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Sentence Structure Videos 25 videos

ACT English 1.4 Sentence Structure
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ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 1, Problem 4. Which punctuation fits best?

ACT English 2.1 Sentence Structure
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ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 2, Problem 1. Which choice best punctuates this sentence?

ACT English 4.3 Sentence Structure
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ACT English: Sentence Structure Drill 4, Problem 3. How could this sentence be written to best exemplify parallel construction? 

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ACT English 5.3 Sentence Structure 284 Views


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Description:

In this ACT English drill question, figure out if the underlined segment requires a correction or not.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

Here’s your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by caveman musicians.

00:08

The real inventors of rock and roll.

00:10

How should you change the underlined portion below, if at all?

00:13

Evidence about how musicians played the instrument comes from ancient wall paintings.?

00:25

We’ll jump right in here and eliminate choice (C), which doesn’t use the proper verb form--

00:29

a crime for which the verb police have stiff penalties.

00:32

The auxiliary verb “has” is forbidden to hang out with the verb “came”

00:37

on pain of...well...being incomprehensible.

00:40

“Has” is meant to be used when creating the present perfect tense.

00:44

The correct combination here would be “has come” not “came,” thus (C) is incorrect.

00:50

Choice (D) gives us “had come,” which is in the past perfect tense.

00:54

This is incorrect because the past perfect is used to compare two things that have happened

00:59

in the past.

01:01

If it were trying to tell us that a caveman had invented rock and roll right before he’d

01:05

invented the art of painting, then all would be good, but… that’s not what’s going on here.

01:09

So we're left with (A) and (B). No doubt, these two are a little tough to choose between.

01:14

The only other verb in the sentence is “played,” which is in the past tense.

01:18

This might lead us to choose choice (B). “Came” is in the past tense like “played,” right?

01:24

Hmm, something still seems fishy…

01:26

Choice (A) uses “comes,” which is in the present tense. This is actually the right

01:30

answer since the evidence here doesn't refer to a specific discovery or idea.

01:35

When this is the case it’s best to use the present tense to convey the idea that evidence

01:39

in general comes from this source.

01:41

Quick tip: Evidence found in ancient wall paintings is usually not admissible in court.

01:45

This loophole helped Grog the Caveman dodge an “assault by clubbing” rap…

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