SAT Math Questions

<p>I want to make only one thread where i can answer all of my SAT math questions and a place for others to reference as well. (srry if the questions come quickly but its SATs)</p>

<p>First Off:
Each face of a cube is identical to two faces of rectangular prism whose edges are all integers larger than
one unit in measure. If the surface area of one face of the prism is 9 square units and the surface area of
another face of the prism is 21 square units, find the possible surface area of the cube</p>

<p>Thanks</p>

<p>PS. If anyone is willing to give me an IM i will be glad to have it. Thanks.</p>

<p>Read it wrong, the smaller face would be one face of the cube (draw these out or imagine them). Then 9 would be the faces of the cube, so 9*6=54. I think (doing this all in my head)</p>

<p>Wow, that was easy…STAPLES!
thx, soo much sense has been made :D</p>

<p>The variable x represents Cindy’s favorite number and the variable y represents Wendy’s favorite number.
For this given x and y, if x > y > 1, x and y are both prime numbers, and x and y are both whole numbers,
how many whole number factors exist for the product of the girls’ favorite numbers</p>

<p>Septimra, the answer is supposed to be 4. </p>

<p>However, do yourself a huge favor and look for a few official tests for your practice and preparation. You may want to use the source of the questions you posed to learn a few techniques, but do not use the questions nor the suggested answers. As with other similar courses, there will be plenty of hits but also plenty of misses, especially when it comes to relevance and context. This one happens to be one of the worst. </p>

<p>Best of luck to you!</p>