<p>Thats impossible becuase my experimental ws math.</p>
<p>my post was with respect to the post by the person above you</p>
<p>hehe</p>
<p>you posted while i was typing</p>
<p>TO THOSE WITH TWO QUANT COMPS</p>
<p>section 4 (experimental, i HOPE), last question, fill in: Three digit number with exactly 4 factors (one being 1 and the other being the actual number) can be made by multiplying two prime factors. Disprove this statement with a number.
only math problem i couldnt get... help!
ill probably feel like a moron when you tell me the answer</p>
<p>for those wondering when the collegeboard posts the experimental section on their website I believe it is after we get our scores. or maybe just before I can't recall exactly but it is within a week of when we will be getting our scores or have gotten our scores already.</p>
<p>no they post it wayyy before that, i would say in the next two three days, but anyone answer that question two posts up?</p>
<p>Is it possible that there were multiple experimental sections of each type (verbal and math). I had four verbal sections and did not have mini-dual passage and some others with four verbals did not have Nixon passage. It only makes sense that there were multiple experimental sections.</p>
<p>hehe, sorry vitamn1. </p>
<p>Anyone get 10 for that question that has 7 in teh hundreds digits and 5 in teh ones digits?
It asked for the greatest number of numbers.</p>
<p>Does anyone know the answer to the math problem where it have 2 parallel lines going down and you have to find a really small diagonal?</p>
<p>yea i got ten 0-9 makes 10 tens. ^_^</p>
<p>ranisparkle:</p>
<p>3^5 = 243</p>
<p>if any one was wondering:</p>
<p>PK</p>
<h2>+KP</h2>
<p>1K6</p>
<p>97</p>
<h2>+ 79</h2>
<p>176</p>
<p>cmp, i dont recall that question on my test........was it experimental?</p>
<p>wait, what was the actual question to that last one on section 4 quant comp then? maybe i misread it?</p>
<p>Does anybody know for sure that they got QC #14?</p>
<p>I remembered it ended up being something like a^2-b^2-c^2 vs. a^2-b^2+c^2</p>
<p>I picked D, probably because I was an idiot, but was there any restriction that said c couldn't be 0?</p>
<p>for #14, you get -c^2 and c^2. Since c can't be zero the answer is B.</p>
<p>slipstream99, I think there could be more than 1 possible experimental.</p>
<p>What did anyone put for "peaceful to swift" in the astronomy passage</p>
<p>Was it interstellar to atmosphere??</p>
<p>Since this is now a 'experimental discussion' thread --- I had 3 Verbals (including the short passages), and 4 Maths (with only ONE Grid-in section).</p>
<p>So their apparently was a test where a non-gridin section was experimental.</p>
<p>Okay, for the voters one was it disenfranchised/registered or compromised/garnered? I put the second.</p>
<p>I put the first.</p>