<p>was the conductor: symphony experimental.</p>
<p>I can't remember that. Playwright: play would be wrong because a playwright creates plays but a conductor doesn't create symphonies. Maybe if you give more choices I will remember.</p>
<p>was the conductor: symphony experimental.</p>
<p>I can't remember that. Playwright: play would be wrong because a playwright creates plays but a conductor doesn't create symphonies. Maybe if you give more choices I will remember.</p>
<p>WORD, haha. Yeah, lyricist writes lyrics, the PRODUCER writes the music (well, usually anyway). The most logical choice is playwright:play.. well, because:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.webster.com%5B/url%5D">www.webster.com</a></p>
<p>fabulist:1 : a creator or WRITER of fables
2 : LIAR
A fabulist is a person who writes fables.</p>
<p>play?wright: a person who WRITES plays
A playwright is a person who writes plays.</p>
<p>For info regarding experimental sections, go here: <a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=6116%5B/url%5D">http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=6116</a></p>
<p>tough to say a play DOES NOT have to be dramatic...</p>
<p>I thought for conductor: symphony there was something like</p>
<p>director: ?</p>
<p>Are you sure playwright : play was an answer in the fabulist: fable analogy. I would have been torn if that was on there. I'm pretty sure it was dramatist: play for that one. dramatist and playwright are synonomous by the way. drama and dramatist are not related.</p>
<p>I don't think I noticed director as one of the choices that's why I am confused.</p>
<p>did you recognize a conductor:symphony question?</p>
<p>yes, it was director:play (?)</p>
<p>the only trick was realizing that a conductor has no part in creating a symphony, just to 'direct' it</p>
<p>I REMEMBER NOW!</p>
<p>The disenfranchised:resgister question</p>
<p>Here we go:</p>
<p>They felt [disenfranchised] after discovering the voting system had a flaw, so they filed a lawsuit to [register] their discontent.</p>
<p>That's not the exact wording, but it's somewhere around there.</p>
<p>Disenfranchise: to deprive of a franchise, of a legal right, or of some privilege or immunity; especially : to deprive of the right to vote</p>
<p>Register: To give outward signs of; express</p>
<p>No, the second blank came before lawsuit...it was something like 'they ____ a lawsuit to express their discontent.'</p>
<p>I think levity: seriousness was renunciation:allegiance.</p>
<p>it was ackwardness: dexterity</p>
<p>if we have an almost definite agreement on an answer, there is no need to figure out the exact question.</p>
<p>glassjawer, by definition a dramatist is a person who writes plays (whatever genre it is).</p>
<p>atreeyum is right. The sentence undoubtedly had "...[registered] their discontent."
(I remember because on one of my APUSH essays I used discontent as an adjective and my teacher got all hot and bothered about it so everytime I see it now I take notice of it.) There was nothing about a lawsuit immediately following the second blank, I'm sure of it.</p>
<p>And, btw, it is dramatist : play. This combination was a "root analogy" (or whatever the question part of the analogy is called) on the Oct SAT and it was the only analogy I missed. Needless to say, I learned exactly what it meant.</p>
<p>i think voiced their discontent is more correct than registered</p>
<p>disenfranchised is a tasty SAT word though and "registered" seems to make sense; like they materialized their concerns in form of a lawsuit</p>
<p>Yeah, blanked their discontent is how it was worded. That's what threw me off. I couldn't see register fitting in there, but I guess it can work. I hate SAT Verbal!</p>
<p>impeccable wuz undeniable certainty</p>
<p>Guys, on the telescope passage, when the author said something of the sort:</p>
<p>"If it's cloudy their are two options. Plan A: Go to bed. Plan B: Spend billions of dollars to make a blah blah blah..."</p>
<p>A question referred to what the author was saying in Plan A. Anyone recall the answer?</p>
<p>difficulty involved with astro studies</p>