***Oct 2014 SAT (US ONLY)***

<p>for the smell & tasty passage,</p>

<p>am I the only one that put salty “impression” as mark…? Why is it sensation?</p>

<p>No I think release from makes more sense, because it was a idiomatic error.</p>

<p>was the writing section with the toolbox question experimental or not?</p>

<p>@mindyru‌ no that was legitimate </p>

<p>The question in math about the cars and trucks is really bothering me. I think that’s the only one that I may have got wrong, but I’m pretty certain I got it right. I put 28 (maybe 27/26, unsure) and I made a venn diagram and I’m almost certain that was right. Some others are saying 13/14/15. What is it?</p>

<p>one of my CR section was experimental but I don’t know which one lol</p>

<p>For CR sentence completion,</p>

<p>For the women movement the press called the participants “rampants” but they, ironcally, EMBRACED. RIGHT?</p>

<p>what was the one about the smog in the iran passage?? one of the choices was a sailor</p>

<p>I put sand dust since tehran is a desert but idk why so many ppl thought the answer was sailor :(</p>

<p>did anyone choose something that is emit?..</p>

<p>I got 28, ironically embraced , and sailor to a lighthouse</p>

<p>I got ironically embraced too. Sailor to a lighthouse because of recognition.</p>

<p>I chose sailor (I’m pretty sure it’s correct) because it described that in Iran or wherever it was as a place where you can tell where places are. Example: you walk out the street and you can tell how far the park, playground etc… is but in California everything was identical and the same.</p>

<p>Does anyone know if this was part of the experiemtnal math section…the question asked what was the smallest angle possible between two lines r and s while they both intersect lines l and m. </p>

<p>can someone please answer that one about two triangles and square? 120 or 135?</p>

<p>Also, what did the new guys in this thread put, potentially altruistic or obvious for the free rider problem?</p>

<p>CR QUESTIONS FOR Y’ALL</p>

<ol>
<li>Confident/Measured vs. Ingratiating/Genial</li>
</ol>

<p>Explain which you chose and why.</p>

<p>Confident/Measured: Could be right because Sonny kind of noticed that they were a five people family and tried to sell them the car, therefore he’s measured?</p>

<p>Ingratiating/Genial: Ingratiating means “eager to please, charming”. Was he really trying to win favour?</p>

<ol>
<li>Obvious vs. Potentially Altruistic</li>
</ol>

<p>**Does anyone remember the exact wording of the question?</p>

<p>Obvious: Stated multiple times in the passage that it’s evident and easy to point out a free rider.</p>

<p>Potentially Altruistic: So for this to work, it would have to mean that free riders are “selfless, kind, and compassionate.” Even if they helped others, wouldn’t it still be for the purpose of achieving their own “goals”? Would that really make them “selfless”?</p>

<p>Did anyone get inherently useful for that controversial free rider question?
The author defines a free rider as an individual who works for their own benefit, but later explained how this could benefit a group.</p>

<p>Is the Google doc not allowed to be posted here or something, I have a link but it’s only on the first few sections, someone pls pm me or something</p>

<ol>
<li><p>I put ingratiating/genial. He mentioned that Sonny seemed almost to be congratulating them for having a family of five, so Sonny was eager to please and convince them to buy the car. </p></li>
<li><p>I put obvious. As you said, the passage stated it. </p></li>
</ol>

<p>What was the “extrapolated” question, and what passage was it for? </p>

<p>For the smell passage,</p>

<p>“released” from mouth mostly means dismissed. right?</p>