<p>Also, there was a question in the writing section about rashoman or something. Was that no error.</p>
<p>@ AwkwardAardvark</p>
<p>I felt the math was okay. I didn’t spend too much time on any one question and nothing game me any real trouble. And I put no error for the rashoman question as well.</p>
<p>Did anyone get a lot of No errors? I think I got like three in a row, a few more than that total for no errors ?</p>
<p>For vocab, was it antagonistic/enmity or uncouth/scathing?</p>
<p>I don’t believe I had any consecutive No Errors. Maybe one instance of it? Definitely not 3.</p>
<p>Did the Dr. Seuss one have any error? I couldn’t decide whether beginning a sentence with the infinitive “To create” vs. “In creating” was an error or just a stylistic foible.</p>
<p>@bonabo it was antagonistic/enmity.</p>
<p>Peacock feathers? Is “it” definitely sound?</p>
<p>When do SAT scores usually come back? A month? 3 weeks?</p>
<p>Also, did anyone else find the double passage about deception really hard? I usually consider CR a breeze but that one was killer. So many comparisons that could work but there was only one correct response, supposedly. Does anyone remember a few questions on that one?</p>
<p>I found the math easy except for the creative response or whatever they call it, and the only thing I had difficulty with in the writing was “proceed”–it came up twice and I think I got it right both times.</p>
<p>I think the peacock one was the one about feeling enlivened by her situation or something like that. Also the one about the lists of words was referring to setting and the one about the city paragraph was sensory imagery.</p>
<p>OK on the question for the diagonals in the square, do you guys remember what the answer choices were? Was -3 an answer choice or was -5 an answer choice?</p>
<p>I guess I’m unusual in that I got the “shake” question right away and didn’t look back. I immediately said dislodge. Maybe it’s just my personal experience, but I’ve never “weakened” a feeling–I have it or I don’t have it. So when I’m trying to shake a feeling, I want to get rid of it and not have it again.</p>
<p>For the essay prompt about individualism, did it ask for individualism in the present day? Because if it did I’m screwed since I used all historical and literary characters</p>
<p>@ ekatz612 </p>
<p>I don’t remember the choices, but I’m fairly certain that -4 was the correct answer.</p>
<p>The square diagonals I thought you just found the midpoint of the line? And the x-coordinate of the midpoint was the intersection? After all if its a square then the diagonals are the same length…</p>
<p>@DivisionByZero
Yeah I know that, I just don’t remember whether I put -4 or either -5/-3. Hoping I didn’t miss that one cause that was the only one i’m hesitant about.</p>
<p>What time of the day do SAT scores come out? I know they come out the 23rd, but will they be available at midnight or is there a specific time during the day?</p>
<p>Also, I put -4.</p>
<p>I think I did pretty well on the SAT, as a whole. Hoping I improved from my PSAT score of 193. A few concerns, though - On one math section, I didn’t have time to answer a few math questions I probably could have, and I think I could’ve done better on the essay. My intro was pretty strong and my first body paragraph was an interesting personal anecdote, but my second body paragraph and conclusion were a bit rushed. The conclusion turned out to be a bit interesting (in a good way), but my second body paragraph wasn’t really an “example” backing up my point… just abstract discussion of the topic. Sensical abstract discussion, but it seemed different from anything I’d previously seen on an SAT example essay (granted, I haven’t seen many…). The syntax and diction used were definitely on the impressive side, though. If only the essay came after one or two English sections, I’d have done much better.</p>
<p>Does anyone have any thoughts on the essay I’ve described?</p>
<p>@ my88keys</p>
<p>From what I’ve heard, scores are released around 5AM EST.</p>
<p>on the essay question (individualism vs community) i used one flew over the cuckoo’s nest (all the patients competed with each other and sabotaged one another, so their need to be individuals made them forget the importance of working together) and some made-up study that showed that the majority of students today are motivated to volunteer in order to have a better looking college app (so basically manipulating the sense of community in order to appear as a stronger individual) but i was rushing and worded things really badly so idk how i ended up doing</p>