***JANUARY 2014 INTERNATIONAL SAT***

<p>oh there was this one question where one progression was the 25 plus the last digit and the other sequence was the square of positive integers, n they asked which term “n” would satisfy both the equations or sth the answer was 25 yeah ? and also another question was where we had 5 variables and we had to use 2,4,5,8,9 (i think) to create the maximum possible number I got 48 for it. was that what you guys got ?</p>

<p>Let’s put our questions in here is more organized :D!</p>

<p><a href=“https://docs.google.com/document/d/1LlAaW9N18hlOJHXKKdBwQaFVjd7ZCiOq0OTz_hxin9U/edit?usp=sharing”>https://docs.google.com/document/d/1LlAaW9N18hlOJHXKKdBwQaFVjd7ZCiOq0OTz_hxin9U/edit?usp=sharing&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>@satassistance
The first question is right. I can’t recall the second one</p>

<p>@benjamin8451 man the question had variables r,s,t,u and v and then there were those digits and there was an equation relating those variables and well the second last option was 48 and the last one was 60 sth i remember putting D for this one =/</p>

<p>i cant recall the n term thing but i am sure i marked 48 for the maximum possible number.</p>

<p>@ satassistance: oh my god thank you for confirming 8 for the cylinder question. I got nervous when people kept talking about 19 as the correct answer. This is my 4th SAT and a good score is the only way I can go to study in the US. </p>

<p>That 2,4,5,8,9 question was like: (ab/u)/(c/t) = (abt)/(uc)</p>

<p>Plug in abt = the largest numbers and uc = the smallest. I remember my answer was the second largest option (the largest was 64 I think).</p>

<ul>
<li>And yes the nth is 25. </li>
</ul>

<p>@satassistance I really can’t remember… You are probably right </p>

<p>Hey guys there is this writing question in the last section
We are hoping that the debris (is removed before the exchange student arrives) so i was wondering between A and E ( would be removed before the exchange student arrives) and so i chose E. Anybody else chose the same?</p>

<p>@sparkkid1234
that is exactly what i did!</p>

<p><a href=“January 2014 - Google Docs”>January 2014 - Google Docs;

<p>RULES: Only vote on answers, add other possible answers or add questions/answers where the question marks are. No other editing is allowed.</p>

<p>@resiliencemind your welcome, it’s all looking really good hoping for a good score i’m pretty sure u’ll do really great as well
@sparkkid1234 not sure man i was stuck between these exact two so i just took a random guess though i do not remember what that guess was atm =P</p>

<p>@sparkkid I got trapped by that question. I either picked D or E. Probably E</p>

<p>The nth question was like:
A = {25;50;75;100;125;…} (nth term = the term before it + 25)
B = {1;4;9;16;25;65;…} (nth term = n^2)</p>

<p>What is n so that nth term of A = nth term of B.</p>

<p>With n=25, we have 625 in both cases.</p>

<p>@satassistance
Me too. D and E are quite similar. I forgot which I picked.</p>

<p>I picked A for that writing question…</p>

<p>@benjamin8451 dude look at the Google doc and the poetry question with “famous” in quotation marks from the poetry passage how is the answer “cliched” ? =S</p>

<p>The radius question: answer is square root of 2 right? I solved that in like 5 seconds. :D</p>

<p>Kudos to whoever got it together (Y) but i have two issues with that, the first one is “That’s sad” from the Bose-Verma passage, how is it solemn and the second one is “famous” from the poetry passage, how is it cliched ? =S</p>

<p>@resiliencemind yeah it was square root of 2 could u explain to me my two questions regarding the CR ? @benjamin8451 u too man =/</p>

<p>@satassistance I got the exact same answers as you… 25 and 48.</p>