<p>Yeah, thinking about it now, "fool" and "shortsighted" could be considered cynical, but "nice man" probably isn't. 2 off CR so far: otters are discriminating eaters, and the parsimonious one.</p>
<p>i remember a passage about art and society, but i don't think i had the same questions</p>
<p>i don't remember anything about grapes and drapes</p>
<p>Well, if the critics are upset with the students because they believe there is nothing to protest about then "indifferent" is wrong. Why would critics who don't believe there is much to protest about be upset with kids who were indifferent to radical politics? -- if kids were indifferent, they would not protest.</p>
<p>And the "They" refers to critics, as cited at the beginning of the sentence.</p>
<p>Exploitative sounds like it is on the lines of being correct. If the students are exploitative, they would most likely protest. I didn't take the test, so I didn't see the multiple choice answers.</p>
<p>"exploitative<br>
A adjective
1 exploitative, exploitatory, exploitive</p>
<p>tending to exploit or make use of" </p>
<p>Get that. Tending to exploit OR MAKE USE OF. The students are making use of radical politics; the critics (who are negative, duh) would be AGINST the students, because they don't feel there is a need to protest against the government in place now. Radicals would be against the present government. therefore, they would definitely protest. a lot. </p>
<p>with sentence completions, you really have to read into the sentence. The sentence does not sound grammatically correct if critics are the "They", but it is.</p>
<p>Then again, a period would not sound grammatically correct, but it is too. The ETS (Evil Testing Serpent:) ) uses lots of periods too.</p>
<p>NOTE: period - really long, run-on sentence that, surprisingly, is grammatically correct.</p>
<p>I used the AP English Language test to help me study for CR. THAT is some hard ****. Definitely you should try using a harder test to study for the SAT. It works.</p>
<p>I've got adversarial for the art passage and then indifferent.</p>
<p>Perhaps the critics were criticizing government and were thus part of the radical political movement?</p>
<p>Woah. Hold your horses, rhassanl. There was a passage question (is the relationship exploitative/adversarial) and a DIFFERENT sentence completion about students (indifferent).</p>
<p>yeah, dude rhasanl, you're off, man. I'm 100% sure it's indifferent for the sentence compltletion, and about 75% sure about exploitative in the PASSAGE based reading.</p>
<p>I said adversarial because the society seemed to stymie the development of true art. Then again, a case could be made for exploitative because adversarial implies that it goes 2 ways, while the passage says artists are catering to public tastes and not opposing them.</p>
<p>Well, screw the SAT. All this stressing out is not doing any good. I just hope the section I got the most wrong on is experimental.</p>
<p>The sentence completion on students and politics was definately indifferent, I'm 100% sure. Besides, it needs a lot less justification than the alternatives. The most straightforward answer is often correct.</p>
<p>oops. sorry. I'm taking 5/6 SAT</p>