<p>Yeah I put 25% too. For the one with 45-45-90 and the 60-30-90 i put something + 4 rad(3). And the last question on the grid-in section with the exponents was 1440?</p>
<p>would anyone give me a link to threads of each section for discussion?</p>
<p>Is there any thread going with the answers?</p>
<p>Was 4 rad(3) letter C, because that is what I put. How do u solve it?</p>
<p>I got 1440 for that. The numbers were 4, 12, 30 for that question. And 25% for me too!</p>
<p>it was answer choice E. Idr most of the question but I remember that you had to use 60-30-90 to find height and base. Than you use 45-45-90 to find the other part of the base.</p>
<p>Oh shoot scratch that. I was thinking about a different problem. For the triangle question, it was 6+4root3, E. At least that’s what I remember putting it as.</p>
<p>What about this one? It was like finding numbers between 100 and 200 (inclusive) that numbers don’t repeat or something. I got 29.</p>
<p>Anyone remember the math question that had a line going through the origin and a point at (4,2) then a circle with radius 1 that was tangent to the line at some point. Then it asked for the area of the quadrilateral it formed? I put 3 (D I think).</p>
<p>yeah thats what i got
and im pretty sure it was 6+2rad3
that one was 3 because it’s just 2 times the smaller triangles</p>
<p>I got 29 also, Which was the math experimental?</p>
<p>What was the 25% for?!?</p>
<p>was section 7 experimental? because i had section 6 for critical reading and section for reading too. so i didn’t take section 7 seriously. i forgot what the passages were on though :(</p>
<p>I got 29 for that too. And for the quadrilateral, I think I got 4. darn it, one wrong…</p>
<p>25% was about the sweater. Buy three get one free.</p>
<p>I put 25%. I was glad I change it from 33% during my 2nd time going around.</p>
<p>For Grammar, What was #29, was it “vary”</p>
<p>100, 101, 111, 121, 131, 141, 151, 161, 171, 181, 191, 200 (12)
122, 133, 144, 155, 166, 177, 188, 199 (8)
110, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119 (9)</p>
<p>12 + 8 + 9 = 29</p>
<p>The experimental one was the one that has “if y>=0,then x is not 8.”</p>
<p>@ellen or you can do this way. you find all the number than repeats. 1x9x8 = 72
then subtract them from 101. 101-72=29</p>
<p>Was the 18 question experimental the cake question or the inverse proportional question?</p>