<p>Ptang I think it was 4 but I could be wrong cause it seems as though I've made a bunch of stupid mistakes so far...</p>
<p>I think I got 2rad3 too</p>
<p>that question seems to be deeper than just internal vs. external because it is seen through the eyes of a child. the building itself may not be much interest but on the inside it is heavenly since there're so many books. so it really depends on impressions. so i picked A</p>
<p>2 root 3 definitely</p>
<p>yeah internal v external</p>
<p>on that same question, what was the answer for the reason for the extended quote? I think i answered A, whatever that was</p>
<p>edit: oh and i think i had 4 readings or something
what's the difference between reading and writing sections?
which one has vocab and stuff?</p>
<p>2rad3 was definitely correct</p>
<p>with the long passage, I picked A also=]</p>
<p>I dislike my essay. I cited overspeculation during the roaring twenties ultimately resulting in the Great Depression and Lady Brett Ashley's unhappiness in The Sun Also Rises despite her wealth and vast collection of possessions, reasoning that money may buy happiness, especially if one uses it to help the poor fulfill their basic human needs, but materialism does not buy happiness. I sort of strayed from the question and I'm now expecting a ten.</p>
<p>"i don't remember the grid in with the bisectors. what was the question?"</p>
<p>Angle AOE. X = 40. Y = 35. The correct answer was 90 degrees.</p>
<p>I'm fairly sure that the only math question that I answered incorrectly was the inverse proportion.</p>
<p>Some tougher questions and answers on math was the 80 inch rule [correct answer 100 inches, I believe, as 20 x (3 +2) = 100, the (x - 8)(x - k) [x squared - 5kx + m] question [answer was 16, I believe, as k was two], the shaded circle area question [diameter is six, answer was 6 pi, I believe], the y = the product of a and x squared [side of the square is eight, correct answer was a = (1/2), I believe].</p>
<p>I am not sure if I understood the question about the sequence 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 3, etc. Was the correct answer n = 5?</p>
<p>I said internal vs. external.</p>
<p>Also, the cube and circle thing was super easy, just took a few moments to get the answer. It was one of the few difficult questions that gave me no trouble. All you had to do was use good ol' Mr. Pythagoras' theory twice.</p>
<p>on the math question:</p>
<p>1,2,2,3,3,3,4,4,4,4...</p>
<p>find the first n when the sequence is 12, did you get 67 for that?</p>
<p>"I'm fairly sure that the only math question that I answered incorrectly was the inverse proportion."</p>
<p>What was that one?</p>
<p>One: Yes I got 67</p>
<p>i said y squared for the inverse question</p>
<p>what was answer choice A?</p>
<p>I didn't even take the test and I knew as soon as someone mentioned area of a cube and diameter of a sphere what the answer was. I've seen that exact question 1 too many times. </p>
<p>Can someone make an official discussion thread for each section?</p>
<p>The inverse porportion one was Y^2</p>
<p>"find the first n when the sequence is 12, did you get 67 for that?"</p>
<p>yep</p>
<p>the math question with the inverse proportion?I put it 1/y squared...</p>
<p>Yeah it was 67. </p>
<p>The question about 50 numbers in a sequence of 2, -4, 8, where each number gets multiplied by two, I got 28. What did you guys get?</p>
<p>I got y^2 for that inverse proportion one as well</p>
<p>and 28 for the sequence thing</p>