<p>Spilling just means that it is a lot. Oozing, emerging and trickling are all slow paced and small amounts. It might have been spilling.</p>
<p>^^^^^ that’s what I feared :(</p>
<p>Nah, I put emerging. Emerging has different connotations than the other three, and a slightly different meaning. Emerge makes it sound like the burrito stuff is performing the action [if I emerge from a pool, that’s me acting. You don’t normally say that food emerges], while in the other three, the burrito stuff is simply falling. Plus, it didn’t sound right in the context of the sentence.</p>
<p>It’s not a burrito! It’s a tamale! Gosh! lol. ;)</p>
<p>(FYI, pronounced tuh-MALL-ee… or tuh-MALL-eh if your speaking Spanish)</p>
<p>Ya, the aswer was “emerging”… it sounded creeepy, like the stuff in the tamale was alive. Spilling etc. just means it fell out, which is normal.</p>
<p>Connotation is key!</p>
<p>slugger255 has a stable argument but it’s emerging because something can spill over slowly. In a sense, trickling is just a clearer form of spilling.</p>
<p>i think it was spilling…cos all other’s is comign out slow…and by putting spilling ur changing the meaning of the sentence</p>
<p>and for the log one i think it was 8…not sure…
and it was def 2/3</p>
<p>I think both arguments are valid. I myself put emerging because it was connotated differently then the other 3, yet the other argument about changing the meaning is also valid. hmm…more bias…</p>
<p>Someone asked before whether the Jacksonville choice was A, B, C, or D. I’m pretty sure Jacksonville (the right jacksonville choice) was B. If not, then it was C. But I’m pretty confident it was B.</p>
<p>Obsessing over these questions is very unhealthy since we can do nothing to change our answers.</p>
<p>On that note, does anyone remember any questions from the reading section? Or what the 4 pieces were about? :)</p>
<p>I remember the horseriding/ gardening one: </p>
<p>Was one answer that the narrator’s friend couldn’t have gotten to the narrator’s house without the narrator’s help?</p>
<p>yes it was, polkadots.</p>
<p>In the reading passage about the Japanese (?) emperor/architect, what did you put for the question about what submerged shoulders meant? I was deciding between “floodwater has peaked” and “the gates should be closed.”</p>
<p>gates should be closed.</p>
<p>Gates closed. </p>
<p>And newfounder, the answer to the log question in math was definately 3.</p>
<p>In the fiction reading passage, what did the woman’s speech that was punctuated by poking the spade in the ground signify? (Bitterness or something toward her father?)</p>
<p>Yeah, signified frustration towards her father is what i put.</p>
<p>I got signified frustration also</p>
<p>yep definitely signified frustration</p>
<p>really? i said she’s more interested in action than words. how’d it have to deal with her father?</p>
<p>because she was like talking about her father in the previous sentence or something and right when she starts talking about him she starts to use the spade clumsy and hits the ground really hard or something. Thinking about her father causes her to become frustrated which is evident through her actions with the spade.</p>
<p>rememberme - what Jacksonville one? i can’t recall any problem that had that… the ACT seems to have done some damage to my brain cells <em>sigh</em></p>
<p>it took me a while to figure out the math problem for finding area of obcd. how did you do it? i split it into two triangles and added the areas together… got something like 6.67?</p>