<p>Was I the only one that put “you not choose” for the security question?</p>
<p>It was suggested by the security company that, when creating a password, you not choose a multi-letter word that is in the dictionary.</p>
<p>Was I the only one that put “you not choose” for the security question?</p>
<p>It was suggested by the security company that, when creating a password, you not choose a multi-letter word that is in the dictionary.</p>
<p>I put ‘you not choose’ as well, I believe.</p>
<p>@joe789 That was another one with quite a bit debate. I know about 5 people who put the one with should [btw, does anyone remember what that answer choice said, exactly?] and about 6 people who put you not choose. It’s actually really bugging me haha</p>
<p>i think it was “your choice should not be”, and that’s what i chose.
i was stuck between those two.</p>
<p>@iceqube oh well, i was probably thinking of another one i put I and II on</p>
<p>^^^^^ Same.</p>
<p>It was like “… suggested that, … , [you not choose] a password that …” </p>
<p>"… suggested that, … , [you should not choose] a password that …" doesn’t sound correct IMO.</p>
<p>I put “your choice should not be” as well.</p>
<p>“You not choose” doesn’t sound correct to me…</p>
<p>oh guys that one is you not choose because it would be a dangling modifier then and then it would be addressing the question instead of the person, which is what it should have been addressing.</p>
<p>one of the choices was
not to choose
do not choose</p>
<p>i said not to choose… hoping… idk</p>
<p>I don’t remember that one quite well as I had to reread it a few times, so all the answers are in my mind… not just the one I chose. I may not have chosen ‘you not choose’.</p>
<p>No it was do not choose. The things had to be parallel.</p>
<p>For security:</p>
<p>I put: do not choose: A.</p>
<p>The answer to the security question should be “You not choose” because right before the part it had a clause saying “When choosing a password” and this has to modify “you”.</p>
<p>It wasn’t not to choose. The question was something like:</p>
<p>“The security guard asked that, when deciding on a password, not choose…”</p>
<p>That’s not the exact wording, but it’s close enough. The answer can’t be “not to choose” because I believe you need a subject after “that”. I think the phrase “when deciding on a password” is a parenthetical element - the sentence can still be grammatically correct once it is removed.</p>
<p>For the thieves one, it was def. D (has shrunk).</p>
<p>The questions was something like "That the thieves antiques…blah…hard to sell…blah…showed that the market for stolen goods has shrunk (this was the original choice). </p>
<p>It should be HAD SHRUNK. Not sure why there is so much debate about this one…</p>
<p>Also, Aj39vn23cf2, what county in MD do you live in? WE MIGHT KNOW EACH OTHER :D</p>
<p>What were the I, II, and III roman numerals on the x/y question?</p>
<p>^ very similar question on the october SAT, answer turned out to be NE.</p>
<p>I think the most reported answer was I and II, but there is substantial argument and mis-remembering with regards to that problem.</p>
<p>The thieves one was something like “That the thieves had trouble selling their items shows that that the market for stolen goods has shrunk.”</p>
<p>Again, not exact wording. But I think “has shrunk” is correct because “shows” is in the present as well, and the sentence is transitioning from idea to another. Can’t you have both tenses present in this case?</p>
<p>I think I said that the error was “That.” I’m pretty sure I got that one wrong…</p>
<p>For the x/y question, the answer was def. I and III.</p>
<p>Option III was something like x/y>1 I think…</p>