<p>i think the question was like something to do with the letter he wrote? like why he doesn’t have time? and in the letter he said business takes a lot of my time twice in a couple of different ways</p>
<p>nvm , I remember it now. I put “look after”</p>
<p>Yeah i agree with jules92. I put wait upon because I felt that he was being very servile towards business.</p>
<p>It said what does “attend” mean in the sentence or something.</p>
<p>I put “look after”. He is overseeing his business, and not waiting upon it.</p>
<p>no that wasn’t the one about trustworthiness … that question was like what examples was there to prove the chinese people’s trust of him? or something like that??</p>
<p>If it was I think I put “look after”</p>
<p>Unoriginal, I’m positive that attend to was in the answer choices and not in the question, though i don’t remember exactly what the question was askingg</p>
<p><em>high fives meadow36</em></p>
<p>Yeah “a situation of trust” was an entirely different answer. The one I’m talking about was like what does “attend to” most nearly mean in context.</p>
<p>@unoriginal, yeah i was also thinking that, i mean after all look after means to take care of, and taking care of business makes sense too. I really could not decide between the two.</p>
<p>yeah i put wait upon just because i think that had more to do with spending time doing business? idk i guess i was thinking look after is more watch over, but attend to means more dealing with like “i have to attend to my responsibilities”</p>
<p>I agree with “look after.” None of the other choices make sense in the context of business.</p>
<p>And to settle the x > x^n >0 question, the problem explicitly stated (I’m 100% sure on this) that n was an integer greater than or equal to 2.</p>
<p>If someone says that he or she has business to attend to, they are not waiting upon said business, rather the business is waiting upon them.</p>
<p>He had to oversee his business endeavors, hence the “look after” reasoning I have.</p>
<p>wow i messed that up … i meant i put wait upon and attend to is in the question</p>
<p>it’s so confusing thinking back on questions!</p>
<p>I agree with Unoriginal. ‘Wait upon’ means literally waiting upon… a person. If you put it in the figurative sense, it would be completely right! But so would ‘look after’ or ‘care for’.</p>
<p>Yeah, i only put wait upon because i remember the following sentence talked about something imminent, as if he was waiting upon business. Honestly though, that question was ■■■■■■■■.</p>
<p>okay i just looked up wait upon and now i realize that i was thinking that “wait upon” and “wait on” mean the same thing, which they don’t so i think look after was the better choice</p>
<p>yeah, i’m beginning to think look after was right too. Well we won’t know for sure until december.</p>
<p>Do our schools give back the PSATs, or do the PSATs come in the mail?</p>
<p>yeah you get them in school, or at least my school does</p>
<p>last year as a soph i got it back in school. I’m pretty sure you will as well, unoriginal.</p>