<p>was “distressing” debunking a theory</p>
<p>what was the nuance/complex SC?..wasn’t that a passage…</p>
<p>choas was an answer. For what, I don’t remember.</p>
<p>Distressing = bemoaning a trend. Final answer.</p>
<p>no, “distressing” was bemoaning a trend.</p>
<p>not sure if this question was experimental: what does venerating mean? oh and did anyone have a short passage about the blending of Rome and Egypt?</p>
<p>^
same. she even said it provided him order in the sentence before it i think</p>
<p>WAS IT LIFE CHAOS OR SPECIAL SENTIMENTAL VALUE, im pretty sure the latter because the first choice is something a mediocre reading comprehender would pick, but the latter choice is a balances unextreme, and warranted response</p>
<p>and was something undeserved and mostly uninformed…something along those lines</p>
<p>chaos. He mentions something in the essay that made me positive it was the correct answer</p>
<p>i put lifes chaos…</p>
<p>I’m sorry if this has been asked, but what was the answer to the “quarrelling friends” one in the Mrs. Verma passage, when she is talking about her father?</p>
<p>what were the discriminating and nuance/complex SC? b/c i don’t remember seeing those…</p>
<p>it said “he strived to find the order missing in life” by saying chaos its instantaneously assuming that this lack of order means he is running away from chaos, however his intrinsic relationship overall with the bookcase was one of a unique sentimental value</p>
<p>I failed at CR once again… but idc… i’m done with the SAT. Is anyone with me? >_<</p>
<p>The books were his refuge from chaos.</p>
<p>The sentimental value of the bookcase doesn’t make much sense, to me anyway.</p>
<p>me!..even tho im taking literature SAT II in december which is exponentially harder than this stuff</p>
<p>You guys think you are so smart, why are you violating the rules that you signed off on when taking the test. You are risking your scores. NOT worth it.</p>
<p>College Board AP Test Policies</p>
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<p>well it also said he was very seclusive…so isnt it rather apparent that he found order in his books because he refused to associate himself with the rest of the world?</p>
<p>i would put chaos but its jus too extreme and like a 3rd grader could make that correlation, maybe im wrong but i feel that my warrant for sentimental value is better than a radical (chaos) answer</p>