<p>For the question about national contraceptive laws, was the choice “to place his uncle’s and aunt’s concerns in a broader context” or “to place [their] concerns in a national context”?</p>
<p>I chose some answer about context.</p>
<p>For the question about national contraceptive laws, was the choice “to place his uncle’s and aunt’s concerns in a broader context” or “to place [their] concerns in a national context”?</p>
<p>I chose some answer about context.</p>
<p>Japanese internment ID cards were gray/white: [Tule</a> Lake Relocation Center identification card for Sakae Ikemoto.](<a href=“Tule Lake Relocation Center identification card for Sakae Ikemoto.”>Tule Lake Relocation Center identification card for Sakae Ikemoto.)</p>
<p>@born2dance94: Hahahahaha!!!</p>
<p>That was awesome just now, my friend.</p>
<p>^lolol. if only we could use the internet during our exams. we could look up stuff like this</p>
<p>@zposture: I also said that he thought books were a valuable resource, because that was the general conclusion he reached at the end. The whole first half of the excerpt seemed like one big concession to those who thought books were dangerous to the social order - he agreed that this was sometimes the case, but he didn’t want books to be banned altogether.</p>
<p>I think I did the worst on the double passages starting with the “fond virgin”…I thought the fact that they doubled the passages was a little overbearing and unnecessary…I actually enjoyed the Indian one as well as the Podsnaps one…I put that they recognized Georgianna’s limitations. Did anyone do the same?</p>
<p>@Lifeofsolitude: I also put the one about social limitations, because that one had the most direct textual support.</p>
<p>@Genericana EXACTLY! But I saw a couple pgs back that people put “insensitive to her needs” and I can see how that would be a better answer than the former…do you think there is going to be a good curve on this test? It wasn’t easy, I must say…</p>
<p>First post!! Sorry for my “noobish” tendencies, but will 4 omitted have a huge bearing on my overall score? That epistle passage was an absolute butt-kicker…</p>
<p>^^4 omitted will have almost no </p>
<p>Sent from my ADR6300 using CC App</p>
<p>Sorry.^^4 omitted will have virtually no effect on your score, it’s the wrong answers that kill.</p>
<p>Sent from my ADR6300 using CC App</p>
<p>I’m hoping there is a HUGE curve on this one…it wasn’t easy :P</p>
<p>I was surprised by how much I felt the time pressure on this test. The passages were just so long! I finished but didn’t get to check very many of my answers so I’m not really sure how I did. I definitely hope the curve is really generous!</p>
<p>I thought it was pretty tough too. I took a lot of practice tests to prep for this and then I took the CB practice a week before. I thought the CB practice was super easy compared to the practice so I was feeling pretty confident. Then when I got to the passages and kept running out of time I was like “oh crap” haha. But overall I’m hoping for at least a 700.</p>
<p>I’m the kind of person who finishes the CR on the SAT reasoning in half the time per section and the AP english tests 40 minutes early…but I found myself very pressed for time. I finished with about 10 minutes to spare after rushing a bit…</p>
<p>Does anyone have any idea as to what the curve may be?</p>
<p>Hopefully a favorable one…how have they been in the past?</p>
<p>I definitely thought the passages were too long/there was too many of them to be completed comfortably in the time they gave us. I made the mistake of not omitting any of the ones I was uncertain on and going for guesses…I hope this isn’t too detrimental.</p>
<p>Wow sounds like i got some answers right.
What was the answer you guys put to the question from the city vs. country poem, that both the poet and the girl feel the following: (don’t remember the exact wording lol)? I spent like 5+ minutes on the question and still dont think i got it right.</p>
<p>For the Prosody excerpt, does anyone recall answering something like, “acknowledges the pointlessness of ‘Prosody 101’”? I don’t think that was the exact answer, but something along those lines (it was an “all of the following EXCEPT” type of question)…</p>
<p>grr. horrible test. hard. time pressure.</p>
<p>yeah, i remember getting something about the speaker does NOT suggest the uselessness of prosody 101…</p>
<p>i’m also wondering about the book inciting revolt one. i put books are a valuable resource? i mean the author mentions that it would be undesirable to censor what he terms “good” books. therefore “good” books wouldn’t incite revolt. but then again, perhaps “demeaning” books would not such valuable resources…</p>
<p>i think the test as a whole was harder than kaplan’s practice tests, and kaplan’s tests for lit are supposed to be (and usually are?) pretty realistic. arghpaegaiubiuapjbnakjrgp.</p>
<p>In the Indian passage, wasn’t the question about contraception “putting his relative’s concerns on a larger context” instead of national problems? The passage never mentioned a national problem, though I can see why people chose the answer.</p>
<p>Here are some other questions I’m not sure of:
georgiana’s parents unaware of daughter’s needs vs aware of social limitations (not convinced it’s social limitations)
georgiana’s party tedious but musically lively vs tired and intimidating (<-why intimidating)
books as a valuable source vs incite rebellion (<-where was rebellion even mentioned) </p>
<p>“dear man”; the word “dear” is the perspective of?
intent of author for using pastoral setting (to prove his sincerity, to show how dull life is without him, etc?)
“except” question? i put something about the virtues of city over the country not being mentioned…
most prominent literary device in first stanza (symbolism, perioded sentence, etc)</p>
<p>illusions and false feelings vs finding significance over minor events?</p>