.. which i dont remember it being .34. ah well =(</p>
<p>now i remember the answer to that f inv. of 2e is 0.34. I agree</p>
<p>hmm i dont really remember many of the answers.. but here are some that i do,</p>
<p>stemleaf problem = 56?<br>
cube with triangle drawn from mdpts of bases, perimeter = 24.14?</p>
<p>Also what did get for the angle with the circle not drawn to scale. I got E which was 23.6 degrees. Agree? Also flyaway tell me what is a 33-34 thanks a lot?</p>
<p>oh and also the one with the two concentric spheres.. i think the answer was D.. 5 thousand something</p>
<p>^agree agree it IS D. i rememeber that one cuz it was weird. lol
also the cube thing agree too
33-34 says 700-710
i wouldnt rely on that tho, cuz it really depends on the curve
darned curve
88% is lowest 800, that's all i know</p>
<p>shiz, i got 23.6 and then i think i thought it was wrong and erased it. shucks. i'm such a stupid mofo.</p>
<p>the 5000 value that is D, NOT the last one for the concentric spheres?</p>
<p>I was stuck on that circle 23.6 one for so long b/c I had my calculator ir radians!!!! Ugh!</p>
<p>^which one????
i dont remmeber that problem. anyone wanna enlighten me?</p>
<p>yeah i remember it definitely wasn't the choice E that was also five thousand something for the sphere problem.. because that was just the volume of the bigger sphere</p>
<p>did you guys all use graphing calculators? lol i can't imagine how badly i would've done if i just used a scientific one -_-</p>
<p>how about the flag problem, guys?
it was like, if its a flag, its 2 colors
if this is false then blahblah</p>
<p>Soompiers! lol
Does anyone remember that one y=f(x) and it zigzags? And there are some open points, and asks what f(x) can be? What was the answer?</p>
<p>I know this is an easy question: what point must be on the graph if (4,2) is one point and symmetric about x=2?</p>
<p>kin3sis
hey!
i think ppl answered that up above
u mean f(100)?
we had an argument; most ppl said 1, some said 2
i got 1 personally, durnno
sking: i said (0, 2)</p>
<p>Sking, I put (0, 2), don't know if that's right?</p>
<p>And hey flyaway! I know what you guys are talking about, but I'm talking about.. that other one, where the graph ranges from like -2 to 7, or something, and there are some open points.</p>
<p>(0,2) is right.</p>
<p>Sking, i think the answer was (0,2)</p>
<p>flyaway, i think the answer was B (II only)</p>
<p>kinesis, i think the answer was A, all reals except points 2 and 4 only</p>