Test with japanese poems, the west, math experimental, looking for extra terrestrials

<p>Vehement, if a verb fit in the real sentence then it couldn't have been vanguard, that's a noun. Problem solved.</p>

<p>well obviously it had to be a sentence where both the words "originate" and "vanguard" could fit.</p>

<p>I honestly don't remember vanguard. But oh well, we're getting nowhere really. if somebody actually remembers the choices that's one thing, but nobody seems to remember the choices.</p>

<p>originate was there</p>

<p>god why the hell is this guy still not banned?</p>

<p>After a bit of cleaning, the thread is back.</p>

<p>Does anyone remember the question with "myriad" as an answer choice?</p>

<p>yep i dooooooooooooooooooo</p>

<p>Ok, let me rephrase my post: can anyone post the question with "myriad" as an answer.</p>

<p>"ablhalb had countless reasons for ablhalhbab....it was a ____ of reasons"</p>

<p>You guys are silly... vanguard wasn't an answer choice... it was IN the sentence!!</p>

<p>Originate was the answer because vanguard means "first wave" or something to that effect.</p>

<p>Lmao Bion Is Right.</p>

<p>Pwned</p>

<p>Remember the question with the answer recalgsggd (or whatever -_-)</p>

<p>no, vanguard was an answer. It used the second definition of vanguard:</p>

<p>2: any creative group active in the innovation and application of new concepts and techniques in a given field (especially in the arts)</p>

<p>a noun and a verb? (vanguard and origniate</p>

<p>the blank was for a verb</p>

<p>oooh thats right, it WAS originate, now i remember</p>

<p>good call</p>

<p>There were 2 (simple) math problems that I missed, and I can't remember which math section they were in. I'm hoping they were in the equating one that didn't count (on the form that went: essay, reading, equating, math). One of them asked which point wasn't on the circle, which had a radius of 10, and the second was about french and spanish students...X number were in french, X number in spanish, 2 were in both, how many were in neither.
Does anyone remember if these 2 were in teh equating section? Or were they in the math sections that counted?</p>

<p>I remember the french and spanish question, the answer was 4. It was not an equating section. However, i dont rememember the circle question......</p>

<p>Vanguard was 100% in the sentence. The answer was originate. You were supposed to use that secondary definition of vanguard as your clue to pick originate</p>

<p>vehement, do you mean recalcitrant? If so, I second you in that it was an answer. Something about a snooty girl.</p>