<p>I thought the essay topic was relatively easy. However, i could only fit two body paragraphs in my essay. I did write on every line with my smallest handwriting, but still only two body paragraphs. Do you think that will hurt my score?</p>
<p>Honking Geese…I put that Except for was a mistake…shouldnt it be like Despite?</p>
<p>I put no Error for honking geese, also for the combined blah _____ blah</p>
<p>was it combined blah and blah or combined blah with blah.</p>
<p>no error for honking geese? either way, by far the easiest writing section i have ever encountered.</p>
<p>never mind, it’s combined with. POOP. I GOT THAT WRONG!</p>
<p>Except for sounds kind of awkward, are you guys sure its right?</p>
<p>AND YES. I thought so too… hahaha on the last section with 14 questions I finished and checked over it within ten minutes and the girl next to me was on like number 5. Once you understand what grammatical error each question is testing for, the writing portion becomes really easy</p>
<p>Was the one with The guy, her and her no error?</p>
<p>The guy was the subject so I left her as her instead of changing it its subjective form she.</p>
<p>for the historic building one,
what was the answer to sentence combination ? (6 and 7)
B. witnessing destruction of buildings, THE PRESERVATIONISTS realized
D. or E. idk …and the other was when the preservationists saw the destruction of the buildings, THEY realized</p>
<p>i put that “her” was wrong.</p>
<p>“he heard from diana that [HER] and sarah collect teddy bears”
she and sarah?</p>
<p>I put that “he had heard” was wrong</p>
<p>for the “were to” one, do u guys remember the answer choice it was. I had an answer but changed it last second to another… but were to sounds familiar. What was the salmon one?</p>
<p>^Correct, She and sara (they are the subjects of the clause)</p>
<p>Guys, lets go over the passage-based writing questions?</p>
<p>@Brolex, this is where foreign language either helps or hurts me. Structure went something like:
Bob heard that her and Julia are girls.
In Latin, this would be indirect discourse, which means that the subjects, “her and Julia” would be in the accusative case, which in English would be objective, so “her” would be correct.
BUT, since “that her and Julia” is a dependent clause in English, “her and Julia” would be the subject so they should be subjective, meaning “she” is correct.
So… I went with “she.”</p>
<p>@roshdaddy: Thanks
I think that’s what I put as well.</p>
<p>Ugh I had she and changed it. Oh well.</p>
<p>melancholy: sober thoughtfulness; pensiveness. (Random House Unabridged)</p>
<p>she’s definitely thinking deeply about her relationship with her mother. Why else would she be asking her self such earth-shattering rhetorical questions?</p>
<p>Can someone give me an example from the experimental writing section? I stupidly didnt realize that i had an extra section. Though i think it was writing, but i would have to see a question from it to recognize it :(</p>
<p>@Drummer, the one with the psychology/artist passage with the picture of the duck/rabbit. I also think it had a passage about a biologist and bee’s with large hind legs.</p>
<p>For the one with the geese, I thought the error would be in “when animals” because it should exclude the geese…so the correct answer should be “when OTHER animals”</p>
<p>@brolex thanks</p>