<p>its paradoxical, because they aren’t REALLY famous</p>
<p>^ The answer is “ironic.” (or paradoxical, I don’t remember. D: )</p>
<p>so does anyone know the answer to the question ME was asking? about why it was in quotes…it was the question right after it obviously bc it goes in order.</p>
<p>lol i put me in caps because I in caps wouldnt emphasize anything. i destroyed proper english for the sake of effect.</p>
<p>Why it was in quotes was because it was either ironic or paradoxical, I forget which one.</p>
<p>really? because i remember putting ironic for a different question in that section…lol i probably just remember seeing it and didnt choose it.</p>
<p>hooray for another question wrong =/</p>
<p>discrimination means discernment? that’s a joke.</p>
<p>it does. tricky, i know. i nearly cried when i read it on cc.</p>
<p>@ satwizard
discrimination DOES mean discernment in certain situations, Einstein.</p>
<p>If you say “racial discrimination” that’s way different than saying “I discriminate between right and wrong.”</p>
<p>look at definition “B” in both cases:
[discriminate</a> - Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary](<a href=“http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/discriminate]discriminate”>Discriminate Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster)
[discriminate:</a> Definition, Synonyms from Answers.com](<a href=“Answers - The Most Trusted Place for Answering Life's Questions”>Answers - The Most Trusted Place for Answering Life's Questions)</p>
<p>Think before you speak next time :)</p>
<p>its really ironic (haha no pun intended on previous discussion) that the sat practice test i took the night before had discrimination used in that manner. </p>
<p>unfortunately, with the # of questions i got wrong already it didnt make much of difference lol.</p>
<p>haha nice. Yeah that one was definitely irony.
but I wouldn’t call your situation ironic, per se; I’d call it awesomely fortunate! :)</p>
<p>it is asset, because asset means a higher meaning and quality to the elephant’s existence. The question was tough, but the author was getting at how she was frustrated unable to discover anything more about the elephant, and she wanted to know deeper meanings that the elephant’s existence possess. Asset means a higher quality, or in this case the artistic quality. People get assets confused with money, which is the orthodox def. but in this case, it is about meaningful quality.</p>
<p>^ you’re referring to the one about “the scent gave ___ to the elephant’s existence” right?</p>
<p>It wasn’t asset. It was substance. I know I’m not always right, but I was positive on that one, and I’ve gotten general consensus.</p>
<p>the irony one (different questions) was like “what did putting famous in quotation marks show?”
…irony.</p>
<p>hey, it is the question. but substance is the word that is asked,; it is not the answer choice. The answer choice that complements the substance is asset</p>
<p>i put reality because the author discussed how she knew the elephant was there at one time, but felt slightly dubious regarding an elephant’s ability to draw. therefore the scent of this elephant would provide “substance” to its existence, making the most logical choice “reality”. i dont think “asset” is applicable in this case because the the lines that the question referred to were not focused on the elephant’s artistic qualities.</p>
<p>i put reality in the beginning there was something about elephant not even leaving a foot print as if it doesn’t exist so she was closing her eyes trying to get a scent… thus tyring to pick up something that shows the elephant is in real …</p>
<p>sorry but can we go back to the candid question? i know this is incrediblely annoying but i swear the problem said
Her SEEMINGLY ____ personality… so wouldn’t candid make sense?
and about the map question from the hiker person…
i thought map wasn’t the right answer because they did find the water fountain or whatever from the map it just that the water fountains were inadequate… so the map wasn’t misleading… so i choose she became increasingly frasturated cause that kind fits with the flow of the passage? idk??
and abt the thrived…antediluvian one… i don’t get it? why isn’t it prosper…antiquated?
doesn’t antediluvian also mean before the flood?
and about alu… i thought she laughed because of scorn for the book because she loved right after alu said the name of the book…
i don’t know
ugh
vocab is a *****.</p>
<p>*laughed
sorry
as you can tell i bombed the writing section</p>
<p>solicitous means showing concern. the sentence specifically mentioned the word “care.” idk thats all i remember about the sentence. but im 90% sure it was solicitous</p>
<p>hey hookem, I know discrimination means discernment. however that is an extremely uncommon use of the word and I, in my 17 years of living, have never heard it used in the way it was used in the sentence. For it to be used on an aptitude test is ridiculous, and it leaves opens the use of millions of obsolete words.</p>
<p>let me tell you this, Einstein, I find your SAT score to be pathetic in relation to the amount of time you’ve spent studying. Peace.</p>
<p>^ I haven’t spent a single moment studying, unless you count reading real books as studying. The night before the Nov. 1 test, i was out til 2 at a Halloween party. I never even cracked an SAT prep book. Dead serious. Chew on that.</p>
<p>Experimental sections have been released. Which CR section didnt count?</p>