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ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 1, Problem 4. Which punctuation fits best?
ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 2, Problem 1. Which choice best punctuates this sentence?
ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 4, Problem 3. How could this sentence be written to best exemplify parallel construction?
ACT English 4.2 Sentence Structure 242 Views
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ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 4, Problem 2. Which choice contains the proper use of tenses in this sentence?
Transcript
- 00:04
Here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by bad students. So, our apologies: it was
- 00:08
turned in late with no spell check run on it.
- 00:10
How should you change the underlined portion below, if at all?
- 00:14
The teacher said that he was a poor student because he waited until the last minute to
- 00:18
study for the exam, completed his lab problems in a careless manner,
Full Transcript
- 00:23
and his motivation was low.
- 00:33
Our quest for parallel construction continues with this question, where we're confronted
- 00:38
with a monstrous list that's not parallel in the least.
- 00:41
The first item on this list begins with "waited,"
- 00:44
a verb that we know is in the past tense because of its "E-D" ending.
- 00:49
The next item on the list maintains the status quo by beginning with the past tense verb "completed."
- 00:55
The final item, however, messes up the flow by starting with the adjective-noun combo
- 00:59
"his motivation."
- 01:01
Since the construction here is decidedly not parallel, we can go ahead and nix choice (A).
- 01:06
Choice (C) gets crazy with its tenses.
- 01:08
Though the list starts with the past tense verb "waited," choice (C) inexplicably shifts
- 01:13
into present tense with the verbs "is" and "has."
- 01:16
Shifting tense is a cardinal sin in the church of parallel construction, so we can kick choice
- 01:20
(C) to the curb.
- 01:21
(B) gets needlessly fancy by throwing a participle into the mix. A participle is a word derived
- 01:26
from a verb, which functions as an adjective.
- 01:29
Here, "having" functions as an adjective by describing the pronoun "him," which stands
- 01:34
in for our slack student.
- 01:36
Neither of the other items in the list are participle phrases, though. So all of this
- 01:40
effort is for naught.
- 01:42
Choice (D) is the right answer because it begins each item on the list with a past tense
- 01:45
verb.
- 01:46
"Completed," "lacked," and "waited" go together like peas and carrots.
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