<p>it has to be supported by both passages and psg1 dispels the details of shakespear’s life being unknown because it talks about how biographies were written about him. psg2 seemed to be referring to how most people were ignorant to the substance of shakespear’s intellect, but not that details of his life were unknown. both psg1 and 2 make reference to an industry that DEPENDS on shakespeare. i dont think this would be an uncommon type of correct answer for collegeboard to have.</p>
<p>Hm… i agree with Shifu Yoda. Although I put the geniuses (b/c it is kind of extreme and the 2nd passage wasn’t really about his being a genius)</p>
<p>I don’t even think the industry one is correct <–b/c I don’t think that’s what the 2 passages were stressing/think it’s important. the two passages, imo, focus on shakespeare and what we think of him/w/e…I think industry is too specific and that it’s the main theme of the two…</p>
<p>Hey guys do anyone remember at all the words, tendentious (something about a piece of work being partisan) , chronicler & jettison (about a guy being ____ of jazz music …) on the test? i really hope one of those is an experimental.</p>
<p>Industry was correct. The first passage specifically indicated that Shakespeare is key to the literary industry or something along those lines. The second passage, in one SINGLE clause about midway through, stated that Shakespeare has an influence on many different industries.</p>
<p>The genius one was implied, but only because we all think of him like that. This answer was wrong.</p>
<p>The concept of not fully knowing him. The first passage mentions that we know little of his life, in the public eye, and in fact we may or may not be worshipping the right person. However the second passage only mentions the portrait, which is imagery not a detail about life, and the joke about how he wrote plays at the end.</p>
<p>china
traffic
pipes
physics
shakespere</p>
<p>Any of these experimental ? ? ?</p>
<p>the words above are from SC btw,</p>
<p>don’t remember anything about pipes.</p>
<p>Did anyone get the passage about theories of pain/and the brain? It had one crazy question that asked for an anaology of the “gate” theory of pain, and it listed five objects: scissors, compass, freight train, faucet and one other thing. It was like, what was analagous to the gate letting in or not letting in pain signals to the brain. At first I chose compass, because of the reference of the brain’s bell “ringing” without anyone pulling the bell, and I thought the compass was the only object that could operate on it’s own without a person operating it.
Then I changed it to faucet, which. like the gate, controls the flow.
Anyone know what the hell I’m talking about? I’m cross-eyed from reading 35 pages, no mention of this passage.</p>
<p>the pipe paintings and reality paradoxes , IE painting a painting of a pipe</p>
<p>anyone remember any other choices in “precipitiously” SC question?</p>
<p>OH yeah the gate brain one ! I too choose faucet. I nixed compass (not similar to the gate), the train because it has no similarity, the scissors because ***, and wtv the other was. Faucet turns on and off (open close gate) and than lets a flow occur (pulse of electricity)</p>
<p>precipitiously, remorsefully, incompatibly, belligerently , and ----dk.
joeyharvey, yes i got the wirng brain part…</p>
<p>What is the response to true but trivial about paintings and pipes?</p>
<p>options:
a painting is really a painting etc but I chose something else…</p>
<p>ren, it was precipitately</p>
<p>Hm… I have a question about the Boston automobile one…one of the questions was about a thing in the 2nd passage and its importance or whatnot (um i’m kind of forgetting…horrible memory haha)</p>
<p>anywho… Was it to point out somethign…phenomenon (can’t quite remember…it was choice A)? or to minimimize a purported problem? or…?</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure I didn’t have the brain pain thing-maybe experimental? I had shakespeare, pipe, some physicist, 2 passages about cars, artist movement (mass industry vs art (medieval guild one), idk what else. there was one passage taht had an “M” word in it, it was capitalized and had a question about it. was this brain paiN?</p>
<p>Edit: was one of the answers to support a characterization?</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>I think that’s to illustrate a phenomenon or problem (Choice A as you put it). It contains quotes from both passages. I knew it has the word “illustrate” in it.</p>
<p>yeah, it was “precipitately”</p>
<p>WantIvy, i think so, the “jaywalking” ?? CAR? i think thats the o ne</p>
<p>why do i remember bubbling in erudite? :/</p>