<p>hmmn. theres a difference between “more than” and “greater than”, and for population its the latter-- i really hope im wrong though!</p>
<p>Well basically where I think your mixed up is</p>
<p>More is used the same as fewer.</p>
<p>Less is used the same as greater.</p>
<p>15 items or more. There were more than 100 people in this room. </p>
<p>15 items or fewer. There were fwere than 100 people in this room.</p>
<p>Grammatically speaking, MORE or LESS do not follow parallel grammar rules, it’s actually flip flop.</p>
<p>Hope that helps…</p>
<p>I did okay on the sections. The last correcting a passage one. it was my first portion after the essay. the passage was about a oven or stove and his dad or something like that?? was that experimental?? cus i did bad in that section.</p>
<p>What’s the one that: “the owl flying (A) low, its wings beating(B)…it ears tuned to…”</p>
<p>A or B?</p>
<p>I put A; how about the correcting Shakespeare passage, for when you had to replace “it” I think - did anybody put “the issues raised by skeptics”?</p>
<p>a</p>
<p>1a1- yes</p>
<p>was the rhino one no error?</p>
<p>what was the rhino sentence?.. and did anyone remember D for the last Sentence ID question</p>
<p>Yes you have to replace “issues raised by sketpics” to avoid ambiguity. </p>
<p>Yes to A about owl. </p>
<p>And rhino is defintely no error.</p>
<p>The rhino sentence was like “rhino population increased from 20 to more than 11,000.”</p>
<p>what about the last sentence ID with the guy who wrote the book and wanted to revise it on his deathbed? It was the last one.</p>
<p>I said no error to that one, but “revising” seemed a little suspicious.</p>
<p>The virgil one?</p>
<p>I said D was the error because of ambiguity</p>
<p>Ya that’s what I put it seemed like a pronoun was needed but I wasn’t sure.</p>
<p>No, the virgil one I put because of noun ambiguity I think. We’re talking about an author who would revise his manuscript before sending it to the editor.</p>
<p>ooooh I was stuck on that one too. I think I said error with “until revising”, i thought “until she had revised” or something would sound better</p>
<p>What about the company that gave the award to the people? It was one of the last ones.</p>
<p>the one about “whether or not the team wins two games” or something was dependS RIGHT?</p>
<p>how bout the “one with rock and roll, like blues” something was no error?</p>
<p>Don’t remember exactly; was the question about Beethoven and Austria experimental? Does anybody remember anything about the “call” and “one another”?</p>
<p>I said it should be “such as” not “like”.</p>
<p>i think the rock and roll, like question was a verb tense question.</p>
<p>I think you had to recognize it should be were, not was.</p>