<p>If it’s NOT trouble than my chances of breaking 700 in CR have been destroyed.
DARN! CR<700 probably will not impress the Ivy Leagues I hope to get into.
I really hope the curve is lenient- I have exhausted all my practice tests and do not see how to prep for SAT again</p>
<p>its definitely trouble
…what interests me is how ridiculously obvious this question was, whereas two or three of the cr questions were very obscure, yet this question is being argued vehemently…</p>
<p>i am more confident about this than the math question that asked which was not a factor of 80…and the only way i got that wrong was if i misbubbled</p>
<p>12 is not a factor of 80</p>
<p>entangle is more negative than trouble.</p>
<p>The definition of entangle that would be used here (from a dictionary):</p>
<p>to involve in a quagmire</p>
<p>Debate is over. It is trouble.</p>
<p>how the hell can one say entangle is more negative than trouble, just read the words once and it’s quite definitive that trouble is more negative. and the definition you gave from the dictionary is NOT the definition used for this context, it’s simply to be intwined in something, it can mean rope or a situation, and she wasn’t able to be intwined (entangled) in doing chores to keep her busy…so please don’t just boast and say “debate is over”…i still think its entangle.</p>
<p>xindianx ur just upset cuz u got it wrong…</p>
<p>entangle mothaf</p>
<p>perplex in context means ‘to occupy’</p>
<p>being troubled by something has more of a mental connotation while being entangled something has to do more with physical chores.</p>
<p>the passage was talking about physical chores.</p>
<p>im out</p>
<p>vote:entangle</p>
<p>7r0u813
(10 characters)</p>
<p>haha, u HAD to do that</p>
<p>Can anyone actually post the sentence? </p>
<p>I didn’t even take the test, but…the word perplex never means entangle. Just look it up! If the sentence was “…leaving mrs. d with nothing to perplex her except how she would spend the day” as someone wrote, then it’s definitely trouble, there’s no use in debating it. How in the world do you get entangle out of that one?</p>
<p>I really thought it was trouble… I remember that entangled didnt make sense for me at the time.
:)</p>
<p>Here are some more definitions for you that are close to your “intwined”:</p>
<p>-to unite or knit together in intricate confusion</p>
<p>-to twist together or entwine into a confusing mass</p>
<p>-To complicate; confuse. </p>
<p>Which one of these is positive?</p>
<p>And dictoionary.com gives this example for use of trouble:</p>
<p>May I trouble you for directions? </p>
<p>Debate is over.</p>
<p>someone just call up CB and ask for the real answer…haha</p>
<p>trouble…judging by the way the word perplex was used in context</p>
<p>Double Double Toil and TROUBLE!!!</p>
<p>Entangle makes no sense in the context of the sentence. You use ‘trouble’ in the idiomatic phrase “To trouble someone”. Nobody says, “To entangle you”. Seriously, dictionary.com defintions are not necessary. Just use common sense, acknowledge that “trouble” was the correct answer choice and stop arguing about this question when there are so many more questions that we don’t have the answer to.</p>
<p>Trouble is the correct answer choice.</p>
<p>…</p>
<p>Astound!</p>
<p>Did somebody suggest that we all post our previous verbal scores in order to weigh the popular consensus? Are you trying to turn this into a vicious competition rather than just a simple discussion? Because if you are, I am ready to begin, LOL…</p>
<p>trouble!!!</p>
<p>Damn it, i wrote trouble then switched it to entangle. I still think it the answers were too close.</p>