Sort of like Caulfield’s determination to have fun with every ‘bubble in the answer’ test, by way of making constellations, limericks in Braille, or the Mona Lisa?
My hypothesis is that she added a column, and answered (e) for everything. Although I’m not sure how she convinced them that (e) always meant “Rutabagas are cool”.
What was that question about? The Naxcivian Autonomous Republic and the Nagorno-Karabakh region?
If you get this reference, I will, frankly, be shocked.
Sort of like Caulfield’s determination to have fun with every ‘bubble in the answer’ test, by way of making constellations, limericks in Braille, or the Mona Lisa?
Actually, missing a line can cause that effect by accident.
These tests must not be very good if “Rutabagas are cool” is a choice for every question.
My hypothesis is that she added a column, and answered (e) for everything. Although I’m not sure how she convinced them that (e) always meant “Rutabagas are cool”.
(e)*, with “* = rutabagas are cool” at the bottom of the page?
What was that question about? The Naxcivian Autonomous Republic and the Nagorno-Karabakh region?
If you get this reference, I will, frankly, be shocked.