<p>HeyImAlok, I put the same answers as you.</p>
<p>@Alok</p>
<p>There was another option that talked about her life on the farm/how much fun she had on the farm. That option more directly applied as a “topic” for the rest of the paragraph, and the games she played</p>
<p>Was the one on the farm that nothing grew on it which led to the setting of the game and dust?
Was the bead necklace one added or added to?</p>
<p>i put added… i was confused on this as well</p>
<p>I was confuesed on the question about the asian trees but I dont even remember what the question was! Whaaaa</p>
<p>For the very beginning of the coco one, I put no change for the clothes one. You guys have clothes of her own design. I thought about it after the passage also. She could’ve been wearing clothing of her design but maybe not as well.</p>
<p>added or added to?</p>
<p>“For the very beginning of the coco one, I put no change for the clothes one. You guys have clothes of her own design. I thought about it after the passage also. She could’ve been wearing clothing of her design but maybe not as well.”</p>
<p>What question are you referring to? I kind of remember a question about this, but I would need more detail to give a definite answer.</p>
<p>Nelly, WHAT ARE YOU ASKING? Sorry for being a little rude, but how are we supposed to answer the answer without the question?!</p>
<p>@thirrdplannet Has to be her own design to show that her clothing deviated from the standard of her day. Since she dressed differently, people thought it was cool. </p>
<p>I put just “added” not “added to.” I was a bit confused, but I selected “added” because the “to” was already mentioned earlier in the sentence, I think. Thus, there wasn’t any need for another “to”.</p>
<p>haha my bad. There was a question about adding beads to a bracelet/necklace. Somebody stated this question earlier but nobody answered it yet.</p>
<p>I put just “added” not “added to.” I was a bit confused, but I selected “added” because the “to” was already mentioned earlier in the sentence, I think. Thus, there wasn’t any need for another “to”.</p>
<p>What question is this referring to?!</p>
<p>@wcclir The girl goes to the summer camp yearly. It’s a ritual, collecting necklaces every year. She gets beads and puts them on her necklace (<<- The “added” quesiton was somewhere in this paragraph). The colors of the beads are red, yellow, and purple. Purple signifies the tipping test. Although she gets to go on the overnight trip if her team pass the challenging test, it’s the personal satisfaction of feeling like a million bucks the entire week after.</p>
<p>BAM!</p>
<p>damnit! So the answer was “added”?</p>
<p>Not sure. Either added or added to, lol. I think I put added before they mentioned a “to” or something similar to indicate that the beads were added to the necklace, so the “to” after the “added” wasn’t necessary. Not 100% confident in my answer though, I’m hoping for 34+ on English :P</p>
<p>I’m hoping for a 29 and above. Good luck tho</p>
<p>@wcclirl444 Pardon me, but I believe that “Although she gets to go on the overnight trip if her team pass the challenging test, it’s the personal satisfaction of feeling like a million bucks the entire week after.” is wrong. </p>
<p>The answer was D.</p>
<p>Ill summarize each sentence:</p>
<p>If she wins they go to hike some mountain. She feels like a million dollars. <a href=“But%20the%20real%20motive%20was%20blah%20blah%20blah”>D</a></p>
<p>I makes it kind of confusing when you add that to C. It interrupts the flow of the outcome. Anyone else agree?</p>
<p>Okay, now I know what question you are talking about. I put “added” I thought adding another “to” was redundant.</p>
<p>@GoldenMonkeySAT, I have no idea what you are talking about… Also, I don’t memorize what letter I select as the answer, I remember the answer itself. If you want to discuss a question, you need to provide BOTH the question AND the answer choices.</p>
<p>Balls, I thought it was “added to” for the bead and necklace question, that way it was completely clear the the bead was added to the necklace… But I could be completely wrong</p>
<p>I thought I did really well on the english, but it looks like I might have gotten 3 wrong >:(</p>
<p>Does anyone know the curve??</p>
<p>There was a question at the end of the canoeing passage about adding a sentence something like “even though she had to bare the cold water, she had a better something in mind.” I thought the answer was D where it would be added at the very end. C was another option but idk.</p>
<p>OH! I put add that sentence to C. I was relatively sure of that answer. Although she gets to go on the trip, she is mostly happy with the fact that she actually conquered the challenge, thus feeling like a million bucks.</p>
<p>GoldenMonkey, we were discussing the “added” or “added to” question, not the “Should this be added to A, B, C, or D?” question. But yeah I put C, made sense to me.</p>