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11 min read•july 11, 2024
Welcome to Fiveable's deep dive into sentence structure! This is the first of three guides that goes straight into the nitty-gritty of Standard English Conventions as part of the SAT Writing and Language section.
Compared to the other SAT Language Sections, Standard English Conventions is more on the technical side. In order to be successful, you should familiarize yourself with the rules and the standards of written English. Let's get into it! 💫
But wait...what is sentence structure all about? Your job for this part of the SAT Writing and Language section is to recognize and correct sentence formation, as well as inappropriate shifts in sentence construction. We've broken this down into six subsections for you!
🌰 What the College Board says: Recognizing and correcting grammatically incomplete sentences that aren’t rhetorically effective
⭐ What It Basically Means: You'd want to know what makes a sentence complete or incomplete.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
🌰 What the College Board says: Recognizing and correcting problems in how major parts of sentences are related
⭐ What It Basically Means: You'd want to know your different subordinating and coordinating conjunctions and how they relate in a sentence!
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
❗ Sample Question: Unless he transferred to a new school, Jeremy struggled with finding friends.
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) Although
(C) Because
(D) Even though
ANSWER: (C) Because. "Unless" gives more of an ultimatum-like vibe (has a consequence). "Although" and "Even though" (similar meanings) do not fit the outcome of Jeremy's situation as he struggled due to his transfer. "Because" is the most appropriate, as it connects Jeremy's evident struggle to his transfer to a new school.
🌰 What the College Board says: Recognizing and correcting problems with parallelism
⭐ What It Basically Means: When looking at items in groups, make sure to keep them consistent. This is the key idea of parallelism in grammar.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) reaches
(C) reaching
(D) to reach
ANSWER: (C) reaching. Remember, stay consistent!
🌰 What the College Board says: Recognizing and correcting problems with modifier placement, including dangling and misplaced modifiers
⭐ What It Basically Means: Beware of dangling and misplaced modifiers. Know what your pronouns are referring to and be sure to clearly indicate them. Your goal is to minimize any confusion or ambiguity.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) the on-site reporters and the malevolent vandals ran.
(C) the malevolent vandals ran away from the excited on-site reporters.
(D) the photos of the malevolent vandals were snapped by on-site reporters.
ANSWER: (C). Ask yourself, "Who was caught in the act?" The vandals! (Not the on-site reporters. Not the photos.) Remember, you want your modifier to be as close as possible to what it's describing.
🌰 What the College Board says: changing inappropriately from past to present tense
⭐ What It Basically Means: Stay consistent with your verb tenses.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) chopping
(C) will chop
(D) chopped
ANSWER: (D) chopped. There are two ways to approach this question, and both are correct! You can treat this one as a parallel structure question…OR notice the "back in his day" hint, which indicates that Grampa's actions happened way back in the past!
🌰 What the College Board says: changing inappropriately from second person “you” to third person “one”
⭐ What It Basically Means: Keep track of what the pronouns refer to, and don't mix up your numbers.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) our
(C) its
(D) their
ANSWER: (D) their. We have a plural subject (Agatha and her classmates), so it makes sense to use a plural pronoun (which eliminates choice A and C). Since "I" wasn't mentioned, we can't use choice B. That leaves us choice D!
...aaaaaand that's a wrap! Remember to really take the time to digest these six rules and how to apply them to practice questions. Once you're ready, move onto our deep dive into conventions of usage for the SAT Writing and Language section. You got this! 🍀
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11 min read•july 11, 2024
Welcome to Fiveable's deep dive into sentence structure! This is the first of three guides that goes straight into the nitty-gritty of Standard English Conventions as part of the SAT Writing and Language section.
Compared to the other SAT Language Sections, Standard English Conventions is more on the technical side. In order to be successful, you should familiarize yourself with the rules and the standards of written English. Let's get into it! 💫
But wait...what is sentence structure all about? Your job for this part of the SAT Writing and Language section is to recognize and correct sentence formation, as well as inappropriate shifts in sentence construction. We've broken this down into six subsections for you!
🌰 What the College Board says: Recognizing and correcting grammatically incomplete sentences that aren’t rhetorically effective
⭐ What It Basically Means: You'd want to know what makes a sentence complete or incomplete.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
🌰 What the College Board says: Recognizing and correcting problems in how major parts of sentences are related
⭐ What It Basically Means: You'd want to know your different subordinating and coordinating conjunctions and how they relate in a sentence!
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
❗ Sample Question: Unless he transferred to a new school, Jeremy struggled with finding friends.
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) Although
(C) Because
(D) Even though
ANSWER: (C) Because. "Unless" gives more of an ultimatum-like vibe (has a consequence). "Although" and "Even though" (similar meanings) do not fit the outcome of Jeremy's situation as he struggled due to his transfer. "Because" is the most appropriate, as it connects Jeremy's evident struggle to his transfer to a new school.
🌰 What the College Board says: Recognizing and correcting problems with parallelism
⭐ What It Basically Means: When looking at items in groups, make sure to keep them consistent. This is the key idea of parallelism in grammar.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) reaches
(C) reaching
(D) to reach
ANSWER: (C) reaching. Remember, stay consistent!
🌰 What the College Board says: Recognizing and correcting problems with modifier placement, including dangling and misplaced modifiers
⭐ What It Basically Means: Beware of dangling and misplaced modifiers. Know what your pronouns are referring to and be sure to clearly indicate them. Your goal is to minimize any confusion or ambiguity.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) the on-site reporters and the malevolent vandals ran.
(C) the malevolent vandals ran away from the excited on-site reporters.
(D) the photos of the malevolent vandals were snapped by on-site reporters.
ANSWER: (C). Ask yourself, "Who was caught in the act?" The vandals! (Not the on-site reporters. Not the photos.) Remember, you want your modifier to be as close as possible to what it's describing.
🌰 What the College Board says: changing inappropriately from past to present tense
⭐ What It Basically Means: Stay consistent with your verb tenses.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) chopping
(C) will chop
(D) chopped
ANSWER: (D) chopped. There are two ways to approach this question, and both are correct! You can treat this one as a parallel structure question…OR notice the "back in his day" hint, which indicates that Grampa's actions happened way back in the past!
🌰 What the College Board says: changing inappropriately from second person “you” to third person “one”
⭐ What It Basically Means: Keep track of what the pronouns refer to, and don't mix up your numbers.
🤔 What You Need to Remember:
(A) NO CHANGE
(B) our
(C) its
(D) their
ANSWER: (D) their. We have a plural subject (Agatha and her classmates), so it makes sense to use a plural pronoun (which eliminates choice A and C). Since "I" wasn't mentioned, we can't use choice B. That leaves us choice D!
...aaaaaand that's a wrap! Remember to really take the time to digest these six rules and how to apply them to practice questions. Once you're ready, move onto our deep dive into conventions of usage for the SAT Writing and Language section. You got this! 🍀
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