<p>The answer was definately 1/4; I’m [insert offensive boast here].</p>
<p>(I’m joking with the second clause, but the answer is indeed 1/4.)</p>
<p>The answer was definately 1/4; I’m [insert offensive boast here].</p>
<p>(I’m joking with the second clause, but the answer is indeed 1/4.)</p>
<p>Ok i think I got that right then. Thanks!</p>
<p>Oh, and I feel like a complete idiot, but the one with the two arithmetic sequences (one increasing by 5 and one increasing by 2) Was the answer “None” for that one?</p>
<p>^ Yes, it was “none.”</p>
<p>I don’t know how I managed to do so well in math, I only missed 1 question which is amazing considering that on all my prep I was scoring 67 aka, missing like 5. But I’ve pretty much completely stopped reading the stuff about writing seeing as I think I missed 10ish or maybe even more. I’m expecting a score <60. Oh well.</p>
<p>Thanks. Does anyone remember the exact question where the answer was “came?” Was that the last I.S.E. question?</p>
<p>@raderade</p>
<p>what math question did you miss?</p>
<p>Can someone please confirm what number this “bird/migration/explanation of” question was??? or at least which section of writing it was in? </p>
<p>And fresh101. There are three points on the same plane–A, B, and X. X is 5 away from A and 3 away from B. The question asked how many other points (ANY POINT) are 5 from A and 3 from B. A, B, and X ALL do not change position whatsoever. If X is 5 from A and 3 from B, then a 3-4-5 triangle is formed with AX=5, BX=3 and AB=4. so if you were to draw a line 5 units away from A in the opposite direction, slanting down, you would reach a point 5 from A and 3 from B. The question has nothing to do with X. and if you were to have any other ppoints, they may be 3 from B, but they will be at least 7 from A, etc.</p>
<p>@Angel15, I omitted the 7s questions because I was dumb and couldn’t figure out any of the answers and then I missed the one easy one that was like two parallel lines with a transversal and I said the degrees was 120 because I’ve never taken geometry and I thought it looked right (fatal flaw). But honestly, that is a huge improvement from last year for me (I scored 67).</p>
<p>It was in the “identifying sentence errors” section.</p>
<p>Not sure what number, sorry.</p>
<p>@raiderade</p>
<p>was the answer for that one 110? Sry, I have so much trouble remembering the problems after the test. Did you get 1/4 for the spinner one? I got it in a completely different way than them, but i still got 1/4, which is good. Some really smart ppl were saying 1/3. But I’m not sure if they were right.</p>
<p>I got 1/4 from the spinner some weird way where I like found the individual probabilities and added them and then multiplied them together I think. And I got 120 for the degrees one just because it was what one of the angles aboved it was defined as. I’m pretty sure the spinner one was 1/4, though not totally certain.</p>
<p>it was 1/4</p>
<p>Anyone with a super c.r. score…? Was “scope” the answer to the demographics question? Or was it “deception?” Also, was that a passage 2 question or a passage 1 question?</p>
<p>I know it was scope</p>
<p>How do you know? How did you reason through it?</p>
<p>the author was discussing what the study covered, therefore scope. and i dont recall any of the others making any sense.</p>
<p>I like the name of the above poster…it reads “PSATNMSQT” backwards HAHAHA.</p>
<p>Soooo, if I missed</p>
<p>-2-3 in math
-1 in C.R.
-1-2 in writing</p>
<p>Would that be ntl merit? It is 217 for my state</p>
<p>Angel, it would probably be around:</p>
<p>Math: 74 if you missed two; 70 if you missed three (assuming all were answered)</p>
<p>CR: 79</p>
<p>Writing: 77 if you missed one; 75 if you missed two</p>
<p>Total: 224-230</p>
<p>Thankyou SilverTurtle for calculating that for me</p>