<p>^Got all that. Awesome, hopefully their right.</p>
<p>yes!!! im starting to feel a little bit better about this :]</p>
<p>do you remember the last question? i remember having some trouble with it but i dont remember the passage.</p>
<p>Last question of that passage? I think it’s something like the narrator can best be described as ______. I put that she was confident but aware of forces beyond her control or something. Idk though, I was thinking the forces were the people who discriminate against her and how she brushes them off.</p>
<p>no, the last question of the entire test.</p>
<p>(i omitted that one about forces beyond her control. ugh…)</p>
<p>Oh, it was “How does the trumpet effect Kid Jones.” Didn’t you put like desires of past,present, and future?</p>
<p>Oh. Hm. Never mind then. I guess it was a different one :]</p>
<p>corpse??? was that even a choice? i only remember aging old man/woman.</p>
<p>yes, corpse, lol. it was either tree branch, coffin, corpse, or 2 that were totally unrelated.</p>
<p>corpse was def the answer</p>
<p>I just read the first passage again with Joseph and Mrs. Slipslop. Do you think that she felt lust toward Joseph? I said that lust was the only emotion she didn’t feel for him, but I may have misunderstood the last paragraph…reading it again, she seems kind of lustful to me… “her violent *amorous hands on the poor Joseph…”</p>
<p>*amorous = inclined or disposed to love, esp. sexual love (according to Dictionary.com)</p>
<p>Hmm. That one was hard. I put lust too, but I see where you’re coming from with the “amorous hands” thing. Do you remember the other choices?</p>
<p>That was probably one of the hardest questions on the test… I can’t remember what I put for it. I thought the one hitting the ground was a coffin. It just seemed like an allusion to a burial, and usually its the coffin and not the corpse that would make the thud. Besides, a coffin is made of wood and it was about a tree branch, which is also made of wood.</p>
<p>Overall I thought it was a pretty easy lit test compared to the last one i took.</p>
<p>Hmm… Don’t think it was coffin because the log represents a dead tree, which in turn represents an old dead dude’s being, not a dead guy’s “coffin.” </p>
<p>For the one with that asked what DIDN’t describe Mrs. Slipslop I don’t remember exactly what the answers were but I was deciding upon two answer choices that weren’t “lust” or “presumptuous”</p>
<p>What did you get for the other answers?</p>
<p>wasn’t it greed? lol i put that…</p>
<p>I sent the passage to one of my really smart friends, and she immediately said greed. So…trust me, it’s greed. </p>
<p>Sigh…thats one wrong. =/</p>
<p>Let’s move on to a different question.</p>
<p>“Great Stuffer of bags” means that people are made by chance?</p>
<p>Thats what I put. I thought that was the easiest passage of all. Zora Neale Hurston isn’t too cryptic in her writing.</p>
<p>yeah, that was relatively easy.</p>
<p>do you remember any other questions?</p>
<p>Poison, what did you put for what the narrator of the Zora passage can best be described as?</p>
<p>Also, there was another question in the love, moon, pangs of pain poem that asked what was the main device in line whatever. I put repetition of the word “world” or something.</p>
<p>Hipster, I put repetition for that one, too.</p>
<p>I don’t remember that question too well. Did you mean the Zora question about how she acts in the first paragraph?</p>