<p>What did the logic question actually say? In other words, how was it phrased?</p>
<p>cclolzftw: all agree</p>
<p>“If a figurine is blue, it is a cat.”</p>
<p>Necessarily, if it’s not a cat, then it can’t be blue, since blue figurines are ONLY cats.</p>
<p>“Cassandra has animal figurines. If a figurine is blue, then it is a cat.”</p>
<p>It was the contrapositve.</p>
<p>if p then q</p>
<p>Another form of that statement which is also true is,</p>
<p>If NOT q then NOT p</p>
<p>I was fairly tired and burned out when I took the test, but:</p>
<p>English - easier
Math - hardest math one i’ve ever taken</p>
<p>Who the hell knew that</p>
<p>40sin( x - 90 ) = -40cos(x) for that ferris wheel question, jeez. And the complex number question was impossible.
Reading – I couldn’t concentrate, it was harder, but I can’t really say. I didn’t understand anything I read.</p>
<p>Science - easier by a bit.</p>
<p>reading
enlivened
opposed
primate behavior
gerald and jaimie -really alike
boy refered the skyscraper as a nation whole
scientists experiment was challenged
lush of mane= healthy? dispute
train answer= 1000 miles
train answer=yes because of chilhood memories with adult</p>
<p>english
country’s or countries’-country’s
each shiny cylinder
as evidenced by</p>
<p>rows, or connolades,
like blah describe a flock of elegant windmills"</p>
<p>verical stainless cylinders</p>
<p>like charlie said ill be putting them on the other threadstoo</p>
<p>does anyone know for the science reading passage…for the question that asked about linmes 7-9…was the argument ignored or something?</p>
<p>Who here knows how to do the complex number one.</p>
<p>It was like absolute value of a+bi = sqrt( a^2 + b^2), what was the largest possible answer? I didn’t even know what it said!</p>
<p>cjgone: yea…i just figured 3i squared (if its neg. or pos, i don’t remember, but it doesn’t matter cuz it is absolute value) would give you the biggest answer…and from reading these threads…im pretty sure thats right</p>
<p>a+bi for complex numbers. It asked you if the absolute value is given by sqrt(a^2+b^2), which of the choices gave the largest absolute value?</p>
<p>The choices were only bi, so the one with the greatest coefficient.</p>
<p>-3i.</p>
<p>what was the answer to the “blind people book” english passage question that asked where the paragraph should be placed?</p>
<p>We purchased the test booklets after the tests which had the score scales in the back.
June test Dec test
-2 math 36 36
-3 math 35 35
-1 eng 35 35
-3 read 32 32<br>
-10 sci 26 28</p>
<p>What was the answer to the math question with the graphs about students getting b’s and above and being stopped for speeding. Those graphs confused me. I can remember I put J, haha, even though that doesn’t help at all.</p>
<p>For the ferris wheel problem, you could just assume that the angle is 90 degrees…then Cos(angle) = 0. So the height is just 12+40.</p>
<p>tomejones: the angle near the radius? i dont think you can do that</p>
<p>i put 4 dyalna</p>
<p>does anyone remember the choices for the ferris wheel problem? </p>
<p>did the last two choices in that question both have 12+40 or was one 12-40…because if only one had 12+40, then i think i put that one…</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>I put the first choice. The graph was the highest up on the page and most to the left. It was the only one that represented the really small number of students who had a B average and had gotten pulled over.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>The ferris wheel problem wasn’t based on one instant. You were finding a general equation for the height in terms of alpha. It wouldn’t make sense that the height remained constant as the angle changed.</p>
<p>I’m pretty confident that one was 12 + 40 - 40cos(alpha)</p>