<p>There’s a lot of the “hits” threads. I wonder, is it possible for someone to compile a list of total hits from every good vocab book. That is, including all the words that showed up on the test, not just the right answers to SC but including wrong answers as well as the words in the passages. </p>
<p>I’m not sure how you guys have been doing this, but a program can easily do the job if all the info have “E-versions” of them. At the very least, someone can probably compile a “master list” and treat the vocab analysis that way.</p>
<p>What I want to do is, I want to assess how many new words I’m likely to see on the real test if I memorized every list that’s been analyzed. Now I’m very good with CR and basically only get something wrong once in a while because of a vocabulary issue. I’m aiming for 800 so I want to see my chances xD</p>
<p>P.S. if programming is needed I might be able to do simple programs that doesn’t take too much thought or too long. :P</p>
<p>Yes, I’ve read that. What I mean is, what are the hits if I do ALL the lists and how many words are covered in NONE of the vocab lists per test, for example.</p>
<p>LOL…“what are the hits if I do ALL the lists”</p>
<p>If you’re getting all the reading questions and “basically only get something wrong once in awhile”, what is the point of memorizing all the lists? That’s just a huge waste of effort and I don’t think there’s a program that does that, unless you plan coding one yourself from scratch, which is probably fairly difficult.</p>
<p>kyoko -an interesting idea.Get copies of Direct Hits (Amazon), PR’s Hit Parade and Rocket Review. Then compile a master list. Good luck with your project.</p>
<p>It’s fairly easy to do a search scan if I have a master list and all the tests in actual text format… not difficult programming at all. But someone has to type in all the tests lol and to type a master list…</p>