Today's SAT

<ol>
<li><p>with the strongest running and skating.</p></li>
<li><p>def c</p></li>
</ol>

<p>Do you guys remeber the one thats like "sometimes quite moving" and the rickshaws? If the rickshaws was E, then id have 4 E's, which isnt very common. But it could also mean "sometimes quite moving" is wrong, which would revert it back to 3 E's.</p>

<p>how many do you think you can get wrong to get a 750CR? how about 700CR?</p>

<p>You can get 5 wrong (taking account of -1/4) to get 750 and 7 or 8 wrong to get 700.</p>

<p>I think you can miss 4-6 and get a 750 CR. I'm being a bit generous with that estimate, though.</p>

<p>My prediction on this test is -4=750</p>

<p>ok awesome thanks</p>

<p>For the January test, three wrong in CR was a 760 (two wrong was 800 darn it). In essence, however, that was minus four points from the raw score. I don't know how April's CR curve is going to be compared to January's CR curve. (Hopefully April's will be more lenient.)</p>

<p>omg that freakin pail had me for a good three minutes! and i omitted it!!! and i was falling asleep with the passage about luinescent algae.</p>

<p>what did u guys put for the writing section question about the gas called nitrogen oxide (it was near the end and it ivolved improving a story)?</p>

<p>nitrogen oxide is (got rid of the : made it a verb)</p>

<p>what did you guys get for the identifying error question taht went "No one but a fool would lend money..." </p>

<p>I put E but then i thought about it and it could've been B because "but" is a conjuction.</p>

<p>does anyone remember the first question that had the "As it is now". I remember the last question, #35, was "As it is now". I can't remember if I got another "as it is now", does anyone remember the other question? </p>

<p>WHat did you guys get for the identify error question? THe one with the "precocious to her family because she was already able to pick up something..." I picked the one that underlined "to her family" because i dont think it is correct idiom to say "precocious to her family". I think its precocious in her family. I just checked the defintion and i think i'm 99% sure that you can't say precocious to her family because being precocious is a condition so its like you are precocious and your not precocious to other people.</p>

<p>Also I got "nevertheless" instead of "In other words" I think I got that question wrong. </p>

<p>I got 3 E's but I think one of the E's I got was wrong, so I got 2 E's. THe "extremely chanllenging course" question, " The faulkner question" and the "fool" question I got E's. NOt sure about the Fool question though.</p>

<p>Can anyone tell me if this is illegal and collegeboard will cancel my scores if they found out i posted all of this? I dont wanna retake it again.</p>

<p>Should it be "no one except a fool" ?</p>

<p>yea thats what I thought after the test, so i think i got it wrong.</p>

<p>I don't know, I think "no one but a fool" is grammatically correct.</p>

<p>does anyone remember the two "as it is now" questions for the improving paragraph part?</p>

<p>yeah .</p>

<p>could anyone post what the questions were for the two "as it is now" questions?</p>

<p>anyone else get "nevertheless" for the improving paragrah? Everyone else is stuck between "in other words" and "however" Thinking about it now, I think the answer is "in other words" because the next sentence was basically a restatement of the previous. IT was like "In other words, except in ..., scientists can still...."</p>

<p>I didn't mark "To fail, one must have made an attempt first." as correct as it is.</p>

<p>Tests are so stressful these days. I had to take and intensly study for 3 SATs 3 ACTs and 4 SAT 2's...boy am I happy its all over!!!</p>