The SAT question of the day is a math question that goes like this:
The game: substitution. Continue reading
The SAT question of the day is a math question that goes like this:
The game: substitution. Continue reading
Today’s SAT question of the day is a sentence completion about the Red Tail Angels. This group of fighter pilots had the ____ of never losing any bombers it escorted on missions. Continue reading
Today’s SAT question of the day is an easy sentence completion about anger management. The first half of the sentence tells us that we will be refuting the idea that expressing anger is a way to reduce it. Continue reading
Today’s SAT question of the day is an easy two-blank sentence completion. We need words for rain showers that help crops ______ and, in contrast, ______ storms. Continue reading
Today’s SAT question of the day is an easy sentence completion, perhaps to atone for yesterday’s hard math question. The focus is on a dictatorship and what it expects of its citizens. Continue reading
Today’s SAT question of the day is an easy algebra question. Here’s the situation:
N * (5/14) = (5/14) * (7/9)
Naturally, they want to know what N equals. Continue reading
Today’s SAT question of the day is an easy question about food. Sound good?
The sentence begins, “Food can be ——- element in family life, bringing us together…”.
Today’s SAT question of the day is a math question that’s rated easy. Follow along with me to see if that’s true – and to avoid falling into a common trap.
For all test questions everywhere, we have to remember to answer what the question is asking. Today’s question asks us the following:
If √x = 16, √4x = ?? Continue reading
Today’s ACT question of the day is a detail question from a fiction passage. We are asked why a certain character always wears a hat, so our first task is to look back at the passage and find the mention of hats. Continue reading
Today’s official SAT question of the day is a sentence completion about a jellyfish. Per the sentence, the jellyfish swims in a certain kind of drift, but its tentacles contain poison. So, what kind of drift do we have here? Continue reading