<p>was the "because they were innovative" answer right after the Parents answer in that passage or was it the same question. I dont remember fully</p>
<p>^it was the ? before</p>
<p>Does anyone recall the sentence competion question about mexican/spanish pottery? it was something like this -> In the 17th century, mexican pottery was ____ and the authentic remains ______</p>
<p>he choices were Counterfeit and something , perserved and sruvived, and some other choices that made no sense. I chose counterfeit for the first blank b/c the sentence had authentic... Anyone?!!</p>
<p>experimental sections: After</a> the Test</p>
<p>crap i knew the first writing was to easy. O well already got an 800 on that.</p>
<p>"need not buy" was WRONG the subject of the sentence was "Someone" so the correction would be "needs"</p>
<p>how so? i think you need to justify your answer.</p>
<p>wasthe section with passages about scientists and wikipedia all experimental? i can't actually remember which version of the test i had so that collegeboard release of the exp. section isn't erally helping...</p>
<p>i believe that experimental, CCPWNZ</p>
<p>Really? I had the scientists and wikipedia one also. I thought it was later than the 2nd or 3rd section, but I may be wrong.</p>
<p>mexican pottery was not preserved and therefore few survived.</p>
<p>idk the 2nd word but the 1st was def. preserved</p>
<p>locksleylady09: haha i wish you were right. but i googled --</p>
<p>"someone needs not"</p>
<p>(with the ""s) and nobody uses it that way</p>
<p>I put an error for "need not" also, even though needs not sounded wrong. It seemed like "someone" would need to go with "needs" instead of "need." I took out "not" and switched it with "to" to come up with something like: "Someone need to." I decided that it was probably one of those questions that would play on <em>maybe</em> a common mistake (?). Although, "need not" could be some sort of subjunctive form that is actually correct.</p>
<p>the wiikipedia one was experimental because I didn't get that</p>
<p>did ya'll get plethora for one of the vocab questions?</p>
<p>like a plethora might not be good because too many choices could lead to....</p>
<p>idk somthing like that</p>
<p>I think the median question was x squared</p>
<p>media was x cubed, and plethora was rite</p>
<p>thats what i put..</p>
<p>everyone else put x cubed..</p>
<p>i put squared</p>
<p>I believe 'need not' is correct. Just like: Someone does not need to be perfect to get into an Ivy League. Comparatively: Someone need not be perfect to get into an Ivy League.</p>
<p>While 'need not' is definitely not vernacular, it's not grammatically incorrect. Remember that the SAT tests English, not American. They try to be tricky and include questions like the one cited above. Even if it sounds funky, if it's not wrong, it's right!</p>
<p>pearandson , u might be correct =/
i marked "need not"
uh oh sigh`!!</p>
<p>out of the 5, there were 3 negatives--x^3, x, and x^-3.</p>
<p>so it must be one of those.</p>
<p>and the largest negative was x^3 since the number was b/t -1 and 0</p>