<p>i got 2 sets of 3Ds in the writing section... true for anyone else?</p>
<p>Please guys what was this one. It was i think quesiton 8 or 9 on the long one. Although Mr. pataki never got famous, (you filled in the rest. I put E althought it sounded wired. Merit was in the answer. I put E because "HE" was needed otherwise misplaced modifier. ALso w hat did you put for the one before this concerning artifacts and other countrys I put B about how as such each country protects their own.</p>
<p>Man this despite question is killing me. How does no one have the same test as me? And where are all the discussers like there was on the Oct. test >.></p>
<p>Disney's broadway musicals attracted ....</p>
<p>audiences that had never been...
audiences who have never been...</p>
<p>?</p>
<p>I was thinking the second because of who/people... but "have been" seems like the wrong tense (attractED). Ended up going with the first</p>
<p>"Dasani, That one was really messed up, the #13 in section 10. It was "Just as movie heroes and sports stars inspire many fans, ____________" I put "so teachers inspire many students." That was the best one I thought, but none seemed even close to right."</p>
<p>That was not a misprint. In Barron's 2400, page 132, there's what they call a correlative conjunction. It goes Just as blah blah blah, *so * blah blah blah. That was the correct one.</p>
<p>Boridi, I put audiences THAT had never been. Because audiences aren't people. Plus the tense thing.</p>
<p>Wait what does it say further in barrons? Does it say to add a SO?</p>
<p>"Just as movie heroes and sports stars inspire many fans," is a subordinate clause and needs a main clasue after it, and the only main clause there was "teachers inspire students, and many." I think the "and many" was there to confuse people, because, in fact, it is gramatically correct because many is an adjective that describes students. "so teachers inspire many students" -- that just sounds wrong to me. Kristina I don't know what you're talking about correlative conjunctions, because there is no such correlative conjunction as "Just as...so", I tried looking it up on Google. Also if it is a correlative conjuction that it must be the most obscure, outdated, random piece of crap ever cuz i have never heard of it before. I don't know, you are probably right. o ya, Boridi, the answer was audience THAT had never been b/c same reason as Kristina</p>
<p>Found in temperate waters...pacific ocean, billfiish question?? anyone know what was wrong?? my only No error was about something like a species of animal and it was the last sentence correction on that section before it went into paragraph correction for shakespeare or something</p>
<p>wait nvm Kristina u're right. dammit. <a href="http://www.einfoweb.com/grammar/cons/corr.html%5B/url%5D">http://www.einfoweb.com/grammar/cons/corr.html</a></p>
<p>Gyros-- yes, you need the so. The construction is JUST AS.... SO....</p>
<p>Edit: yeah, I know I'm right :D</p>
<p>it was D. they were comparing its nose or w/e to OTHER animals instead of other animal noses. There was one more no erorr. Something about how this guy felt better driving a bus after black snow cleared up or something (16) i think.</p>
<p>What about the toucan/beak one? I think I got it right, but I was unsure, because it is true that you'd find the toucan BEAKS wherever... haha</p>
<p>^^^ omg crap</p>
<p>Yea i remember putting no error twice and that snow thing sounds like the other one. i either put C or D... if only i could see the question.......</p>
<p>I never had that black snow problem</p>
<p>that was directed to ach44.</p>
<p>yes there needs to be "toucans" right after the comma, because it's referring to the toucans and not their beaks.</p>
<p>"just as... so" is right. </p>
<p>i think i got the disney one wrong... crap. </p>
<p>btw what did you get for the one with "had begun"? was it no error or "had began"?</p>
<p>lol i have NO idea what you guys are talking about. toucans, black snow? O_o..</p>
<p>
[quote]
Does CB have a service for contesting bad questions?
[/quote]
Sure does. This is from the SAT Registration Booklet:</p>
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