Did everyone get square root 6 for the perpendicular planes with the triangle and the square?
there was nothing pointing toward being naive about language
@facsimilecoterie The daughter knew “formal Japanese” but her mother had even “less English”. It was easier to say “Yes, yes”. How is she connecting…
@smileymoose the other choice were like dreaded and condemned, . . . .
she wanted to voice this haiku to her mom because she knew that her mom was writing haikus, it was hard cus of language, she’s lazy, so she went to the easiest course of action. her intention is to connect, but it got muddled up in the difficulties of language
@Sherlincapt https://www.google.com/search?q=shared+her+ecstatic+notes&oq=shared+her+ecstatic+notes&aqs=chrome…69i57.177j0j7&sourceid=chrome&es_sm=119&ie=UTF-8#q=hisaye+yamamoto+seventeen+syllables+pdf
go to the first link and read it under, she was thinking of ways to tell her mom. its not the best answer but it still beats naivity of language barrier
@TheEpic2401Man
700 cr
770 math
800 writing
total 2270
@mochilate1897 My point is, she wouldn’t giggle considering her mother had even “less English”. The Haiku was a poem her mother wrote in English. She’s not fluent so obviously it’s not going to be great. She giggled off till she fell asleep. She laughed that much to the point where she fell asleep? Sounds naive to me. Just my opinion.
@facsimilecoterie I still don’t think she wanted to connect. If she truly wanted to connect she wouldn’t laugh at her mother’s poem or say “yes, yes” to everything because that’s rude. Idk, I saw no loving aspect in this kid. xD
@facsimilecoterie The “at” in offered at refers to a location, which is the park. In normal colloquial terms we use “offered by” as a standard which is probably why the article you posted used it that way. “Offered at” makes way more sense
the above comment was for the colorado question in case anyone wants to comment
@Sherlincapt she giggled because she found the haiku entertaining, and wanted to share something interesting with her mom. the haiku about the dough was certainly not by her mom, it was just in one of her magazines. the haiku that the mom is writing is about cats and good luck and what not…
@ratclown you may be right, however, i think offered by is still correct. There may be a better answer, BUT offered by is still correct so you cant mark it wrong.
@sherlincapt okay, lets just say that trying to connect is wrong, but can you explain your answer then? she is not naive about the language barrier, she knows the immensity of it.
@facsimilecoterie I see what you mean but Offered by is wrong. Its the same situation with “that of, those of”: we don’t use it colloquially but its a grammar rule. Hence I really think “at” is correct, since the verb offered is referring to the parks, which is a location. Can anyone else chime in on this?
@ratclown offered by is correct, the SAT does not require for you to consider whether something is animate or inanimate, ask any SAT prep teacher
@mochilate1897 Her mother is the one who writes haikus in magazines though. Regardless, she did contemplate to connect but she said that its easier to say “yes, yes” so that means that she didn’t care about connecting when it was easier just to say “yes, yes” to everything.
“Physics is offered as a class by the school” is fine, same thing with the question
You think math -1 has a chance at being at least a 780? And will writing -1 and 11 essay be 800? And finally, will CR -4 be at least a 760??? If so, my predicted score (at its highest) is a 2340 but 2360 super-score. I would be ecstatic if I actually got that. I think math was medium, but critical reading and writing were hard.
she is saying yes, yes because she is lazy, and it is the easiest course of action. it is too hard to connect due to language barriers, so she says yes yes, but it doesnt change that she still wants to find a way to connect to her mother