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ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 14. Checking for redundant or irrelevant information.
ACT English: Passage Drill 1, Problem 8. What would happen if we deleted the underlined sentence?
ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 3, Problem 2. What would the paragraph lose if the writer omits the underlined phrase?
ACT English 2.9 Passage Drill 188 Views
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ACT English: Passage Drill 2, Problem 9. Which word fits best in the sentence?
Transcript
- 00:03
Here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by insecure cats. You know one by how many
- 00:08
times they ask if they look fat in their new collar.
- 00:32
How would you correct the following underlined portion from the passage? Does it need correcting?
- 00:49
To figure out whether "secured" is the best word, we have to consider the context
- 00:52
in which it appears. The writer is trying to say that the best thing to do if we want
Full Transcript
- 00:56
to give a successful kitty-bath is to make the cat feel safe. In the next sentence, the
- 01:00
writer talks about how he or she used nice stuff like coconut shampoo to make the bath
- 01:05
as relaxing as possible. (Who knew cats like coconut shampoo? Yay, for learning.)
- 01:10
Anyway, it's looking like we can nix choice (A). The word "secured" doesn't fit
- 01:15
because it doesn't have the correct meaning. When something is "secured" that means
- 01:19
it's been fixed or attached so that it can't move or be lost. The writer isn't gluing
- 01:24
the cat to the rubber mat; therefore, this doesn't work.
- 01:26
What the ACT is trying to do here is trick us into thinking we're looking at the word
- 01:30
"secure," which can be used to describe someone who feels safe and happy. We're
- 01:34
not falling for it, though. The "ed" ending changes the meaning, so we"re giving (A) the boot.
- 01:40
Choices (B) and (C) take us down the same road as (A). Both "stationary" and "immobile"
- 01:45
could work as synonyms for "secured." If the writer wanted these things for the
- 01:48
cat, however, he or she would put it in a straightjacket or something. We imagine that
- 01:53
would do the opposite of making the cat feel safe and secure--especially as its being submerged in water.
- 01:58
Of course, we bet Houdini's cat did this kinda stuff all the time.
- 02:06
Choice (D) is the correct answer. The word "comfortable" gets across the safe and
- 02:10
secure feeling that the writer is trying to engender in the cat.
- 02:13
Next time, maybe the writer and cat should give transcendental meditation a shot.
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