<p>The sentence. …she went on 4 space missions which she logged over 50 hours in.</p>
<p>I thought it was no error… since the in at the end of the sentence serves the same purpose as the “in” in “in which”</p>
<p>The sentence. …she went on 4 space missions which she logged over 50 hours in.</p>
<p>I thought it was no error… since the in at the end of the sentence serves the same purpose as the “in” in “in which”</p>
<p>Was the “people denied of the rights to” supposed to be “people denied the rights to”</p>
<p>4 space missions - I said the “which” was wrong, I think the “in” from the previous “in which” doesn’t carry over</p>
<p>“People denied the rights to” is correct</p>
<p>Does anyone remember a question from the “identifying error” portion of the writing section that went like this:
“Exceedingly [blah] in the novel, an artist struggles to find a place in a technological society.”
What was the error, if any?</p>
<p>Hi all,
I just wanted to clarify whether the Collegeboard has given permission to students to discuss the questions. I do not know about the rest of you, but my proctor specifically told us that we cannot discuss test material by conversation, text, or any other form of communication. I am worried that all of you will have your test scores canceled because of this major transgression. I hope I am wrong about this, but I am siding with the user tkapuzas in this matter.</p>
<p>Thanks,
honorama1</p>
<p>I put 1.6 for the token math question. Because you have 5 small and 5 large tokens. 5(1.6)=8 5(.4)=2 8+2=10</p>
<p>^TexasApex
Please do not discuss any questions. You could be severely reprimanded by the Collegeboard for such behavior.</p>
<p>Thanks,
honorama1</p>
<p>I thought it said 1/4 the value of the large token</p>
<p>you think the collegeboard will waste time tracking all of our ip addresses?</p>
<p>Hello,</p>
<p>Yes, westernblotf I agree with your statement. I believe the collegeboard needs to give out daily reminders, and I do not think they will hesitate to kick us all out for doing such felonious acts.</p>
<p>Cheers,
honorama1</p>
<p>Yes, DaneBrick. The Collegeboard has been know to track the Internet Protocol addresses of students who have discussed questions online. They are like the NSA, except watching over students like you who have breached their rules of conduct.</p>
<p>Happy Diwali!
honorama1</p>
<p>hnorama 1 andwesternblotf- i notice you are both new to CC. Seriously??? this has been going on for years. if the collegeboard wanted to shut this down they could. this tracking the protocol is bull…this is hamrless discussion of questions so we can see how we did…</p>
<p>@Texas
.4 =/ .25
lol</p>
<p>I don’t understand why people keep asking about the same questions. “is it which or in which in the astronaut one” it honestly gets annoying having to read the same exact questions everytime</p>
<p>@franky, I know, I read the question as the small token being 1/4 the value of the large token. 1/4 of 1.6 is .4. Stupid mistake :(</p>
<p>Which math section was experimental?</p>
<p>Was the 25 minute, 20 problem math section with the “f(x) - 1” problem experimental or real?
anyone know?</p>
<p>ofocke, real</p>
<p>and ur 100% sure of this?</p>
<p>Yes my experimental was reading and I had the math section with the f(x)-1 problem</p>
<p>I agree. Using “that” at the beginning of a sentence is equivalent to “the fact that.” If you plug in “the fact that” instead of “that,” it all makes sense.</p>