Official thread october sat 2013 test

<p>simple I believe. Does anyone remember more answer choices to compromise and stipulation? What passage was that for?</p>

<p>Okay. I put impassioned inconclusive</p>

<p>@ethanking what did 28 say? If it was the “proceed” question the error was clearly “proceed.” </p>

<p>The one with “past” and talked about kayakers (or boaters of some sort) was no error, right? Ex: I went past the store .
Ex: I passed the store on my way home.</p>

<p>was the answer ERODE
for 1 of theCR voc?..
any0one?</p>

<p>Passage was for the African America lady friend thing</p>

<p>@tidumattud im pretty sure it’s simple. The college board most likely put domestic as an answer bc some people would see “home” in the word “homely”…but im not sure
I don’t think a saying can exactly be described as relating to a home…
but a saying can surely be simple and that’s why i put it</p>

<p>Wasn’t one of the answers anticipate a objection?</p>

<p>@satsarecool That what my initial guess, but I remembered the length/area/volume relationship and thought that it was the right thing to do. There goes the 800, agh!</p>

<p>Again, did anyone else put 1/9 for the area comparison of the parallelograms?</p>

<p>@hellogloria I had back to back math 3 and 4. I don’t remember which one was which but the one with the question asking p^2<6 and q^2<12 how many possibilities for the p+q was NOT experimental. I think that was section 3 but I don’t really remember.</p>

<p>Yeah, what was the answer to the impassioned…largely inconclusive and polarized…surprisingly fruitful question? I put the first one because I didn’t think the passage implied that they had come to a good enough conclusion to say “surprisingly fruitful”</p>

<p>Can’t compromise work as well? The compromise is that that the girl gets books, which she loves to read, and in turn she has to follow the neighbor’s request to read them aloud.</p>

<p>Anyone know what one wrong in writing and a ten on the essay should be?</p>

<p>Yeah I put anticipate an objection</p>

<p>Stipulation: “a condition or requirement that is specified or demanded as part of an agreement.”</p>

<p>What was the one about the lawyer and the alibi and how her statement […] her??</p>

<p>The parallelogram one was definitely 1/3.</p>

<p>So I’m pretty sure it was stipulation. Absolutely.</p>

<p>It was impassioned and inconclusive. The author stated in the conclusion about the inconclusive nature of the argument.</p>

<p>For the math question, it had a box and inside the box said if x is 1 greater than a multiple of 8, then it is a square of an integer. or something along those lines. Then it asked to pick the number that proved it wrong.
I think these were the choices
25
33
37
49
50</p>

<p>anyone get this?</p>

<p>@collegegurl it was exonerate…implicate for sure</p>

<p>@RoseOak3918-
I don’t remember which question had p^2<6 and q^2<12</p>

<p>I mean, the math was hard.
But I blanked out section 3
I hope that’s experimental …</p>

<p>What was the two inequalities one? you had #<a<#, and #<b<# and you can to find the smallest integer for a/b?</p>