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Passage Drill Videos 75 videos
ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 1. Conjunctive Adverbs.
ACT English: Passage Drill 1, Problem 2. What is the right tense for this verb?
ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 3. Keeping an eye out for wordiness.
ACT English 3.7 Passage Drill 186 Views
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Description:
ACT English: Passage Drill 3, Problem 7. Which choice places commas correctly in this sentence?
Transcript
- 00:03
Here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by ancient civilizations. Sorry, if it's a little dusty.
- 00:11
Check out the following passage...
- 00:32
How would you correct this underlined segment from the passage, if at all?
- 00:37
water, called the cascade, forms
- 00:40
And here are the potential answers...
Full Transcript
- 00:44
The phrase "called the cascade" is nonessential to the sentence. Don't believe us?
- 00:49
Well, read it without the phrase included.
- 00:51
"Eventually, a ring of spraying water forms the base."
- 00:57
See, the sentence hasn't lost any essential meaning even though we snipped the phrase.
- 01:05
Sure, the fact that these rings of spraying water are called cascades is good to know
- 01:09
and will make us look cool in Science class.
- 01:15
But in this particular sentence, the phrase is like those extra appetizers we order because
- 01:19
want them, not because we need them.
- 01:22
OK, enough about overeating. Now that we've established that this phrase is nonessential,
- 01:26
the next step is knowing that nonessential elements in a sentence have to be set apart by commas.
- 01:32
With this seemingly innocent piece of information, we can swiftly lay waste to the incorrect answer choices.
- 01:38
Choice (B) places a comma between the words "called" and "the." Not only does this comma
- 01:43
not enclose the nonessential phrase, it also breaks up the phrase in a way that doesn't make sense.
- 01:49
Options (C) and (D) also make the mistake of using commas to break up the phrase.
- 01:54
Dude, who knew commas could be such home-wreckers?
- 01:58
(C) encloses "the cascade" with commas, and (D) does the same to "called." Neither is
- 02:03
correct, so they're both getting nixed.
- 02:05
The right answer is (A) because it takes our advice and walls the entire phrase away with commas.
- 02:13
We wonder if nonessential phrases ever get lonely in there.
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