Official thread october sat 2013 test

<p>when creates an unnecessary clause. also there’s a rule where if you can avoid gerunds, you should.</p>

<p>@houston 14/3(m+3) = 210. It’s m+3 because when you don’t add additional minutes, it’s gonna be a negative number if it was (m-3)</p>

<p>@DarkSouls I don’t remember that question? Any more detail?</p>

<p>Back to the kid’s view on Dickens’ novel and her “idol’s” reading of it. I went back and forth between the romantic option and the mundane option. Both can be argued. But the little girl wasn’t sarcastic? Her use of romantic seems quite literal, unless that is, a secondary or tertiary definition was being used. And also, the girl had already enjoyed reading but her “mentor” made it more dramatic, poetic too, yes. Both second choices are valid. The first one is tough because mundane and romantic can each be rationalized…</p>

<p>14/3(m+3) = 210</p>

<p>The answer is mundane because at first when the little girl read it, it wasn’t as exciting as when Mrs.FLowers read it</p>

<p>Was 14/3(m+3) = 210 answer choice D or E?</p>

<p>@omgitsvicki, the subject of the independent clause is music, so the opening phrase must have music as the implied subject.</p>

<p>@omg: It was E</p>

<p>What did you guys get for the error identification for the river sentence. It put like “before finally”</p>

<p>Also, did you guys put “simple” or “domestic” for the CR question about the best definition for homely?</p>

<p>@DirtySocks45 is right. Before finally was fine.</p>

<p>Guys, you can’t be serious about this whole zero thing…the question asked for positive integer values for p and r. 0 is neither positive nor negative! You find 6 possible combinations, 4 of which are different from one another (2,3,4,5) you get 3 and 4 twice but they only count once</p>

<p>@houstonrep - simple</p>

<p>Houstonrep consensus simple</p>

<p>@houstonrep I got simple</p>

<p>do you guys remember the last question about the bee double passage, it was like the passage of author 1 would consider to the passage of author 2 something like ambiguous and questionable?</p>

<p>@Jlee - I got 4 for the gidin question
@major - questionable</p>

<p>@major987-
i got that too haha</p>

<p>Before finally was just fine. The only questionable aspect of that sentence was “past” but we already resolved that. Past is not the same as passed, thus the sentence was fine (it used past when talking about the kayakers going by some sort of object/“landmark”). [The</a> difference between passed and past (grammar lesson)](<a href=“http://www.grammar-monster.com/easily_confused/past_passed.htm]The”>Passed or Past?)</p>

<p>Can someone please tell me how the hell the circle area answer was 64/9 !</p>

<p>Is inhospitable weather a consensus?</p>

<p>i gotta go with 25/9 for circle</p>