Persona games are masters at making us appreciate the mundane, mostly because every simple activity is an opportunity to improve. Not just metaphorically either. Similar to other Persona games Persona 3 wearable will test your knowledge to answer questions in the classroom and answer midterm and final exam questions throughout the school year. While some of these questions are easy once you’ve been following the lecture, some require a little more external knowledge. Our person 3
Answering each question correctly will increase your charm – even if you give Junpei the correct answer. If you do well on the midterm and final exams, you’ll receive a special reward from Mitsuru, your team’s de facto academic.
Here are the answers for the lesson in chronological order Persona 3 wearable, which have not changed with their Steam, Xbox Game Pass, PlayStation and Switch ports. If you are looking for instructions for the Persona 4 Gold
April answers in the classroom
4/8
Q: Who did I say was my favorite author?
Answer: Utsobu Kubota
4/20
Q: What was the style of houses called in the Jomson period?
A: Mud huts
27.4
Q: Do you know when numbers were invented?
A: 6,000 years ago.
May answers in the classroom
5/6
Q: What do you call water without a lot of calcium and magnesium?
A: Soft water.
5/13
Q: How fast do you think the earth rotates near the equator?
A: 1,700km/h
5/15
Q: One of the items on the family menu is frying pan. How would you translate that into English?
A bread
May midterm exams
19.5
Q: How would you translate “pan” in English?
A bread
5/20
Q: How fast does the earth rotate near the equator?
A: Faster than sound.
21.5
Q: What is calcium and magnesium rich water called?
A: Hard water
22.5
Q: Where is the Kitora Tomb located?
A: Nara
June classroom responses
15.06
Q: Fill in the blank with the appropriate conjunction: “It’s been raining all last week, ____ it’s going to rain again today.”
A: And
17.6
Q: What formed the origins of magic?
A: Shamanism
22.06
Q: Which of these is NOT known as “Devil Fish”?
A jellyfish
25.06
Q: What form of natural magic was used to search for water sources?
A: dowsing rod
29.6
Q: Which direction does the vortex go in the northern hemisphere?
A: It can go both ways.
July classroom answers
7/3
Q: How am I supposed to know about someone who lived so long ago? W-what am I saying [protagonist name]?
A: The Global Heritage Pavilion
7/8
Q: Which of these sentences is incorrect? (and is an example of a comma splice)
A: “I failed, now it’s over.”
7/9
Q: What law served as the basis for the development of feudalism?
A: The Konden Eizen Shizaihou
7/10
Q: What is the mystical study of Jewish texts?
A: Kabbalah
7/11
Q: What title did Taira No Masakado claim?
A: The Imperial Prince
Final exam of the first semester
7/14
Q: What form of natural magic is used to find water sources?
A: dowsing rod
15.7
Q: Some Europeans call this creature “devil fish” and refuse to eat it.
A: Octopus
16.7
Q: Who founded the Kamakura Shogunate?
A: Minamoto, no Yoritomo
17.7
Q: What is an example of a comma splice?
A: “I walked, I learned.”
September answers in the classroom
9/1
Q: What do you call the phenomenon when the electrical resistance is zero?
A: Superconductivity
9/10
Q: What do we say after dinner?
A: Gochisou-sama
9/11
Q: Which book helped promote the art of magic during the Renaissance?
A: The Hermetics
14.9
Q: Which of these is NOT Japan’s nuclear ban?
A: Cannot have others produce.
26.9
Q: What is the collective term for the four sacred numbers in numerology?
A: The Tetractys.
October answers in the classroom
10/7
Q: Do you know why a matador’s capote is red?
A: To wow the audience.
Midterms in the second semester
10/13
Q: What is the biggest source of stress for women?
A: Husbands
14.10
Q: Who founded numerology?
A: Moses
Note: the actual correct answer is Pythagrius, but the game’s correct answer is Moses.
15.10
Q: What is superconductivity?
A: No electrical resistance
16.10
Q: The Ohnin War was one of the two incidents that started the Sengoku era. Which was the other?
A: Meiou coup
continued October
19.10
Q: How many calendar patterns are there?
A: Fourteen
22.10
Q: Natto also comes from soybeans, but how is it made?
A: By fermenting them
23.10
Q: Who is the founder of Theosophy, which has spawned many magical societies?
A: Mrs. Blavatsky
26.10
Q: But which of these things is NOT Arabic?
A wristwatch
29.10
Q: One kind of acid has the function of splitting lactic acid into glucose and galactose. What is this enzyme called?
A: lactase
Answers in November class
11/7
Q: As Sei Shounagon once said, “Fuyu wa tsutomete…” I’m sure you know what that means, [protagonist name.]
A: Winter mornings are pleasant.
11/12
Q: What is the ancient Indian magical text I mentioned today?
A: The Upanishads
30.11
Q: They used white makeup, plucked their eyebrows in favor of raised ones, and stained their teeth with limonite. But do you think the men did these things?
A: You did both
December answers in the classroom
12/7
Q: Which allotrope is formed by three oxygen atoms?
A: Ozone
12/11
Q: Did you hear what she said? [protagonist name]? Do you know the answer?
To: cactus
December exams
12/14
Q: What year did the Battle of Dan-no-ura begin?
A: 1185
12/15
Q: What element is found in ozone?
A: Oxygen
12/16
Q: Which rule relates to the Lorentz force?
A: Left hand rule
12/17
Q: Translate the following: “Fuyu wa tsutomete.”
A: Winter mornings are pleasant.
18.12
Q: Which plural form is correct?
To: cactus
December continued
21.12
Q: What magic is Himiko supposed to have used?
A: Kido.
22.12
Q: What do you call the bliss of a near-death experience?
A: Euphoria.
January answers in the classroom
1/8
Q: Of the three sentences I wrote on the board, tell me which one is correct?
A: It’s wrong.
1/18
Q: I mentioned two Greek sorceresses. One was Medea; who was the other
A: Circe.
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