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SAT Reading Videos 211 videos

SAT Reading: Classifying the Relationship Between Two Passages
179 Views

How was the Beanie Baby era parallel to the Tulip Bubble? Similar events, only the TulipMania almost bankrupted Holland. Bean Babies only bankrupte...

SAT Reading: Citing Evidence to Identify a Theme in Walden
35 Views

Contemplating one's life is key to fulfilled happiness. Thoreau's theme revolves around the simple life well lived. He clearly never tried virtual...

SAT Reading: Why Does Thoreau Use the Phrase "Mechanical Aids" in this Passage?
57 Views

Thoreau was all about simplicity; anything that took away from his vision was the enemy. Mechanical aids were one of them. Guess he had to train a...

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SAT Reading: Defining the Word "Disparate" in Context 4 Views


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Description:

TulipMania is not a wrestling octagon. The emotional connection with greed behind TulipMania drove more than intrinsic values attibuted to tulips. Tulips of the era were the most expensive collectibles in history.


Transcript

00:03

all right Shmoopers have we moved on from tulipmania at least a little bit here

00:08

hopefully okay so let's go to the questions use a passage of disparate [text on screen]

00:11

spawn 158 they're mostly needs what so let's go zoom back to line 58

00:16

all right market a perpetual we have and flowed around such disparate stuff as

00:19

people cards all those boxes in action figures okay so what's the right answer

00:22

well let's see what do baseball cards old lunch boxes and action figures have

00:28

in common nothing or rather they're for the people who clearly need to get [action figures]

00:32

another hobby well they have nothing in common except being awesome yeah no we

00:36

love all that crap all that fine collectible stuff it's not one of the [Darth Vadar action figure]

00:41

answer choices though the clue that disparate means dissimilar is held in [text on screen]

00:46

the previous line there where we're told that all kinds of items have become

00:50

collectible the paragraph does say that the collectibles in question have little

00:55

inherent value but we're told later on that the prices of some of these things

00:58

are high so inexpensive a is a bad choice because a contradicts central

01:02

idea of the text are these items ridiculous B or trivial D well that's a

01:07

judgment call but there's nothing in the text to suggest that they are you got to

01:11

go with the text here not your personal biases lunch boxes are at least useful [trash can]

01:15

sort of via we had a Charlie Brown one with a thermos in it the fact that ours [picture of a lunchbox]

01:19

now has Wonder Woman on it it's a bonus though we swear it makes our peanut [wonder woman lunchbox]

01:24

butter and jellies taste more heroic we like that this seafood yet though [sandwich on a plate]

01:29

the restroom

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