<p>@Busybee123 i think it was genial and ingratiating, but I put that too</p>
<p>lol i took like 10 past administered practice tests and consistently scored 2300+ and blew it on this one </p>
<p>Lol we ALL disagreeee</p>
<p>@ppcc16 ya so wouldn’t it not be that
HE was not confident.
did it ask which of the following is not?</p>
<p>Ikr that’s how I feel @harvard00 @Mystic7 </p>
<p>@Busybee123 yeah theres agreement that its genial and ingratiating</p>
<p>yes i think so it should be no error @Busybee123 and thanks @whartonpls kaplan did help after all</p>
<p>@ppcc16 I put genial, but now I’m having misgivings. It reminds me of that horrib le “Cutting for Stone” passage in June.</p>
<p>OK Critical reading was a mess
IT Literally was a JOKE to understand. SUPER EASy
but all the choices seemed right. like wth</p>
<p>it was genial and ingratiating. there is no evidence he was confident. y’all are just making up stories to distort and fit your answer, lol. genial and ingratiating depicts a man who is very friendly and appreciative; they are perfect attributes for salesmen. he warmly welcomed the kids and made them happy</p>
<p>Boisterous - noisy, energetic, cheerful. He definitely knew how to sell this car, and gave off an experienced vibe. </p>
<p>edited:
ok wow i don’t know anymore
but he was not appreciative, he came across as very forward, telling the kids to sit in the car and such. </p>
<p>I think someone put 3/b-a and 3/7-6 = 3/1 @Busybee123 </p>
<p>I think it’s confident and measured.
It stated that he knew they were a family
member of 5 so he said to the family that the car had 5 seats.
The passages also had some adjectives to show it was confident but I don’t remember exactly what the words were. </p>
<p>By the way for the question about the way the children acted with “legs stretched out” what was the answer you guys got???</p>
<p>WHARTON
but why not the</p>
<p>____ and obsequious choice
(idk the first word)</p>
<p>@sat2014 yeah im the math guy so math was pretty easy for me. What scores are u getting on practice writing sections? i got exactly the same number wrong as u did on the writing sections today</p>
<p>is the curve for october sat usually generous??
i thought it was okay … but i probz didnt do well, because i usually think all my CR answers are right but they arent </p>
<p>obsequious means EXCESSIVELY servile. its like a peasant to a master. he wasnt like serving them and flattering them… he was simply showing them cars to enjoy and appreciate lol. flattering would be like “oh wow! you guys look PERFECT in the car. you should really buy it!”</p>
<p>sigh 3rd time taking the sat…what an asian shame</p>
<p>800 on math
-2 10 on writing
and CR I HAVE NO CLUE</p>
<p>i want to hit 700 on CR but it seemed impossible this time</p>
<p>It’s genial and ingratiating, dictionary.com defines genial as friendly and cheerful (which Sonny was) and ingratiating as
as intending to gain the approval of, which fits with Sonny since he was trying to gain the approval of the Iranian family to buy the car, evidenced when he says something along the lines of "Come on in kids. Show mom and dad how much space you’ve got back here. You can’t really tell if Sonny’s measured since he isn’t really restraining himself from anything (measured is defined as carefully considered, deliberate and restrained.</p>