<p>somebody think of another problem, i cant think of any right now... i remember one had an answer of 11? there was also one that asked what the lowest number higher than 999 was that could be divided by 9,8,7,6 etc, i think it was 1008? these were both grid-ins.</p>
<p>The smallest number greater than 999 that is divisible by 9, 8, and 6 is 1008. Answers to the grid-ins that I recall: 0, 30, 37.5, 2.50, 11, 45, 308, something else, 1008, 1 < x < 1.5</p>
<p>I cannot remember the third to last question on the grid-ins at all.</p>
<p>so which one is the math experimental section, does anyone know? the folded box or the trepozoid?</p>
<p>If you miss one math grid-in, does that mean that you have no chance of getting an 800 on that section?</p>
<p>Honestly chillaxin, pretty much. The consensus is that the math for this SAT was relatively easy, so the curve is likely to be something like -1 -> 780, -2 -> 760, etc. Are you sure the question wasn't on the math experimental?</p>
<p>chillaxin, correct</p>
<p>s'vrone, i want your memory skills :)</p>
<p>i remember getting 0, 37.5, 2.5, 11, 308, 1008, and 1.45, so i think im doing pretty well, if you remember the questions for the other answers i might recall my answer :)</p>
<p>and i remember the folded box one, but not the trapezoid.</p>
<p>Yeah, I had a cr experimental. Thanks for your help, s'vrone.</p>
<p>s' vrone, but isn't missing a grid-in different from getting a mutiple choice question wrong? since u don't get points off for putting down wrong answers on the grid-in part?</p>
<p>It is different, but on the math section, any questions missed whatsoever will typically result in a score less than 800.</p>
<p>getting a grid in wrong is like leaving it blank, no points taken away, but you dont get the last point needed to get an 800.</p>
<p>i think if you get all of them and miss one answer (ABCDE) you will probably have the same score as somebody that got them all and left one blank... seeing as you would be comparing somebody who is 1 pt off the total and somebody who is 1.25 off the total? somebody correct me if im wrong.</p>
<p>You're right, taffy.</p>
<p>Sorry, this is slightly off-topic, but I was wondering if anybody had that website where it shows a bunch of people who applied to all these colleges, their SAT scores, other stats, and whether or not they got in?</p>
<p>hmmm on which math was 11 the answer? Seem to remember i had it but cant really put a place to it. Probably got it by adding 5 and 6 somehow. Anyone want to enlighten me?</p>
<p>i remember seeing that place, but i also remember you cant post its URL here, because its censored for some reason (what isnt).</p>
<p>do you guys remember a math problem with years in it... something like in the year 1998 there were so many kids, then in 1999 there were 5 more kids, and in 2000 there were 20% more kids, what answer could be the number of kids in the year 1998? i think i said the answer was 10 for the number of kids in 1998, because 10 + 5 is multiplyable by 1.2...</p>
<p>I remember that problem, taffy. The answer I got was 10 as well.</p>
<p>it is between 1 and 1.5 because you find half the diagonal of the smaller square which is 1 and find half of the edge of the larger square which is 1.5 It says between thus it is...well between :)</p>
<p>now again does anyone remember the question for the one with answer of 11?</p>
<p>there was also that one problem:</p>
<p>10 green
10 red
10 blue
10 yellow</p>
<p>how many does a person need to pick out of the hat to be completely sure they got at least 7 greens? answer=37... 10+10+10+7greens</p>
<p>your luck would be pretty bad if you had to pick out 37</p>
<p>but then it is the right answer :P</p>
<p>does anyone know if the "marked price" is the same as the "sale price". That was one question i was really kicking myself in the shin about. Does marked price mean the price before sale or the sale price?</p>
<p>the marked price was 100 bucks. the sale price was 70. the price she got it for was 90 percent of 70, or $63.</p>