The Official November 2014 SAT Thread (INTERNATIONAL)

<p>For the identifying the error question of the writing section that said, “That the magazine would publish his work (or something) is evidence of his blah blah),” is ‘that’ the right answer?</p>

<p>the timezone was the paragraph</p>

<p>Will there be a harsh curve for math? This test seems to be a lot easier compared to one last month.</p>

<p>So I’m the only one who found math hard?! 2 blank, 2 incorrect >.< And probably a lot more mistakes that I don’t know of yet</p>

<p>did you get ubiquitous, manifold, or punctilious as Sc’s? </p>

<p>I remember getting manifold. Not sure about the other two</p>

<p>@oreolover‌ Which one?
I think math was harder this month than october.</p>

<p>@marsha ss. Were you able to find it?</p>

<p>just saw your message</p>

<p>@Unifect‌ The tie question went something like this: "John has in his closet X numbers of ties among which one is green and Y numbers of red shirts. He can’t wear red and green together. How many options are there in terms of X and Y?</p>

<p>For the short passage comparison about Night Owls vs Early Birds, there was a question going something like “Night owls are those who can’t keep their eyes open in the morning and blah blah…”
did you guys get “define a term” or “make an observation”? i chose define a term. </p>

<p>Define a term dude. </p>

<p>Yeah I am pretty sure there were two define a terms, also I think I stupidly put return to a topic instead of comic digression in one even thought I dont understand how its NOT returning to a topic.</p>

<p>EDIT: I remember ubiquitous and manifold but punctilious hmm yes maybe. The one vocab I didn’t know was about an anathema or something like that anyone remember?</p>

<p>Wasn’t the answer to the shirt and tie combination question xy - (x-1)(y-1) = x+y-1?</p>

<p>If it wasn’t, I got that wrong. That’s a huge bummer. Was really hoping for an 800 in Math this time.</p>

<p>i got punctilious … stringent? that was the right answer i think. also i got various … manifold</p>

<p>Wait what was the other choice for the sentence completion that had “punctilious…stringent”?</p>

<p>@kiwieagle‌ I got “returning to the topic” and I remember feeling pretty sure about it. Because the statement was something like “Back to the orchad.” That’s an indication that she realizes she’s digressed from the topic and is now bringing it BACK to the original topic. The purpose of the statement wasn’t as a comic digression. Here’s the passage actually: <a href=“An Alchemy of Mind: The Marvel and Mystery of the Brain - Diane Ackerman - Google Books”>An Alchemy of Mind: The Marvel and Mystery of the Brain - Diane Ackerman - Google Books;

<p>@yacht151 I think you are correct for that one, but there was a different passage, and the answer to that question was something about comic _____… i don’t remember. I remember choosing “returning to the topic” for one of them, and for another “Comic blahblah”</p>

<p>Do you remember the question about the purpose of that passage?</p>