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I studied Spanish.

2007-06-01 18:34:29 · 50 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

50 answers

No, I studied 2 years of Latin and 2 years of German and outside of that I studied Turkish and a little of Greek.

2007-06-01 18:44:17 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Spanish

2007-06-01 18:38:16 · answer #2 · answered by xoxo 6 · 0 0

Spanish

2007-06-01 18:37:15 · answer #3 · answered by Nico 7 · 0 0

Spanish.

2007-06-03 08:45:32 · answer #4 · answered by Judas Rabbi 7 · 0 0

Spanish.

2007-06-01 18:45:46 · answer #5 · answered by ღღღ 7 · 0 0

Spanish.

2007-06-01 18:40:24 · answer #6 · answered by Ms Lety 7 · 0 0

Spanish.

2007-06-01 18:37:22 · answer #7 · answered by ahandle101 7 · 0 0

French

2007-06-01 18:37:27 · answer #8 · answered by Mag 7 · 1 0

French, and I wished I had studied Spanish.

2007-06-01 18:38:14 · answer #9 · answered by Dull 3 · 2 1

french but wish I studied Spanish

2007-06-01 18:37:20 · answer #10 · answered by dianehaslegs 6 · 0 1

Do you like biology? If you do it is always better to study a major that you actually enjoy. Regarding biology majors not getting into medical school, or medical schools frowning upon them, that is not true. Biology majors make up almost 60% of any given medical school class (at least, most are up to 75%). But biology majors acceptance rate is artificially low. Let me explain why. The classes in a science major are very demanding, and many people were told when entering college that to go to medical school they had to be a biology major, therefore they had to study something that necessarily didn't enjoy as much and that lowered their GPA, which is important to medical schools. This meant that there are a lot of people that apply with a biology major that do not get in, majing their acceptance rate low, but medical schools do not have a bias against them. The advantages of a biology major though is that they (along with chemistry and biochemistry) generally test better on the MCAT than non-science majors and as you said the pre-reqs are built in. If you want to major in something else go for it! With a history degree (which is generally a little light in coursework) you should be able to fit in all the required courses no problem (maybe taking summer classes one time). The MCAT is generally (The biological sciences part has a couple questions from advanced biology classes you will not take) based on the pre-med courses so you will be ok there (you just will need to study a little harder for it since you will have fewer science courses). Major in something you enjoy, and you will do better in class, making you a stronger candidate for medical school. Picking a major based on a "fall-back" plan is pointless for medical school, unless you are not 100% sure you want to go (which you should be).

2016-05-19 01:19:25 · answer #11 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

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