SAT Digital Reading and Writing Test quick start guide
Quick start guide for punctuation & grammar rules for the 2024 new Digital SAT Test
- see SAT Writing section techniques, strategies & approaches for more detailed instructions (related to the pre-2024 paper test)
Abbreviations
- IC = independent clause
- DC = dependent clause
- Phr = phrase
- S= subject (noun)
- V = verb
- O = object (noun)
Overview[edit | edit source]
- The new Digital SAT has four parts, or "modules".
- the first two are "Reading and Writing"
Instructions[edit | edit source]
- From the SAT Test, instructions for Modules 1 and 2 state:
The questions in this section address a number of important reading and writing skills.
Skills[edit | edit source]
- Vocabulary
- Reading comprehension, including
- contextual purpose of a sentence
- main point
- transition words
- author perspective point of view
- using evidence
- Grammar & punctuation, including
- verb tense
- participle phrases
- punctuation of phrases, dependent clauses and independent clauses
Reading Strategies[edit | edit source]
Identify sentence core Subject-Verb match[edit | edit source]
- every sentence has a Subject and Verb that establish the basis of the sentence's Independent Clause (s)
- the subject indicates the perspective or "person" of the sentence
- the verb contains a verb that matches the subject
- and indicates the "idea" of the sentence (what the subject "is" or "does")
- by identifying the core Subject-Verb the student will identify the basic perspective and idea of the sentence
- all other sentence parts add information to the Subject-Verb core
Get rid of the noise"[edit | edit source]
- identify the sentence core
- then read through complicated language and unfamiliar words by "chunking" them into parts and identifying what they do to the subject-verb
- skip unfamiliar words
- or replace them with "something"
- while ignoring unnecessary modifiers, focus on nouns
- unnecessary or redundant modifiers may include,
- adjectives, prepositional phrases and relative clauses (start with "which", "that", "who")
- convert participle phrases (non-finite verbs that start with "-ing" and do not have a subject) into a separate sentence
Example:
"Studying marsupials in Western Australia during a heavy drought, the field researchers incorrectly assumed normalcy of aberrant behaviors for abiding characteristics."
- identify sentence core: "researchers [incorrectly] assumed"
- key nouns: "drought", "researchers", "behaviors", "characteristics"
- convert and simplify participle phrase: "Researchers studied marsupials during a drought."
Gives us:
Researchers studied marsupials during a drought.
The fieldresearchers incorrectly assumednormalcy[normal?]of aberrant[not normal??] behaviors forabidingcharacteristics."
Identify Transition Words[edit | edit source]
- Transition words move ideas
- Authors use transition words for emphasis, contrast, and example
- As transition words are "conjunctive adverbs," they combine the predicates, or "ideas" of two or more sentences or sentence parts
- look for the word "but", especially
Identify Pronoun References[edit | edit source]
- pronouns refer to another noun or idea, usually previously stated
- in order to maintain context and focus, while reading, replace the pronoun with that noun or idea
- if a noun has "the," "this or" that" before it, then identify when/where that noun was previously discussed or defined
- "the", "this," and "that" indicate a specific or "definite" reference to something previously stated
- "a/an", "any," "some, " etc. indicate general or introductory reference (not previously stated)
Identify Passage Perspective[edit | edit source]
- is the text speaking for the author or from another point of view?
- is the text explaining another point of view
- is the text using a "rhetorical question" to set up a rebuttal to a possible criticism?
- do characters or experiments in the text refer to other characters or experiments?
- what is the overall "perspective" of the piece?
Grammar & Punctuation[edit | edit source]
Verbs quick start guide[edit | edit source]
Students are frequently taught that verbs are "action words". However; the definition is misleading because verbs may indicate an action, but they may also indicate a state, condition, existence or occurrence.
The best way to think of a verb is that it is the core of a "predicate" and establishes the "idea" of the sentence (see "predicate") |
Verb definition[edit | edit source]
- indicates an action, state, condition, existence or occurrence
- the dictionary definition of "verb" is
noun. a word used to describe an action, state, or occurrence, and forming the main part of the predicate of a sentence.
- Verb examples:
Present | Present Continuous | Present Perfect |
---|---|---|
do, does | am doing, is doing, are doing | have done, has done |
am, is, are | am being, is being, are being | have been, has been |
go, goes | am going, is going, are going | have gone, has gone |
think, thinks | am thinking, is thinking, are thinking | have thought, has thought |
get, gets | am getting, is getting, are getting | have gotten, has gotten |
- Note:
- "am", "are" "is" are finite verbs (have subjects)
- which means they are the grammatical equivalent of "action verbs" (kick, play, throw)
- even though they do not express a direct action
- they are forms of "to be" and are linking verbs (see below)
- which means they are the grammatical equivalent of "action verbs" (kick, play, throw)
- "am", "are" "is" are finite verbs (have subjects)
Verbs and predicates:[edit | edit source]
- the verb is the basis of the predicate of a sentence
- the predicate = the action and its result/s, modifier/s or object/s
- the predicate is the "idea" of the sentence ("what is or does")
- the "subject" is the "person" or "perspective" of a sentence ("the doer")
The elephant | sprayed the people at the zoo |
subject
= the "person" or "point of view" (i.e., "the doer") |
predicate
= the "idea" of the sentence (i.e., what is or happens) |
Finite vs. Non-Finite Verb[edit | edit source]
BIG IDEA: for the SAT, identify if a verb is finite or non-finite
Finite Verb[edit | edit source]
- has a subject
- finite verbs form the core of a sentence or clause
- "is" and "are" are finite verbs
- = conjugation of the verb "to be", which is a linking verb
- IDENTIFY them in a sentence, then match them to their subject
- dependent clauses have finite verbs, so identify the subject-verb match in a dependent clause in order not to confuse it with the subject-verb match of the main or independent clause
- ex. The thing I like most about her is her sunny attitude
- S-V of main clause = Thing + is
- S-V of relative clause = I + like
- ex. The thing I like most about her is her sunny attitude
==== Non-finite verb ====*does not have a subject
- non-finite verbs act as a noun (gerund), adjective (past or present participle) or infinitive ("to" form of a verb)
- for the SAT, the most important non-finite verb is the present participle adjective
- = the -ing form of a non-finite verb acting as an adjective
- note that non-finite verbs acting as nouns, called gerunds, are also in the -ing form of the verb
- present participles are used to add information to an independent clause
- ex. Driving carefully, she made it home safely in the storm
- = "She drove carefully in the storm. She made it home safely."
- we can combine those two sentences into a more compact sentence by using the non-finite verb "driving"
- note that participle phrases are attached to an independent clause by a comma and not a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS)
- ex. Driving carefully, she made it home safely in the storm
- = the -ing form of a non-finite verb acting as an adjective
Linking verb[edit | edit source]
- a finite verb (has a subject) that "links" a noun or adjective (the complement) to the subject
- ex. She is a doctor
- "she" = subject
- "is" = linking verb
- linking verbs do not have objects
- instead they have "subject complements"
- in the sentence, She is a doctor
- "doctor" = subject complement noun
- "doctor" is not the object of the verb "is"
- instead, the verb "is" links the complement noun "doctor" to the subject "she"
- in the sentence, The patient feels sick
- "sick" = subject complement adjective
- "sick" is an adjective so it cannot be an object (which is a noun)
- so, the verb "feels" links the complement adjective "sick" to the subject "patient"
- for the SAT, note that
- linking verbs have subjects
- thus "is" and "are" are finite verbs with subjects to match to
- linking verbs do not have objects
- instead, they have "complements
- linking verbs have subjects
Verb tense, conjugation and subject-verb matching quick start guide[edit | edit source]
- "conjugation" means "to inflect" a verb according to the "person" of its subject
- "inflection" = word ending changes
- i.e., "go" >> "going", or "go" >> "goes"
- "person" = the "voice" or "perspective" of the subject of a sentence
- i.e., "I" = first person singular; "we" = first person plural, etc.
- "inflection" = word ending changes
Person[edit | edit source]
Person | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
First person | I | we |
Second person | you | you (all) |
Third person | he / she / it | they |
singular noun
(ex. the lion roars) |
plural noun
(ex. the lions roar) |
Conjugation[edit | edit source]
- matches subject and verb
- or, the verb-ending matches the person of the subject
singular | plural | ||
---|---|---|---|
First person | I am | We are | |
Second person | You are | You (all) are | |
Third person | He / She / It is | They are |
the SAT test will only ask students to select between third person singular ("it") and third person plural ("they")
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
First person | I go | We go |
Second person | You go | You (all) go |
Third person | He / She / It goes | They go |
Tense[edit | edit source]
- tense = verb forms that indicate time (when)
- past, present, future
- and sub-categories of them
- for the SAT, know that the present perfect HAS and HAVE verb forms are PRESENT TENSE
Simple present | Present Continuous | Present Perfect | |
---|---|---|---|
Singular | It works | It is working | It has worked |
It interacts | It is interacting | It has interacted | |
It does | It is doing | It has done* | |
Plural | They work | They are working | They have worked |
They interact | They are interacting | They have interacted | |
They do | They are doing | They have done. |
- HAD is PAST TENSE
Simple present | Present Continuous | Present Perfect | |
---|---|---|---|
Singular | It worked | It was working | It had worked |
It interacted | It was interacting | It had interacted | |
It did* | It was doing | It had done* | |
Plural | They worked | They were working | They had worked |
They interacted | They were interacting | They had interacted | |
They did* | They were doing | They had done.* |
* irregular
Sentences quick start guide[edit | edit source]
- A sentence is a grammatically correct, complete thought.
- A sentence must:
- contain a subject and verb
- i.e. a finite verb
- form a complete thought
- contain a subject and verb
- types of sentences:
- a simple sentence has a single independent clause
- a compound sentence has two or more independent clauses (see below)
- a complex sentence has an independent clause and one or more dependent clauses
- and/or phrases, especially participle phrases (see below)
Sentence core[edit | edit source]
- the "core" of a sentence is its subject-verb
- for the SAT, identify the "sentence core" in order to
- comprehend the sentence
- identify modifying, or non-essential, parts
- correctly answer subject-verb match questions
Sentence parts[edit | edit source]
- we can divide a sentence into two core parts:
- SUBJECT and PREDICATE
- SUBJECT = the perspective of the sentence (i.e. the "doer")
- PREDICATE = the action or idea of the sentence
SUBJECT
the doer or perspective |
PREDICATE
the action or idea |
---|---|
dog | bites |
mailman | runs |
- additional information may be added using "modifiers" and "complements"
- modifiers add important information but are not essential to a grammatically complete sentence
- modifiers include articles
- complements add information to the subject or verb
SUBJECT
the doer or perspective |
PREDICATE
the action or idea | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
the | scared | mailman | runs | from | the | mean | dog |
sentence core: | |||||||
subject | verb | ||||||
modifiers and complements: | |||||||
article | adjective | preposition | article | adjective | object complement
of the preposition |
Clauses quick start guide[edit | edit source]
- a clause has a finite verb
- i.e. it consists of a subject + verb
independent clause[edit | edit source]
- has a finite verb
- makes a complete thought
- i.e., if by itself it would make a (simple) sentence
dependent clause[edit | edit source]
- has a finite verb
- does not make a complete thought
- i.e. by itself it would not make a sentence
- dependent clauses add information to an independent clause
- dependent clauses are formed by subordinating conjunctions or relative pronouns
Subordinate clause[edit | edit source]
- "subordinate" = "below" or "under"
- it is subordinate to the IC
- it is "subordinated" by a "subordinating conjunction":
Subordinate clause (DC) | Independent clause (IC) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Since | the snow | fell | all night | school | canceled |
subordinating
conjunction |
subject | verb | prepositional phrase | subject
(relative pronoun) |
verb |
The DC could not be a sentence by itself: | The IC could be a sentence by itself: | ||||
Since the snow fell all night. | School canceled. |
Relative clause (also called "adjective clause")[edit | edit source]
- adds modifying information
- is a dependent clause
- introduced by the relative pronouns that, which, who, whose
Independent clause (IC) | Relative clause (DC) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The snow | fell | all night | which | meant | no school! |
subject | verb | prepositional phrase | subject(relative pronoun) | verb | object phrase |
The IC could be a sentence by itself: | The DC could not be a sentence by itself: | ||||
The snow fell all night. | Which meant no school! |
- note: if we used the wording, "The snow fell all night, which meant school canceled," we would then have the clause "school canceled" (subject-verb) as a dependent (noun) clause within the first dependent (relative) clause:
- i.e. The snow fell all night, which meant school canceled
- relative clause
- noun clause
- the dependent marker "that" is assumed (thus can be omitted):
- The snow fell all night, which meant that school canceled
- the SAT will not measure students directly on noun clauses, although sentences may include them
- i.e. The snow fell all night, which meant school canceled
- for more on noun clauses, see SAT Writing section:#noun clause or Grammar: Clause#noun clause
Relative clause within an IC:[edit | edit source]
- Relative clauses may come in between an independent clause's subject and predicate
- the SAT frequently measures this sentence form:
- in order to confuse students about subject-verb matching
- in order to confuse students about punctuation
- ex.:
Independent Clause (IC) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
The study | shows | promise | ||
Subject | Verb | Object | ||
Relative Clause (DC) | ||||
that | used | more samples | ||
subject (relative pronoun) |
verb | object phrase |
- Note: on this sentence, the SAT might try to confuse the student with a mismatch of the singular subject "study" and singular verb "shows"
- by selecting the plural object of the relative clause "samples" and incorrectly matching it to the plural verb "show"
- the test might also try to confuse students over the tense of the past-tense "used" and present-tense "shows"
- Here's another depiction of a relative clause that fits between the subject and verb of an independent clause:
- ex., for the sentence
- The dog that barks has no bite
- IC subject-verb = "dog has"
- DC (relative clause) subject-verb = "that barks"
- The dog that barks has no bite
- ex., for the sentence
- The friend that I made in France last year will visit this summer
- IC subject-verb = "friend will visit"
- DC (relative clause) subject-verb = "I made"
- DC relative pronoun = "that"
- here, the relative pronoun "that" is acting as a "conjunction" or "dependent marker"
- as it marks or sets up the the relative clause
- here, the relative pronoun "that" is acting as a "conjunction" or "dependent marker"
- The friend that I made in France last year will visit this summer
BIG IDEAS for relative clauses[edit | edit source]
- with the relative pronoun "that" no punctuation is used
- ("that" may be preceded or followed by a parenthetical element that uses parentheses, commas or dashes)
- the SAT will frequently ask to place a semicolon or colon after "that" -- this is incorrect
- if coming in between the subject and verb, the relative pronoun "which" may or may not be separated by commas
- if "that" can be substituted, "which" does not need a comma
- if "that" can not be substituted, "which" uses a comma
- do not confuse the subject-verb of the relative clause with the subject-verb of the independent clause (IC)
Phrases quick start guide[edit | edit source]
- a phrase is two or more words that do not contain a finite verb
- i.e., any two words that are not a subject + verb
- phrases add information
- and build up ideas, provide context, information, qualify, etc.
- especially to add information to either a subject or predicate
SUBJECT | PREDICATE | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
On Tuesdays | my friend and I | play | competitive tennis | at the local club |
prepositional phrase | subject phrase | verb | object phrase | prepositional phrase |
Prepositional phrases[edit | edit source]
- identify prepositional phrases (see SAT Writing section #prepositional phrase for more)
- the noun that follows the preposition is its object
- the noun that precedes the preposition is modified by the prepositional phrase
- I left the keys on the desk
- the noun (object) "keys" is modified by the prepositional phrase "on the desk"
- or, if separated by a verb, the noun is the subject and the prepositional phrase serves as the subject or verb complement (like an adverb)
- The keys are on the desk
- "on" is the preposition and "desk" is its object
- the prepositional phrase "on the desk" is the subject complement of "keys" (connected by the linking verb "are")
- He ran up the hill
- "up the hill" is an adverbial prepositional phrase that modifies the verb "ran"
- The keys are on the desk
- I left the keys on the desk
- The SAT will try to confuse students between the subject of a clause and the object of a preposition
- note that the object of a preposition is never the subject of a clause
Participle phrases[edit | edit source]
- participles are the verb forms of using -ing and -ed
- these may be finite or non-finite (see "Verbs" guide)
- non-finite participles do not have a subject and may act as nouns ("gerund") or adjectives (present or past participle adjective)
Participle as finite verb | Form | Participle as non-finite verb | Form |
---|---|---|---|
I was feeling hungry, so I decided to get a burger | "feeling" = present continuous finite verb (with subject "I") | Feeling hungry, I decided to get a burger | "feeling" = non-finite present participle adjective that describes the IC subject "I" |
If you are studying, you will get higher grades. | "are studying" = present continuous finite verb (with subject "you") | Studying yields higher grades | "studying" = gerund (non-finite participle as noun) and acts as the subject of the finite verb "yields" |
The train stopped, and people waited impatiently. | "stopped" = past tense finite verb (with the subject "train") | People waited impatiently on the stopped train. | "stopped" = past participle adjective that describes "train" |
Participle phrase BIG IDEAS[edit | edit source]
- The SAT will:
- try to fool the student into mis-matching a subject with a non-finite participle
- ask to combine two sentences or clauses using a participle phrase
- i.e., going from "Eight graders take Algebra. Ninth graders then have to take Geometry."
- to "After taking Algebra in eighth grade, ninth graders take Geometry"
- i.e., going from "Eight graders take Algebra. Ninth graders then have to take Geometry."
Punctuation quick start guide[edit | edit source]
periods .[edit | edit source]
- periods separate sentences
- periods do ONE thing =
- separate grammatically correct and complete thoughts that are distinct sentences
- What PERIODS do & how to eliminate using the rule:
periods:
- periods separate grammatically correct and complete thoughts that are distinct sentences
- elimination:
- if the sentence is grammatically or logically incomplete, the period is wrong
- i.e., SUBJECT VERB and an object or subject complement if needed to make sense
- if the sentence is grammatically or logically incomplete, the period is wrong
- if a period and a semicolon are both possible answers, they are both wrong
- note that "interjection" (a quick remark or interruption) or "imperative" (a command) VERBS contain an implied SUBJECT
- so they can create a complete sentence or independent clause:
- ex.
- "Go to the store." = "[you] Go to the store."
- "Stop!" = "[you} Stop!"
- for the SAT the imperative may come in the form of a command to the reader, such as:
- "Take this idea, for example."
- = "[you] Take this idea, for example." << as a sentence or independent clause
- "Take this idea, for example."
semicolons ;[edit | edit source]
- combine independent clauses for comparison, contrast or some relation between them
- as opposed to periods which completely separate the ideas/ thoughts
- semicolons do (almost) ONE thing:
- combine ICs
- note that semicolons can -- but rarely:
- separate a list of IC's:
- as in "IC; IC; IC; IC."
- a semicolon may also be used as a "super comma" in order to emphasize separate elements in a list of common examples, usually following a colon:
- as in, "IC: this; that; the other thing."
- ex. "On our trip, we will visit tons of places: in Africa, Egypt & Morrocco; in Europe, Greece and Italy; and in Asia, Turkey"
- the "super comma" does not have to follow a colon, so we could write:
- "On our trip, we will visit tons of places, including in Africa, Egypt & Morrocco; in Europe, Greece and Italy; and in Asia, Turkey"
- the "super comma" is rarely used in practice and on the SAT test (see May QAS 2022 Writing section question no. 35 )
- as in, "IC: this; that; the other thing."
- separate a list of IC's:
- What SEMICOLONS do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:
semicolons:
- combine two ICs
- "School is boring; I should go anyway"= IC; IC
- can also create a list of IC's (IC; IC; IC; IC.)
- "School is boring; I already know that stuff; I should go anyway" = "IC; IC; IC
- elimination:
- must have IC or complete sentences & thoughts on both sides of the semicolon
- i.e., if the two clauses on either side of the semicolon would not stand on their own as grammatically complete sentences and thoughts, the semicolon is incorrect
- if a period and a semicolon are both possible answers, they are both wrong
- must have IC or complete sentences & thoughts on both sides of the semicolon
commas ,[edit | edit source]
- create pauses
- commas do FIVE things:
commas:
- combine IC, DC, or DC, IC
- or IC, Phr or Phr, IC
- ex. "He ate fast, which upset his stomach" = IC, DC
- ex. "After eating too fast, his stomach was upset" = Phr, IC
- = prepositional phrase, independent clause
- or IC, Phr or Phr, IC
- combine ICs
- but only with a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS), i.e., IC, and IC
- ex.: "IC, and IC" or "IC, but IC"
- "They played hard, and they won big" = IC, and IC
- "They played hard, but they lost" = IC, but IC
- separate lists (subjects, verbs, objects)
- ex.: S, S and S V, V O, O and O
- act parenthetically
- ", .... ," (like these parentheses)
- The movie, which was about Ancient Rome, was very informative" = S, .... , V
- ", .... ," (like these parentheses)
- introduce a direct quotation
- ex. "The judge declared, "Guilty!"
- elimination:
- commas can only separate a S-V or V-O if acting parenthetically (see below for examples)
- commas can NOT combine two ICs without a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS)
- 1 or more commas can separate multiple subjects, verbs or objects from one another (called "compound" subjects, verbs, objects)
- "Joey, Joella and Josephina jumped for joy"
- = a single comma between the subject "Joey" and its verb "jumped" because the comma creates a list and not a grammatical separation of the subject and verb
- "Joey, Joella and Josephina jumped for joy"
colons :[edit | edit source]
- distinguish additional information following an IC, usually a list, explanation, or example to clarify or extend the idea presented in the IC
- colons = do ONE thing:
- extend or provide examples in support of a prior IC
- i.e., a colon MUST be preceded by an IC
- i.e., colons follow a complete statement with an extended idea or example/s
- The prosecutor presented the evidence: a fingerprint, the weapon, and a written confession"
- = IC: list
- The prosecutor presented the evidence: a fingerprint, the weapon, and a written confession"
- just about any grammatical form can follow a colon, including
- an IC, phrase, exclamation, multiple ICs with semicolons or coordinating conjunctions
- a direct quotation (if that quotation is a complete sentence and if the colon is preceded by an IC
- exceptions arenthat colons are not followed by
- another colon
- a dependent clause that modifies the independent clause prior to the colon
- colons DO NOT:
- follow a dependent clause
- interrupt a clause or requisite (essential, required) or connected elements in a sentence
- ex., "I went to the store: because I needed some supplies"
- the colon here interrupts the connection between "I went to the store" and the reason why, "because..."
- or "She knew: that it was the right thing to do"
- the colon here interrupts the requisite relative pronoun "that" and the clause it creates
- or "They have two ideas: which are both innovative"
- "which" creates a DC that modifies the IC prior to the colon, so it cannot be separated from that IC by a colon
- (a comma separating the IC and DC is okay)
- "which" creates a DC that modifies the IC prior to the colon, so it cannot be separated from that IC by a colon
- ex., "I went to the store: because I needed some supplies"
- have multiple colons in a sentence
- What COLONS do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:
colons:
- extend or provide examples following an IC
- what follows the colon can be in any grammatical form (IC, DC, phrase)
- except a conjunction (as in : I bought shoes: and some socks (= incorrect)
- or a required (requisite) phrase or clause ("I bought shoes: that fit" = incorrect)
- colons are usually followed by a list or an example
- a colon may set up a direct quotation, such as:
- The lawyer claimed the accusation was wrong: "He's innocent!" = IC: IC
- elimination:
- if NOT preceded by an IC, eliminate the colon
- if another possible answer is a dash that is acting like a colon, then both cannot be correct, so eliminate
dashes --[edit | edit source]
- separate ideas within a sentence, either parenthetically or like a colon
- dashes do TWO things:
- act like a colon
- act like parentheses (...) = -...-
- What DASHES do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:
dashes:
- act like a colon
- ex. "She left stuff behind -- a plastic ring, a cheap phone, and a pencil" = IC -- list
- the dash is often used for emphasis (as opposed to a colon, which adds information)
- act like parentheses (...) = -...-
- The stuff that she left behind -- a plastic ring, a cheap phone, and a pencil -- wasn't that expensive"
- elimination:
- if there is NOT another dash in the sentence, then the dash is NOT acting parenthetically (...)
- if not acting like parentheses, and there is NOT an IC preceding the dash, eliminate
- if another possible answer is a colon and the dash is not acting like a parentheses, then both cannot be correct
Apostrophes quick start guide[edit | edit source]
- apostrophes do two things:
- create contractions ("it's" from "it is" or "can't" from "can not")
- show possession
- nouns possess nouns and nouns can only possess nouns (not verbs)
- punctuation can NOT separate the possessor noun from the possessed noun
- adjectives may separate the two nouns, as in "The cowboy's fast horse"
- possessive apostrophes singular v plural:
- 's for singular nouns ("that dog's toys") and s' for plural nouns ("those dogs' toys")
- elimination:
- if punctuation or a verb follow the possessor noun, eliminate (see examples below)
- note: use of an apostrophe to create a contraction with a noun and the verb, "to be" is informal and not measured on the SAT
- ex., "winning's good" for "winning is good" is informal
Conjunctions quick start guide[edit | edit source]
- conjunctions combine words, phrases, and clauses
- coordinating conjunction (CJ)
- combines ICs (FANBOYS)
- I was hungry, so I bought a burger
- combines ICs (FANBOYS)
- coordinating conjunction (CJ)
- note: the word however is NOT a conjunction,
- therefore it must be combined with another CJ or a semicolon if combining two ICs
- subordinating conjunction (SJ)
- = turns an IC into a DC by requiring additional ideas to complete the thought of the clause
- ex. "I was hungry, so I bought a burger" = two IC w/ a CC
- whereas, if we use the CS "since" = Since I was hungry, I bought a burger"
- = DC, IC ("Since I was hungry is not a complete thought, therefore it is a DC, or subordinate clause)
- requisite or necessary clause or phrase (Phr)
- usually, when the SC follows the IC, there is not a comma
- the subordinating conjunction becames a relative conjunction
- We couldn't play when it rained
- just as SV or SVO are not separated by punctuation (because they are necessary or required of each other to make sense):
- some clauses and phrases are requisite or necessary to complete a thought, which means they are not separated from the main clause by punctuation
- ex. "I bought the shoes that were on sale" << "that were on sale" is necessary to the idea that "I bought" particular shoes
- see "Relative clause" below for more on essential and non-essential sentence elements
Prepositions / Prepositional Phrases quick start guide[edit | edit source]
- prepositions
- include about, by, from, near, of, on , etc.
- prepositions create a relationship between nouns
- the nouns or other words that follow the preposition are called a "prepositional phrase" ("about something I once knew")
- prepositional phrases establish a relationship with a noun or as part of a subject-verb clause:
- ex. adding information to a subject noun: "The ideas of the professor are novel."
- ex. adding information to a subject-verb: "The professor was educated at Yale."
- for the SAT, only prepositions that come before the verb matter
- the noun in prepositional phrases are NEVER the subject of a sentence
- elimination:
- for subject-verb matching, the preposition/ prepositional phrase is NOT the subject
- ex. "Books about sailing are fun" and not "Books about sailing is fun"
- "about" = a preposition, so "sailing" is not the subject and the verb is therefore matched to the plural "books"
- ex. "Books about sailing are fun" and not "Books about sailing is fun"
- for subject-verb matching, the preposition/ prepositional phrase is NOT the subject
- elimination:
Restrictive elements quick start guide[edit | edit source]
- a "restrictive" element is a sentence part that is not separated from the rest of the sentence by a comma or other punctuation
- restrictive elements include:
- subject - verb - object (or subject complement)
- are not separated from one another by punctuation
- S V O
- cannot be separated from one another by punctuation, ex.:
- SoHo, is fun to say, and to visit << incorrect
- SoHo is fun to say and to visit << correct
- but could be separated by a parenthetical phrase or clause:
- SoHo, a neighborhood in New York, is fun to say and to visit
- SoHo, which is fun to say, is fun to visit
- S V O
- are not separated from one another by punctuation
- adjectives and adverbs
- are not separated from the noun or verb they modify by punctuation
- That is one big, elephant! << incorrect
- That is one big, elephant! << correct
- exception: could be a list of coordinate adjectives that are separated by a comma:
- That is one big, angry elephant!
- or, could be separated by a parenthetical element:
- That is one big -- and I mean big! -- elephant
- are not separated from the noun or verb they modify by punctuation
- possessive nouns
- are not separated from the noun they possess by punctuation
- That bird flew right by my friend's, head << incorrect
- That bird flew right by my friend's head << correct
- exception: could be part of a list of adjective:
- That bird flew right by my friend's big, old head
- note: see rules below for possessives
- are not separated from the noun they possess by punctuation
- prepositional phrases
- are not separated from the noun or verb they modify
- The book, on that table is interesting << incorrect
- The book on that table is very interesting << correct
- are not separated from the noun or verb they modify
- relative clauses beginning with "that"
- note that some "restrictive relative clauses" may also begin with the relative pronouns, which, who, whose, etc.
- but relative clauses starting with "that" are always restrictive and thus are not separated from the word or sentence part they modify by punctuation
- subject - verb - object (or subject complement)
- EXCEPTION: parenthetical elements
- only parenthetical elements with a pair of parentheses, commas or dashes may separate restrictive elements
- the reason is that parenthetical elements are ungrammatical -- they exist OUTSIDE of the grammatical construction of a sentence
- thus they can intrude upon a sentence
- but they ALWAYS have paired punctuation, commas, dashes or parentheses, that isolate them from the rest of the sentence
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