<p>anyone take it? what'd ya think? i thought it was kinda hard, but that's cuz i decided to take it about 5 sec before the start of the test. anyone have a clue about the cruve?</p>
<p>yeah, i took it... it was decent
the only thing that really confused me at first was the paragraph about the lady who describes the maid in geometric shapes
umm... also, was the answer to the question about the cultural agreement between Spain and Mexico "firmaron"?</p>
<p>I thought it was a lot easier than the AP test...</p>
<p>whats the curve like? I took it too and it was easier than the AP test but still tough (i'm not a native)</p>
<p>langhughes, i remember that one.... in English it was like "Mexico and Spain blanked avenues of cultural exchange" </p>
<p>I put tocaron, and since i know now se</p>
<p>how about "have" ? tuvieron</p>
<p>Ugh. That was horrrrible. :/</p>
<p>I thought it was hard (not a native speaker, but took 4 years in high school)</p>
<p>It has been a year since I had a real spanish test, and this seemed pretty difficult. i just need a 650 though and i will never have to do spanish again. [crossing fingers]</p>
<p>is this test worth taking w/o having taken the AP? i've taken for years, and i can pretty much read/listen but my grammer and vocab kind of sucks</p>
<p>for years as in for=4=four</p>
<p>you know...</p>
<p>do any of you know the scale for the test?
how many questions can i get wrong for an 800?</p>
<p>well, it depends.. the test has alot of questions that deal with verb conjugation and the vocabulary is pretty diverse. If you can read and understand newspaper articles in spanish then you'll probably do well.
Taking AP Spanish helps but I don't think its absolutely necessary</p>
<p>thanks! so should i even try to study vocab? if its so diverse? and i hate verb conjugation, but i suppose studying might help.....</p>
<p>im kicking myself for leaving SAT til end of junior year. this sucks.</p>
<p>boridi, i don't recall tuvieron as one of the answers... i think i would have chosen that over tocaron</p>
<p>the answer to that question was "firmaron" and this is coming from a native speaker.</p>
<p>yay! i hope you're right</p>
<p>I hope so too, but the other answers didn't make any sence, so I ended up with "firmaron" as a process of elimination.</p>
<p>yeah you're right, cuz now i looked up the other word i didn't know, which was "convenio." so it translates to "they signed a covenant."</p>
<p>Is the Spanish Reading Comprehension easy or like the SAT I Verbal where you have to think (and I still score poorly on)?</p>