<p>Does anyone know the answer where it was like</p>
<p>If I study, I will pass the test.</p>
<p>Which statement is equivolent?</p>
<p>I put "If I did not pass the test, I must not have studied"</p>
<p>Thoughts?</p>
<p>Does anyone know the answer where it was like</p>
<p>If I study, I will pass the test.</p>
<p>Which statement is equivolent?</p>
<p>I put "If I did not pass the test, I must not have studied"</p>
<p>Thoughts?</p>
<p>I've noticed that the SAT math is exactly like IB Math studies, especially since they even had a logic question yesterday.</p>
<p>what did you say for the khyber pass question. and the last one on the venice passage, with what they both were referring to</p>
<p>did anyone have an essay about conformity?</p>
<p>the one about the kyhber pass i thought that it was either that it was a remote place, or a place where its a pleasure to get lost.</p>
<p>in the end i choose its a pleasure to get lost there</p>
<p>I think i said pleasure to get lost. They said Remote and Exotic place. When i think of exotic i think of beaches and hot weather type places.</p>
<p>i think i said pleasure to get lost, too.</p>
<p>
[Quote]
No, this is incorrect. There was nothing in the passage about the speed of execution, and the wording of the two sentences had something to do with the Master leaving. Thus, it's "work best alone."
[/Quote]
</p>
<p>The master left for a short period of time, and comes back to find that Michelangelo completed a whole bunch of paintings and sketches. This implies that great artists such as him can do excellent work in a short period of time without much trouble. This also fits in with the public stereotype of art geniuses, that they can work w/o breaking a sweat. I believe "work quickly and with ease" is the answer.</p>
<p>why would it be apleasure to get lost. the kyhber pass, in context was used to contrast his adventure in the store, and something remote and exotic. </p>
<p>The author was trying to relate that adventure in getting lost is not determined by where you are, but more of the outlook, and the experience of being lost. Therefore, the author was contrasting the khyber pass, a very extreme, remote adventure, to getting lost in a toy store; but nonetheless, they both include that sense of lost</p>
<p>i think we should start putting definite answers into the "June 2006 - Consolidation of known answers" thread. no one has said anything there yet.. but we should!</p>
<p>how was the toy store remote, and how is the kyhber pass an exotic place.</p>
<p>the toy story isn't remote. the hyber pass is definitely a remote and exotic place. the author is contrasting that the secure, safe, incident in the toy story, and the danger, exotic kyber pass and showing they are similar in the sense that they include the idea of being lost.</p>
<p>that's what i chose, i chose a pleasurable place to get lost. I remember that the question said in lines x-y so i thought that changed it from remote location to pleasurable idk thoguh</p>
<p>that was my logic as well, pandora!</p>
<p>i also put pleasure to get lost. remote and exotic are definitely wrong because the authore was just merely comparing the toy store and the pass.</p>
<p>i put remote. i'm fairly sure thats the right answer. Although the passage is about getting pleasure from being lost, that individual paragraph itself dealt with embarking on remote and dangerous journeys.</p>
<p>for the one that was x^2+y^2+z^2=9 a lot of ppl seem to have gotten 5 for the value of x+y+z....but isnt (x+y+z)^2 = x^2+y^2+z^2....so i ended up getting x+y+z= 3 cause (3)^2 equals 9</p>
<p>no because (x+y+z)^2= x^2+2xy+2xz+y^2+2yz+z^2 which does not equal x^2+y^2+z^2. Plug in 2, 2, 1 for x,y,z and u get 9.
2^2+2^2+1^2
4+4+1
9</p>
<p>x+y+z=?
2+2+1=5</p>
<p>thats exactly my point. ^</p>
<p>the question refered to lines x-y. those lines said something like "whether being lost in the department store, or adventuring in the khyber pass, the experience of getting lost is the same"</p>
<p>therefore, i really believe the answer is remote and exotic. the author is comparing the safe toy store to the exotic kyhber pass. through the comparison of these two different things he is showing that the "Experience of getting lost" does not have to be adventuring through a dangerous path. Instead, he is saying that "the experience of being lost" is when you are unaware of your surroundings and are experiencing new things with a new capacity.</p>
<p>i really don't think the author used the khyber pass to show a place that he would enjoy to get lost in.</p>
<p>for the mars.. it was topographical vs mineralogical</p>