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Rhetorical Skills Videos 30 videos

ACT English 1.1 Organization
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ACT English: Organization Drill 1, Problem 1. Which transition works best?

ACT English 1.2 Organization
305 Views

ACT English: Organization Drill 1, Problem 2. Picking the right transition word.

ACT English 1.3 Organization
283 Views

ACT English: Organization Drill 1, Problem 3. Can you find the correct transition?

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ACT English 3.9 Passage Drill 201 Views


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Description:

ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 3, Problem 9. Which choice provides the most significant new information?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

Here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by storms of fish. Bad for fish, great for grizzly bears.

00:12

Check out the following passage...

00:20

The writer is considering adding another phrase to the end of the preceding sentence.

00:25

Given that all of the following choices are true, which one provides the most significant new information?

00:37

The correct answer will boast information that's found nowhere else in the passage.

00:37

The correct answer will boast information that’s found nowhere else in the passage.

00:40

So all we have to do is scan through the passage and check to see which of these phrases is

00:43

redundant and which adds something new.

00:46

Choice (D) can go because the sentence, itself, mentions a "ring of spraying water."

00:50

We're no experts, but if this thing is spraying water, it's guaranteed to be scattering it as well.

00:54

Option (C) fills us in on how the funnels extend from the water to the sky.

00:58

It didn't need to bother, though, because the very next sentence tells us the same thing.

01:01

Too bad, (C), we've heard it all before.

01:03

Choice (A) is more of a challenge to eliminate. The word "dissipate" doesn't actually

01:07

appear anywhere in the passage. However, when something "dissipates" it disperses and

01:12

disappears. The molecules it's made of go their separate ways, and it is no more.

01:17

This goes along with the section in Paragraph 3 that describes waterspouts losing their

01:21

energy and raining objects back to the earth. The correct answer is (B), which gives us

01:25

new information by telling us that the "mature" waterspout can be a mile wide.

01:29

A mile wide? Maybe it should think about low fat frogs next time.

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