<p>Enraged is more of an intense anger, while vexed is annoyed. I said vexed because the author wasn’t blowing his top exactly, but was annoyed that people couldn’t see the truth behind behaviorism and were caught in humanist theory.</p>
<p>simonl - why are you saying impromptu is wrong? and carbon, the question for “doing it” was the stonehedge question…</p>
<p>yea i would’ve putten vexed… but i thought vexed meant confused…stupid me!</p>
<p>and this is really weird, but i remember one of my answers having the word “analogy” in it… does anyone remember what passage/question that was???</p>
<p>it can be the structure of 2nd paragraph of “grand canyon”
but i thought i put “a formula is formed then solved”</p>
<p>i’m not that sure about that one though</p>
<p>It was the Grand Canyon one; I also put analogy. The author used the formula as an analogy, then changed “formulas,” but solved neither, just amended the first (there was a however or some other conjunction that signaled the switch).</p>
<p>@anonymousx37</p>
<p>i second carbon i don’t remember that on the question but if it was how was it used.</p>
<p>btw in case you guys are wondering where i got my reasoning from my english teacher gave us this book to read ([The</a> Elements of Style - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Elements_of_Style]The”>The Elements of Style - Wikipedia)) by E.B.White and it was explicitly stated that “the use of” should never be used.</p>
<p>he say" …but retract it in favor of another view" where is another “view"?</p>
<p>@murmex also i don’t see the author changes anything in the second paragraph</p>
<p>@simonl I think the answer was impromptu because the interviewer ran out of questions and asked one off the top of her head. Impertinent means rude not irrelevant.</p>
<p>@Calculus123, perhaps the question you and I were talking about (with the Zimbabwean village that didn’t use mortar) was on a practice test rather than the actual thing? I sincerely hope so…</p>
<p>@zxc exactly the author means reporter’s questions are not professional and relevent</p>
<p>@carbon</p>
<p>haha sorry buddy it was definitely on the test I just took. Anyway there was no other blatant error like “doing it” im pretty sure because i was stuck on no error or usage of. Don’t worry, im geussing that question will contribute positively to the curve.</p>
<p>Check. Impertinent does mean irrelevant. Damnit</p>
<p>Damn, I definitely got 2 writing questions wrong. With a 12 on the essay, but could I possibly hope for on the writing section?</p>
<p>there was a blatant error like doing it! it said “because the ancient people built stone monuments(or whatever) and did not keep a record of it, researchers today do not know the reason for doing it” … doing it is so ambiguous… it could be building, recording, researching… </p>
<p>also, i put analogy … i dont know why but there was an analogy to something else and another view was presented (in my memory) i just dont remember what that 2nd view was…</p>
<p>Simonl- The other view that the author takes is that instead of every person who visits the Grand Canyon getting the same, complete image, they each get an image that is proportional to how many people are/have seen it. I saw the formula choice as a trap.</p>
<p>i think it’s still impromptu… i put impertinent BUT it said in the beginning, “exhausting her repertoire, the interviewer asked his age” which means that she had already asked all the questions she had, and she pulled one out of her ass boo</p>
<p>@anon I also remember the “doing it” error and put it as the answer.</p>