<p>no they were complaining because the museum might be ruined because they were hiring some newcomers instead of the experienced because in the question before they used architect they described the architects with a flattering word</p>
<p>i dunno, there arent enough answers floating around here to quantitively give an estimate...</p>
<p>naidu, you sure, i dont remember reading that in teh sentence...</p>
<p>I got more than expected. I probably got like 5-6 spread out, but there were like 2-3 clumped together</p>
<p>i only got 1 no error
i mean in the short part only, not the revising sentences</p>
<p>I remember reading that because that's what ticked me off (not in the bad sense) to the other answer</p>
<p>I only put one "no error" - the one about Charlotte Bronte.</p>
<p>EDIT: This is only in the find the error section, not the revising sections.</p>
<p>if i missed 5, whats the highest score i could get on CR?</p>
<p>I think the hardest question on the PSAT was bubbling in what kind of religion background I have.</p>
<p>I think I put that, but I don't remember</p>
<p>I HATE THE PSATS they just should die.. this is ruining my weekend. :(</p>
<p>what was the charlotte bronte one</p>
<p>shadowx</p>
<p>i was talking about the parts where the paragraphs are underlined and you have to find the error in the sentence. Other ppl in my class said they got more than a few no errors</p>
<p>yeah, charlotte bronte was no error. There were a couple of correct sentences in the revising sentences portion too, wernt there?</p>
<p>dandelion, you could get a 69 (according to last year's curve from the CB website)</p>
<p>Indian - yeah I think there were, but I can't remember any off the top of my head.</p>
<p>i think i changed the charlotte bronte one from no error to D, b/c i saw something that had an adjective/noun disagreement. It might have been b/c it described her wrong, something like that.</p>
<p>there were definately more than one word corrections, I think like 3 or 4</p>
<p>According to almost everyone on this message board, the correct answer to the question about the "swift yet peaceful journey" contrasts the calm interstellar space with the turbulent lower atmosphere. Perhaps I misread the question, but I thought it referred to the topic sentence, rather than the paragraph as a whole. Therefore, I interpreted the phrase "swift yet peaceful" as a contrast between those two adjectives. Since "peaceful" seemed poetic whereas "swift" seemed scientific, I stand by my original answer (choice E, or "scientific theory vs. romantic view"), but I probably got it wrong anyway!</p>
<p>Anyone remember the charlotte bronte passage? </p>
<p>It was like:</p>
<p>Although Charlotte Bronte was a writer and a good painter, we know her as ....</p>
<p>Something like that</p>
<p>what was the sentence for the charlotte bronte one, something like how she was an artist too, but was not as recoginzed as being a writer than as an artist? or something like that...</p>