<p>The imminent one was “might be imminent.” It was the only one that was not redundant that made any sense.</p>
<p>The concave triangle (B 2 bomber) angle was z = 70.</p>
<p>The triangle within the circle angle was 60.</p>
<p>The imminent one was “might be imminent.” It was the only one that was not redundant that made any sense.</p>
<p>The concave triangle (B 2 bomber) angle was z = 70.</p>
<p>The triangle within the circle angle was 60.</p>
<p>i put “will occur imminently in the future”</p>
<p>I chose the answer that wasn’t redundant. Can’t remember what it was though.</p>
<p>both of the options presented by jhg were redundant; so i think i went with ’ might be imminent’ -> “When the US imported more oil than it imported, Americans should have realized that a energy crisis might be imminent”</p>
<p>“might be imminent” is what I put.</p>
<p>My exp. was writing sec. I got one writing sec for sec 4,
and I got another one after that, I know… correcting grammar for 70 min
gee…</p>
<p>Firetruck was not ecp. Does anybody get a passage about acting?
I thought a novel about mutual acuantance or whatever was the hardest.</p>
<p>will occur imminently in the future definitely seemed like a redundant one for me.</p>
<p>i put “might be imminent” as well :)</p>
<p>same here. might be imminent</p>
<p>The compilation thread is up!</p>
<p><a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=103540[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=103540</a></p>
<p>Please add all CR questions that have been discussed in this thread! Thanks!</p>
<p>“imminent in the future” is DEFINITELY redundant and therefore INCORRECT. The answer was clearly “might be imminent.” End of discussion of that problem.</p>
<p><a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com…ad.php?t=103540%5B/url%5D”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com…ad.php?t=103540</a></p>
<p>no writing/ math</p>
<p>I agree, Flipsta_G…my friend was following the other course of thought I described, and I wanted to see if anyone else supported or entertained that line of reasoning at any point in the answering process.</p>
<p>“the writing thing i was stuck on forever and kept going back and forth on was the one about intimacy, love, and marriage are interrelated, if different. the other option was intimacy, love, and marriage are interrelated, however, being different. i think i went with the 1st choice even though it is still weird for me. what was the answer to this?”</p>
<p>I definitely had the most trouble with that one. For me it came down to the one you chose and this one, which I chose:</p>
<p>“Intimacy, love, and marriage are interrelated, whereas they are different.”</p>
<p>The reason I chose this is because if you moved the dependent clause (“Whereas they are different”) in front of the independent clause (“Intimacy, love, and marriage are interrelated”), then it sounded correct. I’m not sure if you can think of it this way… obviously none of the answers were really “good.”</p>
<p>Zach, the “whereas” would indicate you’re about to talk about a different subject…like “intimacy, love, and marriage are interrelated, whereas hate, fear, and jealousy don’t have much to do with each other.” i wouldn’t say “i was hungry, whereas i had just eaten.”</p>
<p>Hmm…zach…
I have never seen the word “whereas” in a correct answer on the SAT. It usually sounds awkward, and this sentence is no exception. I still think the answer was A.</p>
<p>I put A for this one. High five Flipsta_G! We also got the same answer for the imminent one!</p>
<p>lol thers another writing question i got wrong- i jus figured might be imminent didnt fit the tense but that was overthinking</p>
<p>was marie curie one had been or was?
was cecile one serious neutrality?
was cecile regrettably underhanded or embarrassed
was it bully or cajole?</p>
<p>marie curie was…
cecile… i thinkg great conviction
embarrassed
bully</p>
<p>i think</p>