***Official Nov 2014 SAT (US ONLY)***

<p>Humans were doing something (unprecedented) and perhaps (irrevocable)</p>

<p>did you guys have a math question that said </p>

<p>If A B and C are points which of the following cannot be true?</p>

<p>2nd to last question on a math section, not sure if it was experimental </p>

<p>@jacob9874‌ What the question for avant garde? I remember seeing it but not the question</p>

<p>So… was it Authentic and Artifice?</p>

<p>poopy that’s a different question. Anyway, about the sentence "The pen is mightier than the sword, but the pencil creates better pens and better swords; sarcasm is definitely present as there is irony in the first part of his phrase. However, wordplay is not present since wordplay is like puns and stuff. Can someone corroborate or challenge my reasoning?</p>

<p>@jacob9874‌ I think so cause to appear more “credible” they would prefer authenticity over artifice (tricks)</p>

<p>ok so what do you guys think the curve will be? 1? 2? 3?.. 4?</p>

<p>@‌botherme </p>

<p>I agree. That part is sarcasm. I think it was also word play.</p>

<p>I know one of the questions had avant-garde but I’m not sure if it was paired with the word conventional.</p>

<p>It would have to be authenticity and artifice. They preferred credibility and tried to avoid (eschew) rhetoricals.</p>

<p>@PoopyMcGee12‌ The question had to with how some writers were reactionary and did not create anything innovative (im paraphrasing, cant remember exactly); the answer to that was avantgarde, and i think the empirical thing is for a different question</p>

<p>@sajidur4 got exactly 5 Es, also got an 800 in Oct :D</p>

<p>Anyone get just 4 Es for sentences?</p>

<p>I feel like it’s too good to be true that I got an 800 on the math… I got all the ones so far on here… I got all 3 Roman numerals, all the fill in the blank, B for the cube, D forthe savings cost, -2 for x^2-y, 22.5 for paint, 300x for pencils, everything I’ve seen. But I feel like I made a stupid error somewhere… can somebody please list some more math problems?</p>

<p>For the tan paint question, if you had 10 gallons of Z paint, you have to see how many 4/9 (which is how much 1 gallon of than requires) fit into 10: it is 22.5, and since its the limiting reactant(im borrowing that term from chemistry) the max amount of tan is 22.5</p>

<p>Hi did anyone get the reading passage about social media with the graph? I’ve never seen something like that before in a reading section and started freaking out. Hoping it’s the experimental!</p>

<p>I don’t think there’s sarcasm present. Sarcasm is saying one thing and meaning the opposite, and there’s no indication that the author doesn’t believe the pencil is capable of improving pens and swords. I would, however, consider this wordplay.</p>

<p>@botherme‌ I agree with you, but just to play the devil’s advocate, where is the sarcasm explicitly? Sarcasm is generally an excessive tone used to mock, or irony</p>

<p>actually, champion as a verb can mean “to defy.” that question was super challenging though, like three choices seemed right.</p>

<p>@botherme‌ Imo neither wordplay or sarcasm is present, but I went with sarcasm since there were some fancy stuff done with words, if you will</p>

<p>Champion means to fight for a cause, not defy</p>