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ELA Drills, Advanced: Punctuation 1. Which option best completes the sentence?
ACT English: Punctuation Drill 1, Problem 1. Choose the correct punctuation for this sentence.
ACT English: Punctuation Drill 1, Problem 2. How should we format this list?
ACT English 4.4 Passage Drill 190 Views
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Description:
ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 4, Problem 4. Where should the commas be placed in the underlined portion of this sentence?
Transcript
- 00:03
Here’s your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by unsung genius, Makoto Hagiwara.
- 00:09
Sign our petition to make his birthday a national holiday.
- 00:35
How would you correct this underlined segment from the passage, if at all?
- 00:39
man, named Makoto Hagiwara, in 1914, in San Francisco.?
- 00:44
And here are the potential answers...
Full Transcript
- 00:49
Once again, we’re being asked to determine what’s essential and what’s
- 00:52
nonessential in a sentence.
- 00:54
The rule of thumb is that nonessential elements should be set apart by commas...
- 00:58
While essential elements should let it fly with no punctuation at all.
- 01:02
Choice (A) is definitely wrong.
- 01:04
It goes so crazy with the commas that it’s hard to tell what the writer thinks is essential
- 01:08
or nonessential. Option (B), on the other hand, sets the phrase
- 01:11
“named Makoto Hagiwara in 1914” apart with commas.
- 01:17
There’s no way this is correct because the main point of this sentence is to tell us
- 01:21
Makoto’s name.
- 01:23
The year in which he invented fortune cookies also seems probably pretty important.
- 01:27
We find a similar mistake in choice (C), which only sets the name “Makoto Hagiwara” apart.
- 01:32
Again, this guy’s name is totally essential to the sentence.
- 01:34
Man, why is everybody hatin’ on Makoto? That does it; we’re officially starting
- 01:38
the Makoto Hagiwara fan club.
- 01:42
The best answer is (D). The correct response is to place no punctuation in this sentence.
- 01:47
All of the elements of the clause that begins with "Japanese man named…" are essential—
- 01:52
we need to know the name, the year, and the place. Therefore, they should not be set off from
- 01:57
the body of the sentence by commas.
- 01:59
We believe fortune cookie history is essential knowledge for all Americans
- 02:03
and should be taught in every school across the land.
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