<p>for father feeling… it said “initially gracious, if a touch cool” so i was vacillating b/w careful and reserved :s
dermis question…
it said in the article “the dermal layer, its surface anatomy,”
i took it as an appositive and chose define the term</p>
<p>I think I chose D. If x < 0 it was decreasing and if x > 0 it was increasing or something like that. I wasn’t really sure though. A lot of others picked that it was always increasing and then decreasing or something.</p>
<p>@ Scintillation
I thought the graph could never become negative? I picked the one said that it was decreasing the whole way. because</p>
<p>1/2 is basically 2^-1</p>
<p>so</p>
<p>x f(x)
-2 (2^-1)^(-2) = 2^2= 4
-1 (2^-1)^(-1) = 2^1= 2
0 (1/2)^0 = 1
1 (1/2)^1 = 1/2
2 (1/2)^2 = 1/4</p>
<p>someone confirm me?</p>
<p>i also choose E.</p>
<p>I chose always positive and decreasing. graph it in your calc (:</p>
<p>There’s no way its always increasing or decreasing.
With a negative exponent 1/(1/2)^X is getting larger as X approaches infinity.
(1/2)^X is getting smaller as X is getting larger. </p>
<p>The other options don’t make sense, because they state that it is getting smaller as X<0, which is not right.</p>
<p>@ Duke
what was the answer choice you picked again?</p>
<p>@smooch</p>
<p>ohhhhhhhh that sounds right uhhh!!</p>
<p>i put E because (.5)^.5 can be +/- sq.rt of (.5) so it can be negative or positive</p>
<p>Uhhh…(.5)^X means that when x approaches negative infinity, y approaches infinity. when x approaches a really large positive number, y approaches 0.</p>
<p>@Scint.</p>
<p>the equation is (1/2)^x</p>
<p>when x is going to infinity… it’s very very very small… very close to 0…</p>
<p>and when x is negative… because it’s a negative component… which is the same as flipping…</p>
<p>it becomes very big… again… graph it on our cal… you will know what i’m saying</p>
<p>@Purplicious</p>
<p>I chose that the claims have not been supported
My thought was that before it said that the ads were orchestrated
So, it wasn’t being used in an unexpected way because it had already been said before that “positive” campaigning of orchestrating ads… blah blah blah</p>
<p>Then, after the use of the italicized word it went straight to negative campaigning</p>
<p>technically the claims would have been positive and it should not have been unexpected. The only problem is that it isn’t positive campaigning because the claims aren’t supported, they are orchestrated.</p>
<p>can someone explain the mexico question to me?
about mexico being 18 million in 2000 as 3% of the pi chart,
and then mexico being 24 million in 200(6?) as 3%… asking for total increase in whatever?</p>
<p>The question is NOT whether or not it is positive or negative. I very well know that it is always positive, but that wasn’t a choice. </p>
<p>If x is negative, the number is increasing. If x is positive, the number is decreasing. E is the only answer that shows this.</p>
<p>How many no errors?</p>
<p>For Lorna/Elaine there was a question about the purpose of the first paragraph and I said to introduce a significant meeting or something like that. There was also a question about Elaine’s personality, I chose jubilant but agitated sounds right now. There was also an overall purpose question that I said “to describe the origin of a marriage” or something similar…, also a question asking what “cold” meant in context and I put reserved. And finally, an answer about “to memorialize their encounter” that I also chose but I forgot the specific question. </p>
<p>For math grid ins the ones I remember are:
4 (undefined at what positive number)
.5 (graph interpretation/agility test one and two results)
75 (angle of double bisect)
1980 (for the 16x population deer question)
6 (for the one that was n2= any number through 9-40, can be 4 or 5 too)
5/21 (for the last question, 350% of 6x=5y)
2radical2radius (lol sorry, not on my computer thus fail symbols)
Something like 144 for the hexagon question? :0</p>
<p>@ scin.</p>
<p>when x is negative… the number is increasing??
nope, it’s decreasing. The slope is negative. you look it from the negative side, not from the origin.</p>
<p>can we go back to reading part :)</p>
<p>@scintillation</p>
<p>a graph moves from left to right.</p>
<p>The graph is always positive and decreasing. from negative infinity to positive</p>
<p>question for memorizalize the encounter was something like why matt showed her the engraving for?</p>
<p>for sentence errors, there was a sentence like…
the paintings she selected for the art show were more varied than those of her last shows [and so gave] … i thought it was kinda funky</p>