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

<p>@elmstreetking‌ i still do not understand how it can be equal, but it’s the only choice that makes remote sense…</p>

<p>Do you know if the choice said that it could equal 96? Or just less than?</p>

<p>@icepierrce ohhh i see omg i think i rememberd i put 45 for one of them!! but i did skip like 2 total :frowning: because i can out of time T.t and i hope i didnt do something dumb like misread the question. what do you think i will get if i get 1 wrong, 2 ommit?- thanks, because i dont think there will be much of a curve on math</p>

<p>Maybe 740-750? That’s really good! I completely screwed math. I had to skip 2 on one section because I spent so much time on the x and y value chart one and realized I was subtracting x from y values to find slope :(</p>

<p>lol ■■■… after reading the passage again, I’m now convinced Sonny was confident and measured rather than genial and ingratiating. Hate you Sonny :(</p>

<p>I put that the answer is less than or equal to 96.</p>

<p>Rationale:
I’m pretty sure the question wanted to know the “limit” of m, the median. It can’t be greater than or equal to six because it did not specify an end to the median: that would mean that from 6 to infinity, ANY integer can be the median, but we know that the numbers only range from 1-100. It’s less than or equal to 96 because no number bigger than 95.5 (which can be rounded to 96) can be the median of the number set. 6 as a median works in this case too because it’s less than 96. So yeah.</p>

<p>I don’t know if this made any sense, and I might be wrong too. </p>

<p>the answer choice said less than OR EQUAL to 96… i found the question really faulty, way to go collegeboard!</p>

<p>That question with tangibility and Extrapolated: Tangibility means able to be felt physically, Extrapolated means to infer something unknown given known information. It had to be extrapolated because the examples given fit under that category (archaeologists piecing together a person with bones or whatever, etc.)</p>

<p>I, for one, put not an integer haha xD</p>

<p>Wait u just brought up an interesting point. If it is less than or equal to 96, wouldn’t that imply that 1,2,3,4,5 would work too?? I am confounded beyond limits with this question!</p>

<p>But measured means restrained or consistent. How could you say he was either of those?</p>

<p>Yeah i put Confident and Measured because he was confident (you can tell by his almost cocky attitude. Ex. “Show your mom and dad how much space you have in there”) and measured cause he planned his every word to sell the car or whatever. idk! haha </p>

<p>Yo it’s def ingratiating and genial</p>

<p>@COYWWWWWW</p>

<p>800 math
10 wrong, 680 CR
640 Writing, 9 wrong</p>

<p>@calvin12341 I dunno… I guess it would depend on what definition CB was using for each word. That question was awful.</p>

<p>All in favor of emailing collegeboard about the faultiness of the 1-100 inclusive question?</p>

<p>Fingers crossed that those demons at CB will wake up one morning and realize their bs questions and faulty answers, and give us all 2400s. </p>

<p>No one has given a sufficient explanation for it.</p>

<p>All of them have some flaw</p>

<p>We should all badger the cb until they give us points</p>

<p>And for some reason I think I put 12 pi instead of 18 pi for that math question. ■■■? Easiest question on the test and I missed it. I am hopeless haha</p>