<p>for the forten passage, it asked to look back to lines 1-33, asking why his encounters were mentioned...was that to establish his status?</p>
<p>yuppppppppp</p>
<p>I think I put tempered appreciation or approval too. </p>
<p>What about the Forten one where they say have the words office or court documents and ask why did they use those words? I put to put examples of bureaucratic documents available to researchers.</p>
<p>wasnt that the only obvious answer? or was that tricky?</p>
<p>i said to show how much he was trusted in his community?- is that even the same question?</p>
<p>for the "trade" question i put qualification, but i think thats wrong</p>
<p>it was profession</p>
<p>it could have been commerce too right? I mean I was trying to choose between profession and commerce</p>
<p>:( 1 2 3 char.. no commerce was the trick answer it was between qualification and profession</p>
<p>And... I also answered "tempered appreciation," but to be fair, doesn't unqualified approval mean the commenter doesn't list his reasons for approving of the weatherman, rather than he doesn't have the credentials (ie, he's not from mit or harvard, or whatever else you CCers idolize)? Yeah. It does.</p>
<p>Does anybody remeber the exact worder to the trade sentence? The passage sentence, not the Q.</p>
<p>yea, i still think it is unqualified approval...i may be the only one! :)</p>
<p>i know it ended with "...just as any other man of trade"</p>
<p>Then I put commerce as an answer, instead of profession, I think. I'm not too familiar with that saying.</p>
<p>I really hope it's commerce because the whole passage was talking about how forten was a businessman. But it could just as easily be profession. Why does CB do this to us?!</p>
<p>Also, about the passage about the constellation, what does the "curves and contours" represent? I put something that the eye is used to seeing or sees as pleasurable. Also, what about the same passage with the question what rhetorical device is used? I put symbolism.</p>
<p>for the if in x then in y question does anyone remember if the answer was C</p>
<p>If C is "if not in y then not in x"
Wow, people seem to be having a lot of trouble with logic questions. </p>
<p>I think commerce is correct, simply from a google search - for instance, a sentence mentioning "man of trade" tend to include commerce, merchant, etc.</p>
<p>Did anyone have one that had like four of the same answer about twice in a row? That really made me wonder.</p>
<p>lol ihad like 4 c's in a row and i was wondering</p>
<p>I had rows of b's, then c's, and a row of e's too I think. me = paranoid.</p>
<p>Wouldn't it be funny if CB decides to freak out the already-freaked out SAT test takers by making each section all one answer, except for maybe 1? lol, maybe not.</p>
<p>it's commerce. the quote was ".... [i am] a man of trade, " so the answer's not profession or qualification (i am a man of job, i am a man of qualification? what tf?).</p>