<p>on one of the short passages about the authors childhood fascination with words…
the second question dealing with the last sentence, what was the answer?</p>
<p>disdain for current state of literature (? something like that, just clearly remember disdain)
or
attempt to recapture?</p>
<p>I put disdain because she never lost her childhood views…and she said “in spite of literature, career poets, etc”</p>
<p>what did you guys say for the question that was something like: “what generalization do both passages discuss?”
i think i chose something about modern america having a relationship with celebrity?</p>
<p>^^^yeah that’s what i got. </p>
<p>i’m pretty sure it’s right.</p>
<p>so was it diffident or cavalier?</p>
<p>The paleontologist was not “cavalier”. I twas definitely flippant as the answer was between “blunt” and “flippant”. Compunction is also one of the answers. </p>
<p>Was that part the paleontologist was mentioning about, a “Metaphor” or “Humorous Anecdote”? I put metaphor but seriously it could be anecdote.</p>
<p>I didnt have the career poets, literature, disdain one. </p>
<p>modern america relationship is correct</p>
<p>it wasnt clarify “POV” it was clarify a principle or reasoning behind POV… i put the latter.</p>
<p>It was between “frank” and “flippant”, but yeah I went with flippant too. And it was metaphor I think.</p>
<p>The paleontologist wasn’t diffident because throughout the passage it’s not like she’s bored or doesn’t care, she’s just being provocative.</p>
<p>light, cavalier and flippant were two different questions. </p>
<p>and yes, humorous anecdote wasn’t the asnwer.</p>
<p>i dont rememeber the exact questions, but i got flippant, cavalier, consipicuous, disdain, metaphor… LOL</p>
<p>i put flippant and cavalier, but from what i hear cav is wrong. . . damn.</p>
<p>^i dont remember one i put being metaphor, but idk.</p>
<p>i thought it was frank… wasn’t it?
was it diffident or cavalier?
what was the horn?</p>
<p>for the disney world one:</p>
<p>the last question was A right?</p>
<p>it was different than other theme parks cuz it had tickets only as a small portion of the money?</p>
<p>i think disney was experimental because i did not have it</p>
<p>what was the answer to the celebrity passage. what was tooting the horn?</p>
<p>was it shamefully conceieted?</p>
<p>cav·a·lier (kv-lîr)
adj.</p>
<ol>
<li>Carefree and nonchalant; jaunty.</li>
</ol>
<p>That definition works. Diffident means shy, which does not.</p>
<p>Cavalier is right.</p>
<p>I put the one about being foolish/mischeivious or silly or something. </p>
<p>Shamelessy conceited? Nah. Do you realize how not strong the context was, and how extreme that answer is?</p>
<p>Shameless yes. Conceited - really weak connection.</p>
<p>Anyone else put the tone was “nonchalant” about the girl playing piano? Or did you guys put sardonic…</p>
<p>im leaning 75:25 in favor of cavalier. it just seems better lol</p>
<p>hey, does anyone mind explaining why they chose dismay over uncertainty? much appreciated. </p>
<p>and damn i put recapture for one but now im almost sure thats wrong</p>
<p>and its sardonic…</p>
<p>Oh sorry powerbomb, lol, I forget what the questions were. Sorrrrrrry.</p>