the official "what was the answer to..." thread for the october 6 SAT

<p>i think it was like -4 or something…unless i’m thinking of the wrong question. </p>

<p>what were some of the choices for the sentence completion that had servile as the answer?</p>

<p>The answer is servile; that’s all i know… lol…-.-…</p>

<p>:) - you could as well rotate it by .000001° and still get the same circle. I am hoping it was asking for different circles, then my answer would be correct.</p>

<p>And for the other thing, -4 was correct.</p>

<p>A plane’s 2D not 3D right? If so, that makes rotation impossible</p>

<p>bjs: that’s not the correct reasoning; there is no reason why you couldn’t rotate anything in 2D. In fact, you only need a center - in either 2D or 3D.</p>

<p>true… i put one anyway, so i’m still hoping it’s the right answer.</p>

<p>could someone please remind me of the pi question?</p>

<p>oh well, regardless of the answer, it seems a little too ambiguous</p>

<p>no one knows yet which section was experimental… they choose which 1 is based on the scoring.. then they select the one that will bring the average score closest to 1500.. different people have different areas with 4 sections.. so obviously 1 persons experimental doesnt have to be the same as yours</p>

<p>there are 3 experimentals, writing reading and math. But they put in experimentals to be experimentals. That would make little sense if you decided to put in a extra section and take one off based on how we do</p>

<p>all the infinite circles are the same
they overlap
it’s one circle!</p>

<p>so~,by that logic
one line is also 2 lines
and 3 lines
and 4 lines.
etc…</p>

<p>^^ correct? People are over-thinking! It’s one damn circle!</p>

<p>“We can rotate~” so what? It’s still one frigggingg circle~</p>

<hr>

<p>I asked a guy who got 2320… and the answer above is an excerpt.</p>

<p>Lol, a circle is defined by a point center and a radius. If you rotate a circle by any number of degrees, it’s the same circle… haha that was funny.</p>

<p>Hello, im new to the forums so yeah. The circle question asked how many circles with a radius 6 pie at point P in a plane M can exist. The wording was different but the question is essentially the same. The answer is one, unless there is some absurd logic beind the other answers. I overanalyzed this question and spent a good 3 min just scratching my head. It seemed to easy, thats what made it difficult. I missed the z=2 one. argggggggggg, now I’ll never get into cal-tech. Eh, berkeley, here I come.</p>

<p>okay. college board posted which sections were experimental on their website. if you had a black/white cover, it was one of the maths, and if you had a pink cover… i can’t remember. but it’s on the site somewhere.</p>

<p>I got black/white cover and I didn’t get math ^.^… unlucky moi…</p>