<p>Yes I got type for that question about form…was the breath “take” or “sketch” ?</p>
<p>form for storytelling, and the thing was about lying with every drawing breath so it was take</p>
<p>@sed When was the last time you “sketched” a breath? It’s take.</p>
<p>v I put freedom</p>
<p>and did the boy get freedom from the open walls or was it that he could live on his own? Weird passage in my opinion…</p>
<p>yep I got take as well</p>
<p>@anon I think I put the same answer as you…the context was to “retrieve [the memories] from oblivion” so it makes sense</p>
<p>@sed it was definitely that he felt freedom…the other choice doesn’t make any sense</p>
<p>so the momentous occassion change/progress, what was it about? I still don’t remember. was it the defining moment question, or something else? does anybody remember the details of the question?</p>
<p>definitely momentous change/progress, without a doubt. the answer of defining moment is wrong, because she was not thinking about her career, rather the fact that her being the first black keynote speaker in 144 years represented the change and progress she had helped facilitate.</p>
<p>@anonymousx37: </p>
<ul>
<li>I also got “type” for form → it makes more sense. </li>
</ul>
<p>can anyone explain the “relationship” answers again?</p>
<p>Which section was experimental? Does anybody have example questions from it?</p>
<p>@seahawks
do you remember the question? I think I remember both those answer choices, but they were for separate questions o.o</p>
<p>did anyone get “form” = type?</p>
<p>@tenacious</p>
<p>3 people on just this page</p>
<p>I put elicit for the breath question</p>
<p>why was “form” type? does anyone remember the context?</p>
<p>also what did u guys put for “what does the photograph imply”…</p>
<p>Aaahhhh put ‘aspect’ instead of ‘type’ for form…</p>
<p>@ibelieve i think I did that it was still something he is unsure about</p>
<p>may have said “unresolved” if I remember correctly</p>
<p>@Michael, all of the answer choices to a “‘x word’ means closest to…” question are possible answers, even if they don’t seem like the definition of the word. On top of that, breath fit the intended definition perfectly, at least in my opinion.</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the answer to “this words means closest to” question in the Barbara Johnson passage? I remember being stuck between secure and win over, I think I went with secure in the end.</p>
<p>@sat100 - definitely secure. </p>
<p>so breath is to “take” right?</p>
<p>I put form as type too because like an example would be like “calligraphy is a form of writing” in that instance form and type mean the same thing if you plug into type for form</p>
<p>For the actual question it asked that in this line the word “form” meant what?</p>
<p>The lines in that particular section of the paragraph if I remember correctly spoke of how letters were a form of storytelling?</p>
<p>of course this is just my opinion</p>