<p>Pretty sure “the plant” was not an option. I remember the other 2 answers were wrong and I had it down to “it” and “itself”</p>
<p>Do you think missing 2 english questions could still be a 35 for this test?</p>
<p>it said the hairs of the plant protected it (the plant) from solar radiation or whatever.</p>
<p>@vlad, i personally think the curve will be something like this:
-0 = 36
-1 = 35
-2/3 = 34
-4 = 33
-5 = 32
It didn’t feel harder than normal, but it wasn’t extraordinarily easy either. So that’s about an average curve; 2 wrong is only a 35 on generous curves, which I don’t think we’ll get.
And anyone have input on the LED one? The two choices that I had it down to were:
“diode, or LED” without a comma at the end and "diode - LED - ".</p>
<p>@littlesilico</p>
<p>the question asked which of these is NOT correct, so i said it was “diode, or LED” without a comma, because in the context of the rest of the sentence, two commas were required
the hyphenated “- LED -” is correct
at least i think so…</p>
<p>I’m so mad I missed the diode LED question. That was dumb… I think I put diode (LED)…that has no chance of being the correct answer right?</p>
<p>The sentence refers to the plant, which makes it an object therefore requiring the objective case of the noun. “of the plant” is a preposition clause therefore the it is completely seperate. And thus the answer is itself, because either way you look at it, the plant has hair that it uses to protect itself, or the hair is part of the plant and it protect itself.</p>
<p>I agree with zkhan13. The “-LED-” option seems valid, although the “,or LED” requires a second comma, so that it should be “,or LED,”. Just my 2 cents.</p>
<p>I still do not remember this it/itself question.</p>
<p>Lot of debate about “it” and “itself.” I’m pretty sure it was “it.” A lot of people saying “itself” are not remembering the context of the sentence.</p>
<p>Question number 60 referred to the passage about the winter counts as a whole, asking whether the essay satisfied a history of winter counts or not. What did you all say? I said no because the other answers were too ambiguous with the question or did not fit the passages. Can anyone clarify?</p>
<p>I don’t think the question was exactly “did it satisfy a history of winter counts.” I put yes because it spoke about a recent example or whatever.</p>
<p>^ That’s what I put</p>
<p>I also agree that “,or LED” should be “,or LED,” which i why i put that.
“–LED–” seems fine to me…?</p>
<p>@ csi ^ i put that also</p>
<p>@CSIHSIS: The it/itself question was about the flowers on top of the volcano. They’re debating on whether it protected (it/itself) with its silver-something leaves.</p>
<p>Edit: I don’t know if this has been established yet or not, but the LED question was on which of the following alternatives would NOT be acceptable. I know two of the answer choices were “-LED-” and “(or LED)”, something along those lines. I can’t remember the other two. I think they might have been “or LED,” and “,or LED,”. I believe I chose “or LED,”.</p>
<p>yup ,or was wrong.-- correct.</p>
<p>Okay just to be clear and to use proper wording the flower question uses an infinitive “to protect” so it requires a reflexive noun/pronoun (ex… Myself, Itself, Himself…) to establish what is doing the action.</p>
<p>i think @ math is right. it might be itself</p>
<p>^ thank you…</p>