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Rhetorical Skills Videos 30 videos

ACT English 1.14 Passage Drill
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ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 14. Checking for redundant or irrelevant information.

ACT English 1.8 Passage Drill
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ACT English: Passage Drill 1, Problem 8. What would happen if we deleted the underlined sentence?

ACT English 3.2 Passage Drill
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ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 3, Problem 2. What would the paragraph lose if the writer omits the underlined phrase?

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ACT English 2.8 Passage Drill 211 Views


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ACT English: Passage Drill 2, Problem 8. Which choice best fits at the beginning of the sentence?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by gunk.

00:08

Twice voted most popular baby name in the Neanderthal community.

00:17

How would you correct the following underlined portion from the passage? Does it need correcting?

00:31

We know that the writer had to look up information because he or she wasn't familiar with the cat-bathing process.

00:38

Choice (A) is incorrect because the use of the word "although" sets up a contrast

00:43

instead of a causality.

00:45

"Although" indicates that something happened

00:47

in spite of something else.

00:49

Choice (C) is incorrect for the same reason. Like "although," the word "while"

00:53

sets up a contrast. It would be correct if the sentence were something more like, "While

00:57

I didn't know anything about kitty-bathing, I took a shot at it anyway," but that's

01:01

not the case here.

01:03

(D) makes the same mistake as its predecessors. The phrase "regardless of the fact" indicates

01:10

a contrast as well. We might say, "Regardless of the fact that I love you, I can't marry

01:16

you because of that thing on your face."

01:19

But then we'd be jerks.

01:20

This leaves us with choice (B), the correct answer. The word "since" is used to show

01:26

when one thing is caused by another. Boom. There's the causality we've been looking for.

01:39

Seems like this causality came close to causing a casualty.

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