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ELA Drills, Advanced: Punctuation 1. Which option best completes the sentence?
ACT English: Grammar and Usage Drill 1, Problem 1. What should replace the underlined word?
ACT English: Grammar and Usage Drill 1, Problem 2. Does the underlined word match the subject and tense?
ACT English 5.1 Passage Drill 190 Views
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Description:
ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 5, Problem 1. Which choice indicates proper comma use in the underlined segment?
Transcript
- 00:04
Here’s your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by the class arachnida.
- 00:09
Guaranteed to cause more trouble than the class clown.
- 00:22
How would you correct this underlined segment from the passage, if at all?
- 00:26
in the araneae order, of the class arachnida?
- 00:33
And here are the potential answers...
Full Transcript
- 00:36
We’re gonna go out on a limb and say that commas are the most abused members of the punctuation family.
- 00:42
Everybody is guilty of comma abuse once in a while, but if we work together, we can put it to an end.
- 00:47
One incredibly useful rule of thumb is that commas are used to set apart nonessential
- 00:52
elements in a sentence.
- 00:54
If a sentence works just as well without a particular word, phrase, or clause, chances
- 00:58
are that element is nonessential.
- 01:00
In these cases, a comma is needed to step in and keep the nonessential element away
- 01:05
from the rest of the sentence.
- 01:08
So for this question, we have to take a good look at the underlined segment and analyze
- 01:12
whether any of this information is nonessential.
- 01:15
We’ll read it out loud to help:
- 01:17
“Spiders are invertebrate creatures in the araneae order of the class
- 01:22
arachnida in the phylum arthropoda.”
- 01:28
Secret confession: we only read that aloud because we like pronouncing Latin names.
- 01:32
Anyway, that all seems essential to us. The writer wants to tell us the order, class,
- 01:36
and phylum to which spiders belong. No piece of information is more important than another.
- 01:42
If we took anything away, the meaning of the sentence would change.
- 01:45
Since everything is essential, no commas are required in this sentence.
- 01:49
Knowing this allows us to swiftly eliminate options (A), (D), and (C),
- 01:53
which all include commas.
- 01:55
Sorry, guys, but the comma abuse has to stop somewhere.
- 01:58
The correct answer is (B), which uses no commas to separate any of this vital information.
- 02:03
All this info needs to be stuck together like insects in a spider’s web.
- 02:07
OK, that simile was a little grim.
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