<p>if you have any questions about the test etc post on here. i dont know how many people took it on march 15 but i did</p>
<p>i did too wneckid, what a coincidence...quesions:</p>
<p>Math:
- perimeter or curved triangle
- the logic one: if i studied for the test....
- number of possibilities of 5x+1 between 35 - 300
- length of diagonal inside rectangular prism</p>
<p>Writing:
- the nelson mandela one
- James and his collections</p>
<p>it was andrew and his collections</p>
<p>the number of possibilities was 53</p>
<p>the curved triangle was 10pi-- im pretty sure</p>
<p>the 35-300 was like 52. because it's 7-59 which is 52. or crap! 53</p>
<p>diagonal prism = 13</p>
<p>yeah it was 10pi</p>
<p>i think the 35-300 one was 52 because u cant count 300</p>
<p>no but the way u calculate- is [(59-7) + 1] so that it inclues 7 up to 59</p>
<p>plus i counted on my fingers</p>
<p>you set 5x+1= 35 then = to 300</p>
<p>When you solve x, round the x solved for 35 up to the nearest integer, because it can be greater than 35. However, round the x solved for 300 down. You get 7 and 59. Then, use Wneckid99's way to solve it. "[(59-7) + 1"</p>
<p>For the perimeter question, you realize that the radii form an equilateral triangle, having 60 degrees per angle. now, use the length of part of a Circumference formula. (x/360)(C)(3). In this case it is 60/360 or 1/6 for x/360, and C is 2x10xpie. So, (1/6)(20pie)(3). The 3 is because (1/6)(20pie) only solves for one out of 3 parts of the region, each one is part of 1 circle.</p>
<p>I got E for the logic one, I'm not sure of that one. </p>
<p>For the length of diagonal, use "super pythagorean theorem". l,w,h represents the length, width, and height of rectangle. So just take the square root of the sum of each dimension squared.</p>
<p>Idk why I thought I should use 120 degree instead of 60</p>
<p>Idk why I thought I should use 120 degree instead of 60</p>
<p>How about the first verbal section about the person who loved exploring deep sea environments.</p>
<p>I was stuck on the first problem...</p>
<p>What were his feelings as a child as expressed in the first paragraph?</p>
<p>So...he mentions how he was taught that everything imaginable had already been discovered and how he envied the great explorers...</p>
<p>So I was stuck between "Curiosity" and "frustration"...</p>
<p>I opted for curiosity since it seemed the fit the theme of the passage better, but I have my doubts. What did you guys think?</p>
<p>Yeah I was stuck on the same question as Arch3r25, but I opted for frustrated...</p>
<p>Also from the test...</p>
<p>-I remember I put "fecund" for one of the CR vocab answers.
-For math, I remember 20/3, 10pie, and "if the kid does not study, then he will not pass the test."
-Does anyone remember any questions from the lawyer passage? I thought that one was the hardest.
-I remember an answer being "reverence."
-There was a CR vocab question about someone getting sick at the bottom of a mountain... I forgot what the answers were
-For the question about the bus driver and his "throne" I thought the answer was that he had a greater sense of his importance.</p>
<p>Does anyone remember any else?</p>
<p>-i put frustrated. i was unsure too.
-For the question about the bus driver and his "throne" I thought the answer was that he had a greater sense of his importance.
do you remember if that was letter a?</p>
<p>what were the other CR passages. i know there was the lawyer one, the two african americans, deep sea one, what's the other long passage i'm missing?</p>
<p>sentence completion: did anyone choose one that had deleterious in it?</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>Pernicious...deleterious</p>
<p>thank you! do you happen to know the one sentence completion about the myriad of worthless projects. was it distilled...variable (think that was the word)?</p>