<p>implore:ask</p>
<p>inquire:question</p>
<p>to implore, you ask
to inquire, you question
to request, you don't necessarily have to plead</p>
<p>implore:ask</p>
<p>inquire:question</p>
<p>to implore, you ask
to inquire, you question
to request, you don't necessarily have to plead</p>
<p>Ignoring the pled:request and the experimental, I think I've gotten them all right. Yay! I will be so mad if I don't beat 680.</p>
<p>implore is to ask earnestly
plead is to request earnestly</p>
<p>My logic was that it had to do with degrees of emotion. Implore and pled are stronger words then ask and request, but they mean the same thing.</p>
<p>so we conclude it is plead:ask instead of inquire:question</p>
<p>plead:request</p>
<p>godamit .\ /. ''</p>
<p>Are The Short Passages Experimental????</p>
<p>The way i saw it, to implore is to beg a lot with emphasis, and to plead is to request a lot with emphasis</p>
<p>yes, because i didn't get them</p>
<p>to ask earnestly (deep sincerity) is not the same as to plead earnestly (beg) ah **** i got it wrong nvm</p>
<p>So are we decided?</p>
<p>OH CRAP...does anybody remember what question the imbue:color one was, because i think that i went back to fill in saturate:liquid but i dont remember...the only thing i remember was it was number 22....close?
thanks people</p>
<p>I got VMVMVMV and I figured out during the test that the v section with the picture of rabbit/duck was experimental becuase first v had 34 questions, second 31 questions, third 35 questions and last double passage 13 questions. Being that the first verbal section and third verbal section had similar format [more analogies], the experimental had to be either one of them. I assumed it was the first one becuase the sum of other two v sections = 44 questions so the first one had to be it since verbal sections have 78 questions in total. </p>
<p>Does this sound logical? Can there be more than 78 questions? I really hope not becuase I paid no attention to that section. =[</p>
<p>
[quote]
pham,</p>
<p>And the formula for the book one is. 23n/17</p>
<p>how is it that?</p>
<p>n + 6 also work...
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Yes n + 6 does work, but not in all cases.
Lets say you have 400 books, 17 percent of 400 is 68 and 23 percent of 400 is 92.</p>
<p>Thus 68 + 6 != 92</p>
<p>But (23 * 17) / 17 = 92 :)</p>
<p>
[quote]
soo who here is asian?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I'm asian (Vietnamese)</p>
<p>Why does that matter? lol</p>
<p>i thought the math was really hard.. so i feel foolish when all you are like "it was elementary"</p>
<p>does anyone know for certain:
- comparing area of circle to area of square, i thought square was bigger
- comparing the village and club problem, i put down D because not everyone in the club had to be from the village, but some</p>
<p>so, what's my max score assuming i get everything else right if i already missed 1 grid in and 2 quant comparisons, and omitted 1 quant comparison?</p>
<p>Hmm. Its interesting that the two people who have responded to the asian question have been vietnamese (I'm half).</p>
<p>oh, poo i did get em wrong. </p>
<p>i'm assuming you can't cancel your math score and not your verbal? :)</p>
<p>oh, i'm asian. tis a disgrace for me to do better in verbal than in math. fooey</p>
<p>Ahahah! I didn't notice your username stupidestofthesmart. I feel your pain!</p>
<p>tis a disgrace for me to do better in verbal than in math. fooey</p>
<p>omg i hear ya!!</p>