<p>but I remember now I put situation of trust because people let him take care of their families (money or the people I forgot) just in case they never made it back. and as head of churches and things. that’s not business</p>
<p>Yep, he ignored the effects of lullabies is what I put too.</p>
<p>I remember a passage about the Chinese physicist teacher and it was why do you observe others’ mistakes, and I put in order to validate your own work, or something.</p>
<p>me too validate your own work.
i remember there was a question before that one though that really confused me. what was the short passage next to it?</p>
<p>Schools of fish sentence = No error. 95% sure</p>
<p>Edit: lol it was about like fish swim in schools with cooperation blah blah blah. I remember it was the first Q on a page and it was two Q’s above the cone shaped eggs one. Idk why I remember this.</p>
<p>So far I’m -1 writing for sure, possibly -1 or -2 CR</p>
<p>The easter island one’s answer was “have been toppled” – should be “were toppled”… that’s the only damn writing q I missed… i thought the themselves at the end was wrong</p>
<p>OH! I remember the passage next to the Chinese physicist one was about punctuation marks being equivalent to traffic signals. My answers for that one were “continuous analogy” and the second question was like what is the authors main point and i put something like punctuation marks and traffic signals are both important. I remember another choice was ‘grammar is like learning to drive’ because I laughed at that</p>
<p>I think the answer is a “situation of trust.” The guy was given high-ranking positions of each activity, which would only be given to him if he was trustworthy.</p>
<p>“have destroyed” is the near past. For example, immediately after falling, I might say “I have fallen and I can’t get up!”…but the destruction happened 300 years ago, so the normal past tense is better</p>