<p>Sorry if this was already asked before, but for the LED passage, there was something like LEDs last far longer than regular bulbs, far was underlined.
Which word does NOT work? Considerably, a great deal, extremely, or much?</p>
<p>@feedback411 I put considerably but I’m not entirely sure</p>
<p>pretty sure it was extremely. All of the others described how much time but extremely describes to what degree something is, not how much time it lasts</p>
<p>extremely, extremely longer doesn’t make any sense</p>
<p>@calllikid i believe it was “c” i may be wrong but i know a and b were allusions so i crossed those out</p>
<p>@feedback411 i put extremely</p>
<p>Arg I put extremely. It just sounded wrong to me :/</p>
<p>I had trouble on a question from the Winter Count passage. It was something like, " It was essentially a way to remember." Or something like that. I ran out of time, so I just had to randomly guess. What was the correct answer?</p>
<p>Did anyone put “once” for the LED question? It was like "Once limited to the remote controle… the LED light system etc etc "</p>
<p>2 questions guys:
1.“Not Acceptable” question was extremely the correct answer???
2. Is it “protect it” or “protect itself”</p>
<p>@actstudent for the not acceptable one, I put “extremely” and for the “it” vs. “itself” one, I put “it”.</p>
<p>@annesexton</p>
<p>i also put “once” because all the other ones made it an independant clause…if we are talking about the same one lol my memory sucks</p>
<p>I put that too!
Do people agree on that?</p>
<p>@anne yes, I put once for that one too.</p>
<p>The answer was protect it. ( i think o.o)</p>
<p>Anybody remember the one where the first sentence in a paragraph was past tense, the third sentence was future and read “…would accumulate over time” and the question underlined something in the second sentence and asked what tense? past or future?</p>
<p>That sentence with protect it/itself was like</p>
<p>“Little hairs protect it from water damage”</p>
<p>It has to refer back to the leaf</p>
<p>was “extremely” the wrong answer?? anybody?</p>
<p>Illusion of or allusion of?</p>
<p>@actstudent
“Extremely” was the right answer to the question because it was gramatically incorrect.</p>
<p>@CSIHSIS
Illusion to</p>
<p>would of been
could of been
were
was</p>