<p>for that question the answer was B because you dont say precocious to her family, you say precocious in her family because precocious is a condition that the baby possesses.</p>
<p>Exactly right, Ihateschool!</p>
<p>It should be considered precocious BY , not considered precocious TO.</p>
<p>are u serious? i thought precocious to her family made sense. she was considered as displaying early development to her family.</p>
<p>No. It's definitely wrong to say considered ... to. The correct preposition is 'by.' That one was pretty subtle.</p>
<p>"you could be treating a pokemon.."</p>
<p>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^</p>
<p>o.0
NO idea where that came from....</p>
<p>here are the highly contested questions:</p>
<p>the "principal" question: I looked up in "Princeton Review's, Grammar Smart" and it said that you need the perfect present tense (have, has) when you establish a relationship of something happening in the past that affects something in the present. Since the principal question was something like "to those who listened to the principal speak, the budget cuts came as no surprise" THe past actions affect the present so you use the present perfect tense instead of the past perfect which was in the original sentence. </p>
<p>Does anyone remember the question in the improving paragraph (i think it was the last questionm #35)? I remember i got "as it is now" for the answer but i dont remember the question. Anyone else remeember any more questions with "as it is now". Many people have been saying that there were 2 answers with "as it is now" but I only remember one. Help anyone?</p>
<p>No one but a fool... There is still a lot of debate and personally I put E but I guess it could swing both ways.</p>
<p>Precocious question. Pretty sure it was B because it was incorrect idiom. </p>
<p>Anyone remember the question in the improving sentence section where it was like "The villagers skated and did turns on the ice?" It was in section 7 of the writing section for me? Does anyone remember what they got for that? </p>
<p>Feel free to post any other questions that you can remember.</p>
<p>anyone remember the improving paragraphs question where the answer had a colon in it? the paragraph was on success/failure.</p>
<p>anyone remember an answer with a colon in the improving paragraphs section?</p>