<p>its self satisfied ivy. there are more people supporting self satisfied.</p>
<p>and for the ultimately trivial thing
doesn’t “unnecesarily competetive” make more sense?
since he called it a “game” </p>
<p>but he said it didnt matter or that he didnt care of something like that. he just played anyways</p>
<p>edit- i think the competetive answer was a trap answer</p>
<p>You’re reading too literally into the definition of game… the connotation of game is something for fun, not substantial. that’s why he called the speculation trivial- it was a game, and not serious.</p>
<p>doesn’t prodigy just mean talented (at a young age)? virtuoso is someone who is dazzlingly skilled in any field. It already said he was talented</p>
<p>was a question’s answer conundrum?</p>
<p>okay, i guess the consensus is right… sorry.</p>
<p>was a question’s answer conundrum? </p>
<p>something like “a conundrum researches face…”
yes it was</p>
<p>What was the flout question? I don’t even remeber that answer choice.</p>
<p>it was prodigy/exceptional, i mean the sentence was like he was gifted, but not gifted like a prodigy, just exceptional. and also the question was a medium-easy one, and also the link between virtuoso and precocious is not that strong.</p>
<p>wasn’t self satisfied the consensus.</p>
<p>I got ultimately trivial.
So what was the similarity between extroverts and dancers?!
I guessed social, but I thought that the stimuli choice could also be possible…</p>
<p>which question is for “self satisfied”?</p>
<p>if it’s for the grandma after the “silence”, im pretty sure i put resignation</p>
<p>Guys, it’s prodigy and exceptional since a list of achievements can’t be precocious. However, they can be EXCEPTIONAL.</p>
<p>was one answer ambiguity at the heart of science</p>
<p>Something like how she was willing to write a whole bunch in the letters to her grandma’s sister.</p>
<p>i put conscientious (also due to the definition above). The passage never said anything about her being “proud” of her work</p>
<p>it was how the grand daughter felt about changing the letters or something (not exactly that). most people got self satisfied but under the consolidated list it still says conscientious.</p>
<p>Virtuoso has nothing to do with one’s age though, which invalidates the use of the word “precocious” to justify it. Prodigy, on the other hand, has two qualifications: age and exceptional ability (not just talent, but beyond that). So “exceptional” or whatever it was works in that situation.</p>
<p>OH. dam. bye guys, i’m going to commit suicide</p>
<p>For the self-satisfied vs conscientiousness, I put the latter because I thought that she was conscientious in the way that she wrote in her grandmother’s perspective. Nothing really indicated that she was self satisfied. Yes, she seemed enthusiastic but she was not really satisfied with HERSELF… she was satisfied with the opportunity to impersonate her grandma. If it was satisfied, I would have agreed but the choice was SELF-satisfied.</p>
<p>An example of how she was conscientious (synonym “particular”) is that she noted and wrote that the grandma felt the sense of indifference from her daughter-in-law. The fact that the daughter noticed and could understand how her grandma might feel shows that she’s attentive and conscientious regrading her grandmother’s viewpoint of life.</p>