<p>agree again</p>
<p>agree with everything too</p>
<p>which question arey ou talking about ?</p>
<p>@user83248324</p>
<p>what question?</p>
<p>@zeek - the cluttered desks question…the answer was that they did not yet know how to classify those ideas</p>
<p>also, the spaceship question…the answer was that living in such close proximity enabled people to predict how those around them would act</p>
<p>YESS! This makes me happy
Those were all the ones I stopped for like half a second to think about on the reading comp. lol
So I think I did well thenn. Yay! A lot better than the 26 I got last time (I know, I know, I belonged in the corner with a dunce cap - but that last ACT was disastrous, period).</p>
<p>I felt the reading was pretty average as far as difficulty. I think I did well (31-33) but didn’t feel as confident taking it this month as I did in June when i got a 32.</p>
<p>does anyone remember the question that asked " water is not only vital for life but also is…?"</p>
<p>some of the choices were:
something something
somethingsomeinthing
it’s constantly moving
it’s a superb solvent</p>
<p>constantly moving…</p>
<p>^yes, constantly moving</p>
<p>wow i think i got every question right. i’m hoping a 35-36 on this will makeup for the the $hitty science score and not that good of a math score i’ll be getting</p>
<p>If anyone was wondering about the saturation vapor question, I found the answer word for word on the very last line of the first column, carrying into the second column. It was “stops absorbing water” or something like that.</p>
<p>can anyone make a list of all correct answers???</p>
<p>I’m going to disagree that the answer was “stop absorbing water” for the saturation question. I think the passage strongly implied that it was (I think the second or third answer choice…) that the waters could not produce clouds or mist. The paragraph was like: </p>
<p>Golly, it sure is swell the water isn’t at super-saturation point, because then we get all this pretty mist and crap!</p>
<p>To me, that greatly implies the converse is true, that since the water IS at saturation point, it CANNOT produce mist.</p>
<p>It said when water reaches saturation point it forms droplets…</p>
<p>In which case, the air cannot absorb any more. The question asked for which answer can most strongly BE IMPLIED.</p>
<p>If you know what saturation and saturation points actually is, the question should’ve been very obvious.</p>
<p>Excuse me? I know what saturation and saturation points actually ARE. </p>
<p>And you’re really just verifying my thinking: if the water forms droplets, that means it ISN’T forming mist or clouds.</p>
<p>@epigram- if the passage did directly say that the air cannot produce clouds/mist at saturation vapor pressure then one can IMPLY that the air cannot absorb any more water at saturation vapor pressure</p>
<p>@epigram- if the passage did directly say that the air cannot produce clouds/mist at saturation vapor pressure then one can IMPLY that the air cannot absorb any more water at saturation vapor pressure</p>
<p>@vcooper- No, it said that when the water is not at saturation pressure, it can produce clouds and mist. Therefore, the opposite–that when the water <em>is</em> at saturation pressure, it cannot produce mist–is the answer choice most directly and strongly implied.</p>
<p>I agree with epig. I saw the cloud/mist thing WORD for WORD near the top of the second column. I got a 35 on my last reading test…so just giving my 2 cents…</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure it was the one that said that it stops absorbing water. When something is saturated, by definition, it means that it cannot absorb any more of the solute. </p>
<p>Also, when it’s saturated, IT WILL RAIN! Evaporation ----> Condensation/Raining/Cloud</p>