***OFFICIAL MARCH 2015 SAT (US ONLY)***

Really? I thought that she was genuinely hopeful that their relationship would change. After all, the narrator indicated that she was “surprised” at Saburo’s father’s proposition.

SATs make me wanna vomit on a duck. Who agrees?

@Jamesesesess‌ well, I didn’t really see anything about advice in the second paragraph, so I assumed it would be going off path…but I m not sure now…

@Dorfdude8‌ I agree

Shit I put the mother was supportive instead of delighted, or is that two different questions. What were the answer choices for delighted.

Creativity passage- how would he describe defining creativity as

What was the main point

Which would most likely be in line with the guys theory

Actually I just need every answer for this awful passage

@photogeek8‌ I think I said enthusiastic

@photogeek8 I put enthusiastic. He seemed really excited and incredulous is kinda negative.

@SATsRuinLife‌ nice username

I omitted two questions from the same math section because I ran out of time!

I think we can all agree that the hardest part was writing that non-disclosure statement in cursive. Nice little throwback to 3rd grade…

@chx177‌ those were two different questions

@Jamesesesess Yeah but the fact that the mail carriers ignored the maps doesn’t imply that they disregarded the advice of the merchants. I think that the closest inference you can make is that disregarding what Passage 2 still believes to be a generally acceptable map will lead one off the right path (which in Passage 2 refers to the warmer waters).

@chx177‌ they were two different answers for sure… I don’t remember all the choices though

@fluterazzle9013 “surprised” could very well be right, in retrospect. I’m not sure which is right anymore without being able to read the passage again. I thought the way that her sentence was worded sounded a bit too 60’s suburban housewife to be anything but sarcastic, but “surprised” makes sense.

HELP There was a math question involving f(x) = 3/x + 3.

Was it asking for what f(x) could not be or what x could not be?

Did anyone put sarcastic for one question about the mother and supportive for the other?

On the Math grid in (last problem) I got 6 as n, and here is my reasoning.
I know a lot of people here are saying 9,25,49,81; these answers are COMPLETELY correct.
However the question exactly said this:
A two-digit integer has exactly 3 positive roots, including 1 and n. What is one possible value of n
I said -12 was the number; it has 6 roots and since it is a negative number can only have exactly 3 positive roots (you need one positive and one negative to make a negative number)
I know many of you assumed that n was the original number but it never stated that the original number was n, all it said was that n was one of the roots. If the question was: A two-digit integer,n, has exactly 3 positive roots,… then I would be wrong, but given the question and the information they give you I believe I am right.

3 @breadrock

This test seemed wayyyyy harder than the January, like way wayyyyy harder. Thinking about cancelling my scores.

It did say “a two digit integer, n, …” @mrmaster198