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Playlist ACT® English: Sentence Structure 25 videos
ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 1, Problem 1. Properly punctuating dependent clauses.
ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 1, Problem 2. What punctuation do we need between these clauses?
ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 1, Problem 3. Proper word choice for independent clauses.
ACT English 3.2 Sentence Structure 233 Views
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Description:
ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 3, Problem 2. How should the underlined portion of the sentence be changed?
Transcript
- 00:04
Here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by Aunt Sue. She's got a thing for litigation.
- 00:07
How should you change the underlined portion below, if at all?
- 00:11
Sweeping up the paper from the floor, the missing key was found by Aunt Sue.
- 00:23
If we've recently reminded ourselves of the rule about modifying phrases, we can answer
- 00:27
this question without breaking a mental sweat.
Full Transcript
- 00:30
The noun or pronoun that's being modified has to come directly after the modifying phrase, right?
- 00:33
So, all we have to do is ask ourselves who or what the phrase is describing and plop
- 00:37
that noun or pronoun where it's supposed to be.
- 00:39
In this question, "sweeping up the paper from the floor" is the phrase. So, if choice (A)
- 00:43
is correct, then it's the missing key that's making the floor spic-and-span.
- 00:48
It doesn't make much sense for a key to sweep a floor to find itself, or for a key to do
- 00:52
any sweeping at all for that matter. Therefore we can confidently move on to other options.
- 00:59
We can easily eliminate choice (B) as well, since it makes the same error as (A).
- 01:03
Though it might not look like it at first glance, choice (C) actually makes the same
- 01:07
mistake as (A) and (B).
- 01:09
The first noun that follows our modifying phrase is again "key." "Aunt Sue" might be
- 01:15
a noun on its own, but here the apostrophes makes it possessive, and therefore it functions
- 01:21
as a modifier.
- 01:22
By describing whose key this is, the noun becomes an adjective.
- 01:26
Choice (D) correctly places Aunt Sue in her place of glory directly after the modifying
- 01:31
phrase.
- 01:32
This version makes it clear that Aunt Sue was the one doing the sweeping that then helped
- 01:36
her find the missing key.
- 01:37
For the record, if anybody has a magic key that wants to sweep some floors, we're interested.
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