Official May 2008 SAT discussion

<p>Yeah, that felt so good because I had no idea what the answer was, and I felt like I caught such a lucky break.</p>

<p>I had two sections of grid-ins. did everyone else? i do know that the one section had a last answer of 1/2, with the intersecting lines.</p>

<p>Whoa, two grid-in sections? I definitely did not have two grid-in sections.</p>

<p>sweet. because what happened to me on the section that i had that no one else seems to have had... was that i didn't notice a page of it until about three minutes left and i barely answered two of them before time was up. i was so scared about my math score (since i expect to get an 800.) for reference, another question in that section asked for a value of x^(-2) if x was between 0 and 1.</p>

<p>just got back, but damn i thought the cr was freaking hard lol...one of the writing was hard (the first one which i hope is the experimental- section 2) and i erased an answer last second which i thought then was wrong :(. I got 2 problems wrong in math (grid in last 2). not feeling too good about this test</p>

<p>what did you guys get for the difference between mean study and sleep times taken from the graph in the same grid in section as the intersecting lines with the answer +0.5?</p>

<p>I put 5 but I rushed through the end of that section barely finishing so I'm not sure :/.</p>

<p>Anyone recall the answer to the area of the square with perimeter 12 with 4 adjacent equilateral triangles? Thinking I may have got it wrong (may have added area of 30-60-90's instead of equil's). In terms of root(3) if possible.</p>

<p>^ I think that triangle question only asked what the perimeter was of the outer figure... nothing about area.</p>

<p>Crap! The one with the stingy and base CR question...well I just looked up the antonym for noble and it is "base." </p>

<p>@Narcissa, you're right. Geez, why are you so smart?</p>

<p>What was the answer to when you had to double a number every day and it asked for how much the eleventh day had more than the seventh? The 7th started out with 200 I think.. it was pretty simple but I just want to know the answer anyway...</p>

<p>@Joe it's 3200-200 = 3000</p>

<p>pyrotix, it was the perimeter of the outside figure and the answer was 24.</p>

<p>Alright.. nice.. man I am scared to discover if I have any wrong answers... ahh.. I omitted the stupid german/italian prob. and the weird line question.. but yeah.. hopefully I will do well on the other parts.</p>

<p>Lol, I just have that stupid german/italian problem in a dilema. Dunno if the 9 I got is right or if it was really really 6...</p>

<p>if the question said "equal to any one language" then i'm right.</p>

<p>if the question said "equal to number of one languages" then it's proabably 6.</p>

<p>NOOOOO>></p>

<p>Jesus. I should have read the questions more carefully. Perimeter would have made the question significantly easier.</p>

<p>Does anyone remember that problem where it was like (x^t)t = x^y and then like you have to get the product of t and y.. it was something along those lines, I don't really remember it word for word..</p>

<p>pyrotix...i could of sworn that was an area question i got something like 27.6 is that right?</p>

<p>For the question that was like:</p>

<p>23x + 90y = 4523</p>

<p>Besides the sum of x + y being 51, can it also be 118?</p>

<p>23(91) + 90(27) = 4523
91 + 27 = 118</p>

<p>Can't quite remember, but was this question a grid in?</p>

<p>And what was the answer to the median question with the graph of the studying times and hours of sleep?</p>

<p>^ yeah it could be any 2 numbers that fits the equation, the median question i think was like 12 i dont really remember lol</p>

<p>It was a grid in.</p>

<p>What is this experimental section?</p>