@RHSclassof16 I said she was sarcastic, it seemed like her comment was kinda stale. It also said afterwards, that she was “expecting no answer” meaning that she knew her comment was misplaced
@kaf120 I said she was supportive
I said she was sarcastic. We talked about this earlier and I thought she sounded too 60’s housewife to be serious. It said later in the passage that the father and son never did anything together.
@Jamesesesess She went to all of his competitions though or whatever
@Willynilly123 I put that too, thats a different question though, your talking about the Q where it asks about her role, not the tone in her comment
Did anyone think that there was an idiomatic error in the tomato one? I think I put A
hey guys for the one about the sheep with the long horns, does anyone remember the question? Apparently “is/are” is the correct choice but does anyone remember an answer choice being “their”?
@Willynilly123 oh, we’re talking about different questions. I’m talking about the one of her tone when her husband said she wanted to practice with the son. Supportive is the answer to the other one.
Can we agree on these? No errors: tomatoes, skiing, building from hurricanes, had never had, and actors did theirs
I remember the error was is/are for the horn question.
@yesyesyes1 I think i put not error on that one.
I’m pretty sure my essay was horrible. I ended up using Project X as my example…
@Jamesesesess Oh I remember. I put delighted. She didn’t sound mean to me. Not at all.
For the question about skiing, I believe it went like “I had always wanted to go skiing, but had never had the chance…”
and I would correct that to “I had always wanted to go skiing, but had not had the chance”
Hey what was the one with the state officials going out to stop a problem, and then the underlined portion was something about speeding in school zones
does anyone remember the tomato question exactly
I said that “actors did theirs” was wrong. Wouldn’t there need to be an apostrophe after “theirs”?
I think I said no error for the skiing one.
what about ship and captain passage, can anyone remember some questions?
@kaf120 It was choice E, the one with the colon.
@ShipAlreadySank I’m not sure if that’s correct, but I have no idea
@Jamesesesess No, because theirs is already possessive so no apostrophe is needed. I put that too though cuz i wasn’t sure if the parallelism was okay. But people are saying the answer is No Error