SAT Digital Reading and Writing Test quick start guide: Difference between revisions

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== Quick start guides for punctuation & grammar rules ==
'''Quick start guide for punctuation & grammar rules for the new 2024 digital format SAT Test'''
* see further below for more on all these concepts and rules in the quick start guides
* see [[SAT Writing section techniques, strategies & approaches]] for more detailed instructions (related to the pre-2024 paper test)


=== Verbs quick start guide ===
'''Abbreviations'''
* IC = independent clause
* DC = dependent clause
* RC = relative clause
* Phr = phrase
* S= subject (noun)
* V = verb
* O = object (noun)
Also:
 
* CC = coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS)
* SC = subordinating conjunction (creates DC)
* RP = relative pronoun (creates a relative clause
 
= Overview =
* The new Digital SAT has four parts, or "modules".
** the first two are "Reading and Writing"
=== Instructions ===
* From the SAT Test, instructions for Modules 1 and 2 state:
<pre>The questions in this section address a number of important reading and writing skills.</pre>
=== Skills ===
* 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 quick start guide =
=== Identify sentence core Subject-Verb match ===
* 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''' creates a '''predicate''' which expresses the "idea" of the sentence
*** i.e., what the subject "is" or "does"
* the verb "matches" the subject in terms of tense and "person"
** ie. ''It goes'' v ''They go''
* since it matches to a subject the verb is "'''finite'''"
** "finite verbs" have a subject
** "finite verbs" create clauses (i.e., sentence parts that contain a Subject-Verb
 
* '''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/Predicate core
=== Get rid of the noise" ===
* 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:
<blockquote>''"Studying marsupials in Western Australia during a heavy drought, the field researchers incorrectly assumed aberrant behaviors for abiding characteristics."''</blockquote>
# 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:
<blockquote>'' Researchers studied marsupials during a drought. <strike>The field</strike> researchers incorrectly assumed <strike>aberrant</strike>'' <nowiki>[not normal??]</nowiki> ''behaviors for <strike>abiding</strike>'' [normal??] ''characteristics."''</blockquote>
 
=== Identify Transition Words ===
* 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 ===
 
* 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 ===
 
* 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 quick start guide =
 
== Verbs quick start guide ==
* 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
** and not a clear "action"
* 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 ===
*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:
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|+Common verbs (present tense forms)
!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''
|}


* '''verb'''  
* Note:
** indicates an action, existence or occurrence
** "''am''", "''are''" "''is''" are finite verbs (have subjects)
*** ''I do, I am, I went''
*** which means they are the grammatical equivalent of "action verbs" (''kick, play, throw)''
** is the basis of a predicate
**** even though they do not express a direct action
*** predicate = the action and its result/s, modifier/s or object/s
*** they are forms of "to be" and are linking verbs (see below)
* for the SAT, identify if a verb is '''''finite''''' or '''''non-finite'''''


==== Finite verb ====
== Verbs and predicates ==
* 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")
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
| style="background:lightyellow" ; padding-left:20;" |The elephant
| style="background:LightSteelBlue" |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==
'''BIG IDEA''': for the SAT, identify if a verb is '''''finite''''' or '''''non-finite'''''


* has a subject
== Finite Verb ==
* finite verbs form the core of a sentence or clause
*has a subject
* "is" and "are" are finite verbs
*finite verbs form the core of a sentence or clause
** = conjugation of the verb "to be", which is a linking verb  
*"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
** 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
*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''
**ex.  ''The thing I like most about her is her sunny attitude''
*** S-V of main clause = Thing + is
***S-V of main clause = Thing + is
*** S-V of relative clause = I + like
*** S-V of relative clause = I + like


==== Non-finite verb ====
== Non-finite verb ==
 
* does not have a subject
* 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)
* 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  
* 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
** = 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
*** 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
** present participles are used to add information to an independent clause  
*** ''ex. Driving carefully, she made it home safely in the storm''
*** ''ex. Driving carefully, she made it home safely in the storm''
**** = "She drove carefully in the storm. She made it home safely."
**** = "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"  
**** 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)
*** note that participle phrases are attached to an independent clause by a comma and not a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS)


=== Punctuation quick start guide ===
== Linking verb ==
Reminder about abbreviations =  
 
*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
 
== Verb tense, conjugation and subject-verb matching quick start guide ==
 
*"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.
 
===Person ===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|+Verbs: "person" of the subject
!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===
 
*matches subject and verb
**or, the verb-ending matches the person of the subject
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+Conjugation: "to be"
!
! 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'''")
{| class="wikitable"
|+Conjugation: "to go"
!
!singular
 
!plural
|-
|First person
|I go
|We go
|-
|Second person
|You go
|You (all) go
|-
|Third person
|He / She / It goes
|They go
|}
 
== Tense ==
 
*tense = verb forms that indicate time (when)
**past, present, future
**and sub-categories of them
*'''HAS''' and '''HAVE''' finite verb forms are '''PRESENT TENSE'''
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+Present Tense: third person singular and plural
!
!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''' finite verb forms are '''PAST TENSE'''
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+Past Tense: third person singular and plural
!
!Simple present
!Present Continuous
!Present Perfect
|-
| rowspan="3" |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*
|-
| rowspan="3" |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.*
|}
 
* note that '''HAVE''' can also create a "perfect participle" that is '''non-finite''' (does not have a subject)
** ''Having practiced hard, the team won the championship''
** "having practiced" = perfect participle
*** and creates the participle phrase, "having practiced hard"
* for use on the digital SAT, see [https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-practice-test-2-digital.pdf Practice Test 2, Module 2, question 18]:
 
'''18''' For thousands of years, people in the Americas
______ the bottle gourd, a large bitter fruit with a
thick rind, to make bottles, other types of containers,
and even musical instruments.
A) to use
B) have used
C) having used
D) using
 
* We see that the sentence needs a finite verb (a sentence must have a finite verb)
* We can identify "people as the subject" and ______ as the finite verb to match the subject
** (the objects of the __(missing)___ finite verb is "bottles" "containers" and instruments")
 
* Elimination:
** A) is incorrect bc it is a '''non-finite infinitive verb''' and thereby does not match the subject
*** ''people to use bottles''  << does not create a subject-verb match
** B) is correct bc it is a '''present perfect verb''' that matches the subject "people"
*** ''people have used bottles''  << creates a subject-verb match
** C) is incorrect bc it is a '''non-finite perfect participle verb''' and thereby does not match the subject
*** ''people having used'' << does not create a subject-verb match
** D) is incorrect bc it is a '''non-finite present participle verb''' that does not match the subject "people"
*** ''people using the bottle gourd'' << does not create a subject-verb match
 
= Sentence quick start guide =
 
*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
*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==
*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==
* 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
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
!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
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="3" |SUBJECT
the doer or perspective
! colspan="5" |PREDICATE
the action or idea
|-
|''the''
|''scared''
|style="background-color:lightyellow"|'''mailman'''
|style="background-color:lightblue"|'''runs'''
|''from''
|''the''
|''mean''
|''dog''
|-
| colspan="8" |sentence core:
|-
|
|
|style="background-color:lightyellow"|'''subject'''
|style="background-color:lightblue"|'''verb'''
|
|
|
|
|-
| colspan="8" |modifiers and complements:
|-
|''article''
|''adjective''
|
|
|''preposition''
|''article''
|adjective
 
|object complement
of the preposition
|}
 
 
{{#mermaid:flowchart TD;
A[SENTENCE]-->B[SUBJECT];
A[SENTENCE]-->C[PREDICATE];
B[SUBJECT]-->E[MODIFIER];
B[SUBJECT]-->D[NOUN];
C[PREDICATE]-->F[VERB];
C[PREDICATE]-->G[MODIFIER];
C[PREDICATE]-->H[COMPLEMENT];
 
}}
 
= Clause quick start guide =
 
* a clause has a finite verb
**i.e. it consists of a subject + verb
 
== Independent clause (IC) ==
 
*has a finite verb
* makes a complete thought
**i.e., if by itself it would make a (simple) sentence
 
== Dependent clause (DC)==
 
*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===
 
*"subordinate" = "below" or "under"
*it is subordinate to the IC
*it is "subordinated" by a "subordinating conjunction":
 
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="4" |Subordinate clause (DC)
! colspan="2" |Independent clause (IC)
|-
|'''Since'''
|'''the snow'''
|'''fell'''
|'''all night'''
|'''school'''
| '''canceled'''
|-
|subordinating
conjunction
| ''subject''
 
|''verb''
|''prepositional phrase''
| ''subject''
|''verb''
|-
| colspan="4" |The DC <u>could not be</u> a sentence by itself:
| colspan="2" |The IC <u>could be</u> a sentence by itself:
|-
| colspan="4" |'''''Since the snow fell all night.'''''
| colspan="2" |'''''School canceled.'''''
|}
 
===Relative clause (also called "adjective clause")===
 
*adds modifying information
*is a dependent clause
*introduced by the '''relative pronouns''' ''that, which, who, whose''
 
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="3" |Independent clause (IC)
! colspan="3" |Relative clause (DC)
|-
|'''The snow'''
|'''fell'''
|'''all night'''
|'''which'''
|'''meant'''
|'''no school.'''
|-
| ''subject''
|''verb''
|''prepositional phrase''
|''subject (relative pronoun)''
|''verb''
|''object phrase''
|-
| colspan="3" |The IC could be a sentence by itself:
| colspan="3" |The DC could not be a sentence by itself:
|-
| colspan="3" |'''''The snow fell all night.'''''
| colspan="3" |'''''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, <font style="background-color: yellow;">which meant</font> <font style="background-color: lightgreen;">school canceled</font>''
***<font style="background-color: yellow;">relative clause</font>
***<font style="background-color: lightgreen;">noun clause</font>
**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
* for more on noun clauses, see [[SAT Writing section techniques, strategies & approaches|SAT Writing section:#noun clause]] or [[Clause (grammar)#noun clause|Grammar: Clause#noun clause]]
 
====Relative clause within an IC:==== 
 
* 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.:
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+'''''The study that used more samples shows promise.'''''
! colspan="5" style="text-align:center" |'''Independent Clause (IC)'''
|-
|'''The study'''
|
|'''shows'''
|
|'''promise'''
|-
|''Subject''
|
|''Verb''
|
|''Object''
|-
| colspan="5" style="text-align:center" |'''Relative Clause (DC)'''
|-
|
|'''that'''
|'''used'''
|'''more samples'''
|
|-
|
|''subject<br>(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"
 
{{#mermaid:flowchart TD;
A[SUBECT]--INDEPENDENT<br>CLAUSE-->B[VERB];
A[SUBJECT]-->C[SUBJECT OF RELATIVE CLAUSE]
C[SUBJECT OF RELATIVE CLAUSE]--RELATIVE<br>CLAUSE-->D[VERB OF RELATIVE CLAUSE];
D[VERB OF RELATIVE CLAUSE]-->B[VERB];
}}
 
 
*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
 
{{#mermaid:flowchart TD;
A[SUBECT]--INDEPENDENT<br>CLAUSE-->B[VERB];
A[SUBJECT]--DEPENDENT<BR>MARKER>-->Cc[THAT];
Cc[THAT]-->C[SUBJECT OF RELATIVE CLAUSE];
C[SUBJECT OF RELATIVE CLAUSE]--RELATIVE<br>CLAUSE-->D[VERB OF RELATIVE CLAUSE];
D[VERB OF RELATIVE CLAUSE]-->B[VERB];
}}
 
=== BIG IDEAS for relative clauses ===
 
* with the relative pronoun "'''that'''" <u>no punctuation is used</u> 
**("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)
 
= Phrase (Phr) quick start guide =
 
*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
 
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="2" |SUBJECT
! colspan="3" | PREDICATE
|-
!On Tuesdays
!my friend and I
!play
!competitive tennis
!at the local club
|-
| prepositional phrase
|subject phrase
|verb
|object phrase
|prepositional phrase
|}
 
== Preposition / Prepositional Phrase quick start guide ==
*'''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 noun (like an adjective):
***''The ideas '''of the professor''' are hardly novel''.
***''The keys '''on the desk''' are just sitting there.''
***''The path '''up the hill''' is steep''
**ex. adding information to a subject noun (like a subject complement adjective):
***''The keys are '''on the desk'''''
***''Those tired ideas are '''from that professor'''''
***''The path goes '''up the hill'''''
**ex. adding information to a verb (like an adverb): 
***''The professor was educated '''at Yale'''''.
***''I left the keys '''on the desk'''''
***''He ran '''up the hill'''''
 
* the noun in prepositional phrases are '''NEVER the subject of a sentence'''
{{#mermaid:flowchart LR;
A[SUBECT]-->B[PREPOSITION];
A[SUBECT]--CLAUSE-->D[VERB];
B[PREPOSITION]--PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE-->C[OBJECT OF PREPOSITION]
C[OBJECT OF PREPOSITION]-->D[VERB]
}}
**i.e., for subject-verb matching, the preposition/ prepositional phrase is NOT the subject 
***ex. ''Books about sailing '''are''' fun'' and note ''Books about sailing '''is''' fun''
****"about" = a preposition, so "sailing" is not the subject and the verb is therefore matched to the plural "books"
{{#mermaid:flowchart LR;
A[BOOKS]-->B[ABOUT];
A[BOOKS]--CLAUSE-->D[ARE FUN];
B[ABOUT]--PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE-->C[SAILING]
C[SAILING]-->D[ARE FUN]
}}
 
* Strategies:
** identify prepositional phrases
*** identify the noun in the prepositional phrase
**identify the noun or verb that the preposition modifies
**recognize that prepositional phrases are modifiers that add information to a sentence core but are not the core of the sentence
 
* 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 <u>is never the subject of a clause</u>
**example from April 2018 paper test Writing question 20 (slightly modified here):
20. Finally, traditional methods of storage
________ heat to compress the air, which can
lower the energy efficiency of the process.
A) requires
B) had required
C) does require
D) require
 
*the question is trying to trick the student into thinking that the object of the preposition, "of" is the subject of the sentence:
**"''of storage''"
***whereas, the object of a preposition is never the subject of a sentence!
*thus the elimination:
**'''A) requires''' < incorrect because the subject of the verb is the plural "methods" and not the singular "storage" (which is the object of the preposition)
**'''B) had required''' < incorrect because the sentence is in the present tense ("can lower") and "had required" is past perfect tense
**'''C) does require''' << incorrect because the modal verb "does" is singular (''it does require'' v. ''they do require'') and the subject of the sentence is the plural "methods"
**'''D) require''' << correct because the plural "require" matches the plural subject, "methods"
*Note that a prepositional phrase may come before the verb, while the subject of the verb is after it
**see Digital SAT Practice [https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-practice-test-3-digital.pdf Test 3, Module 2, question 24]
'''24.''' The Progressive Era in the United States witnessed
the rise of numerous Black women’s clubs, local
organizations that advocated for racial and gender
equality. Among the clubs’ leaders ______ Josephine
St. Pierre Ruffin, founder of the Women’s Era Club
of Boston.
A) was
B) were
C) are
D) have been
*the correct answer is '''A)''' was because "among the club's leaders" is a prepositional phrase
**so the plural "leaders" is the object of the preposition and not the subject of the sentence
**the subject, "Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin" follows the verb, as the sentence is in the passive voice
*the sentence can be seen better by inverting the prepositional phrase and the subject, giving us:
Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, founder of the Women’s Era Club of Boston, was among the clubs’ leaders.
 
* or, eliminating the parenthetical attributive noun phrase:
 
Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin was among the clubs’ leaders.
*see [[SAT Writing section techniques, strategies & approaches#prepositional%20phrase|SAT Writing section #prepositional phrase]] for more
 
==Participle phrase quick start guide ==
 
*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)
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!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 ===
 
* 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''
 
=Conjunction quick start guide =
 
* conjunctions:
** combine words, phrases, and clauses
 
== Coordinating conjunction (CC) ==
*combines ICs (FANBOYS)
**''I was hungry, so I bought a burger''
 
*'''note''': the word '''however''' is NOT a coordinating conjunction ("FANBOYS" does not have an "H" !),
**therefore it must be combined with another CC or a semicolon if combining two ICs
**"however" is a "conjunctive adverb", or "transition word"


* IC = independent clause
== Subordinating conjunction (SC) ==
* DC = dependent clause
* = turns an IC into a DC by requiring additional ideas to complete the thought of the clause
* Phr = phrase
*ex. ''I was hungry, so I bought a burger'' = two IC w/ a CC
* S= subject (noun)
*whereas, if we use the SC "'''since'''"
* V = verb
**= ''Since I was hungry, I bought a burger''
* O = object (noun)
** = DC, IC ("Since I was hungry is not a complete thought, therefore it is a DC, or subordinate clause)
 
*'''no comma if the dependent clause (DC) or phrase (Ph) is requisite or necessary'''
**usually, when the SC follows the IC, there is not a comma
**the subordinating conjunction becomes 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
**some teachers use the term "SWABIs" for SC (''Since, When, After, Because, If'')
***although that list is incomplete
 
== Conjunctive Adverb ("transition words") ==
 
* also called "transition words" because they "conjoin" predicates (ideas)
* conjunctive adverbs DO NOT join grammatical sentence parts;
** instead, they join ideas
* therefore, they DO NOT combine clauses
** which requires other punctuation or grammatical form (such as coordinating or subordinating conjunctions)
* some teachers call conjunctive adverbs "THAMOs" although that list is incomplete (''Though, However, Also, Moreover, Otherwise'')
 
examples:
{| class="wikitable"
| colspan="2" style="background-color:darkgray; color:white;"|<center>'''''I love Oreos, however, I know they are bad for me.''''' &#10008;
|-
| <center>IC
|<center>IC
|-
| colspan="2" |<center>'however' (a conjunctive adverb) incorrectly conjoins the ICs
|-
| colspan="2" style="background-color:darkgray; color:white;"|<center>'''''I love to eat Oreos, but I know they are bad for me. &#10003;'''''
|-
|<center>IC
|<center>IC
|-
| colspan="2" |<center>'but' (a coordinating conjunction) correctly conjoins the ICs
|-
| colspan="2" style="background-color:darkgray; color:white;"|<center>'''''I love to eat Oreos; however, I know they are bad for me. &#10003;'''''
|-
|<center>IC
|<center>IC
|-
| colspan="2" |<center>the semicolon correctly conjoins the ICs, and the prefatory 'however' is okay if followed by a comma
|-
| colspan="2"style="background-color:darkgray; color:white;" |<center>'''''I love to eat Oreos, even though I know they are bad for me. &#10003;'''''
|-
|<center>IC
|<center>DC
|-
| colspan="2" |<center>'though' (a subordinating conjunction) correctly conjoins the IC to the DC
|}
 
* see below for "transition words" (which are conjunctive adverbs)
 
= Transition Word quick start guide =
 
* "Transition words" are "conjunctive adverbs" that compare or relate two or more ideas (predicates) either between or within a sentence.
** called "conjunctive" because it joins or relates ideas (predicates)
** called adverb because it modifies predicates (which have a verb as their basis)
* Transition words generally create
** positive transition (''thus, additionally, for example'')
** negative transition (''but, nevertheless, alternatively''),
** neutral or chronological transition (''next, meanwhile'')
* '''Here for list of Transition word definitions: [[Transition words translations]]'''
* Notes on transition words questions:
** "however" is a transition word and not a coordinating conjunction (i.e. it does not combine ICs)
** students should summarize the idea (predicate) of sentences or clauses on either side of the transition word
*** and assess whether the second predicate (idea) supports, negates, or moves on from the first
** always read several sentences before the transition word for context
** if the transition word is in the middle of a sentence, it may be transitioning from the prior sentence
*** to check, put the transition word at the beginning of the sentence, and see if it makes sense.
*** ex.
October 2022 QAS, Writing section, question 14:
 
  In the early twentieth century, the Dutch were cycling enthusiasts, not only riding but also manufacturing bicycles in large numbers. As personal income grew in the postwar boom years of the 1950s and 1960s, <u>[ in short ]</u>, car ownership rose sharply, and cars began to eclipse bikes in popularity.
 
  A) NO CHANGE
  B) in other words
  C) therefore
  D) however
 
* note that the transition word falls within the sentence.
** test if the transition is actually between the two sentences, i.e.
 
In the early twentieth century, the Dutch were cycling enthusiasts, not only riding but also manufacturing bicycles in large numbers. <u>[ In short ] a</u>s personal income grew in the postwar boom years of the 1950s and 1960s, car ownership rose sharply, and cars began to eclipse bikes in popularity.
 
* At that point, the transition becomes more clear
** Sentence 1 summary: "Dutch = cycling enthusiasts"
** Sentence 2 summary: "With more income i 1950s/60s they started buying cars
* therefore we see that Sentence 2 creates a NEGATIVE transition from sentence 1
** thus '''D) however''' is the correct answer
 
= Punctuation quick start guide =
== Period . ==
*'''periods''' separate sentences
'''periods do ONE thing ='''
# separate grammatically correct and complete thoughts that are distinct sentences <u>(note</u>: a sentence contains a finitve verb and makes a complete thought)
 
=== What PERIODS do & how to eliminate using the rule: ===
<u>periods</u>: 
*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 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
 
== semicolon ; ==
*combine independent clauses for comparison, contrast or some relation between them   
**as opposed to periods which completely separate the ideas/ thoughts
'''semicolons do TWO things:'''
 
<span style="margin-left:15px";>1. combine ICs (independent clauses)</span>
* note that semicolons can -- but rarely: separate a list of IC's:
** as in "IC; IC; IC; IC."
 
<span style="margin-left:15px";>2. act as a "'''super comma'''"</span>
 
* <span style="margin-left:15px" ;>a semicolon may also be used -- uncommonly -- as a "super comma" in order to emphasize separate elements in a list of common examples, usually following a colon</span>
* identify a colon working as a "super comma" by identiying other semicolons in the sentence
** ex. ''Years later, the experiment had unexpected results: yielding new antibiotic drugs; uncovering prior laboratory mistakes; identifying new microorganisms.''
 
=== What SEMICOLONS do & how to eliminate using the rule/s: ===
<u>semicolons</u>: 
 
1. combine two ICs
*''School is boring; I should go anyway'' = IC; IC


==== periods . ====
*can also create a list of IC's (IC; IC; IC; IC.)
* '''periods''' separate sentences
**''School is boring; I already know that stuff; I should go anyway'' = "IC; IC; IC
* periods do '''ONE''' thing =
*elimination: 
# separate grammatically correct and complete thoughts that are distinct sentences
**must have IC or complete sentences & thoughts on both sides of the semicolon
click EXPAND to see what PERIODS do & how to eliminate using the rule:
***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
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
**if a period and a semicolon are both possible answers, they are both wrong
----------------------------------------------------------
2. semicolon as super comma:  
<u>periods</u>:
* as in, ''IC: this; that; the other thing.'' 
* periods separate grammatically correct and complete thoughts that are distinct sentences
**ex. "''On our trip, we will visit tons of places: in Africa, Egypt & Morocco; in Europe, Greece and Italy; and in Asia, Turkey"''
* elimination:  
**the "super comma" does not have to follow a colon, so we could write: 
** if the sentence is grammatically or logically incomplete, the period is wrong
***''On our trip, we will visit tons of places, including in Africa, Egypt & Morocco; in Europe, Greece and Italy; and in Asia, Turkey.''
*** i.e., SUBJECT VERB and an object or subject complement if needed to make sense
***or ''We defeated the enemy at the gates; rescued the homeland; and saved the children.''2.


* if a period and a semicolon are both possible answers, they are both wrong
* *the "super comma" is rarely used in practice and on the SAT test (as on the May SAT QAS 2022 paper test Writing section question no. 35):
----------------------------------------------------------
  35. Critics lauded the film’s predominantly Black
</div>
<u>[ cast ]</u> its director, Ryan Coogler<span style="background:yellow>'''; </span>its Kendrick
Lamar-produced soundtrack<span style="background:yellow>''' ; </span>and its Afrofuturist aesthetic.
A) NO CHANGE
B) cast:
C) cast,
D) cast;
*Elimination:
**'''A) NO CHANGE''' is incorrect because it creates a run-on sentence between the IC ("critics lauded") and the examples that follow
**'''B) cast:''' is correct because the colon is properly preceded by an IC and the colon sets up the the list that follows, which is separated by semicolons acting as "super commas"
**'''C) cast,''' is incorrect because the comma does not set up the subsequent list
**'''D) cast;''' is incorrect because the list that follows would not be parallel with the initial IC
***(it would incorrectly create "IC; phrase; phrase; phrase", and IC and phrases are not conjoined by a semicolon)


* note that "interjection" (a quick remark or interruption) or "imperative" (a command) VERBS contain an implied SUBJECT
*for an example of a "super comma" on the Digital SAT practice tests see [https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-practice-test-3-digital.pdf Practice Test 3, Module 1, question 7]; the question is not about the super comma,
* so they can create a complete sentence or independent clause:  
The work of Kiowa painter T.C. Cannon derives its power in part from the tension among his ______ influences<span style="background:yellow>''':''' </span>classic European portraiture, with its realistic treatment of face<span style="background:yellow>'''s;''' </span>the American pop art movement, with its vivid colors<span style="background:yellow>''';''' </span>and flatstyle, the intertribal painting style that rejects the effect of depth typically achieved through shading and perspective.


* ex.
== Comma , ==
** "Go to the store." = "[you] Go to the store."
* commas create a pause
** "Stop!" = "[you} Stop!"
** we use commas to distinguish -- but not separate -- grammatical parts or ideas
* for the SAT the imperative may come in the form of a command to the reader, such as:
** i.e., create a pause between them ("let the reader breathe")
** "Take this idea, for example."
* instead of separating, as a period or a semicolon, commas combine those distinct sentence parts
*** = "[you] Take this idea, for example." << as a sentence or independent clause
'''commas do FIVE things:'''
==== semicolons ; ====
* 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 )
click EXPAND to see what SEMICOLONS do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
----------------------------------------------------------
<u>semicolons</u>:
# 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
----------------------------------------------------------
</div>


==== commas , ====
<u>commas</u>:    
* create pauses
#combine IC, DC, or DC, IC
* commas do '''FIVE''' things:
#*or IC, Phr  or Phr, IC  
click EXPAND to see what COMMAS do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:
#**''He ate fast, which upset his stomach'' = IC, DC
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
#**''After eating too fast, his stomach was upset'' = Phr, IC  
----------------------------------------------------------
#***= prepositional phrase, independent clause
<u>commas</u>:
#**''Eating too fast, he upset his stomach ='' Phr, IC
# combine IC, DC, or DC, IC
#***= participle phrase* + IC
#* or IC, Phr  or Phr, IC
#combine ICs  
#** ex. "He ate fast, which upset his stomach" = IC, DC
#*''but only with a coordinating conjunction'' (FANBOYS), i.e., IC, and IC
#** ex. "After eating too fast, his stomach was upset" = Phr, IC  
#*ex.: "IC, and IC" or "IC, but IC"
#*** = prepositional phrase, independent clause
#**"They played hard, and they won big" = IC, and IC
# combine ICs  
#**"They played hard, but they lost" = IC, but IC
#* ''but only with a coordinating conjunction'' (FANBOYS), i.e., IC, and IC
#separate lists (subjects, verbs, objects)  
#* 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
#* ex.: S, S and S V, V O, O and O
# act parenthetically
# act parenthetically  
#* ", .... ," (like these parentheses)
#*", .... ," (like these parentheses)  
#** The movie, which was about Ancient Rome, was very informative" = S, .... , V
#**''The movie''', which was about Ancient Rome,''' was very informative'' = S, .... , V
# introduce a direct quotation
#introduce a direct quotation  
#* ex. "The judge declared, "Guilty!"
#* ex. ''The judge declared, "Guilty!"''
* elimination:
*elimination:
** commas can only separate a S-V or V-O if acting parenthetically (see below for examples)
**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)
**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)
**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"
***''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
****= 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
----------------------------------------------------------
</div>


==== colons : ====
== Colon : ==
* distinguish additional information following an IC, usually a list, explanation, or example to clarify or extend the idea presented in the IC
*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:
'''colons do ONE thing:'''
# extend or provide examples in support of a prior IC
#extend or provide examples in support of a prior IC  
#* i.e., a colon MUST be preceded by an 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
#*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"''
#**''The prosecutor presented the evidence: a fingerprint, the weapon, and a written confession"''  
#*** = IC: list
#***= IC: list
#* just about any grammatical form can follow a colon, including
#*just about any grammatical form can follow a colon, including
#** an IC, phrase, exclamation, multiple ICs with semicolons or coordinating conjunctions
#**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
#**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  
#**exceptions are that colons are not followed by
#*** another colon
#***another colon
#*** a dependent clause that modifies the independent clause prior to the colon
#***a dependent clause that modifies the independent clause prior to the colon  
* colons <U>DO NOT</u>:
*colons <U>DO NOT</U>:  
** follow a dependent clause
** follow a dependent clause
** interrupt a clause or requisite (essential, required) or connected elements in a sentence
**interrupt a clause or requisite (essential, required) or connected elements in a sentence  
*** ex., "''I went to the store''': because''' I needed some supplies''"
***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..."
****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''"
***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
****the colon here interrupts the requisite relative pronoun "that" and the clause it creates
*** or "''They have two ideas: which are both innovative"''
*** 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
****"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)
*****(a comma separating the IC and DC is okay)
** have multiple colons in a sentence
** have multiple colons in a sentence
click EXPAND to see what COLONS do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
----------------------------------------------------------
<u>colons</u>:
# 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
----------------------------------------------------------
</div>


====dashes -- ====  
=== What COLONS do & how to eliminate using the rule/s: ===
* separate ideas within a sentence, either parenthetically or like a colon
<u>colons</u>: 
* dashes do '''TWO''' things:
#extend or provide examples following an IC
# act like a colon  
* 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 the colon
***but do not eliminate the dash yet, because it does two things, 1) act like a colon; 2) act like parentheses)
 
== Dash -- ==
*separate ideas within a sentence, either parenthetically or like a colon
'''dashes do TWO things:'''
#act like a colon
# act like parentheses (...) = -...-
# act like parentheses (...) = -...-
click EXPAND to see what DASHES do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
----------------------------------------------------------
<u>dashes</u>:
# 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
----------------------------------------------------------
</div>


=== Apostrophes quick start guide ===
=== What DASHES do & how to eliminate using the rule/s: ===
* '''apostrophes''' do two things:
<u>dashes</u>: 
** create contractions ("it's" from "it is" or "can't" from "can not")
# act like a colon   
** show possession
#*ex. ''She left stuff behind -- a plastic ring, a cheap phone, and a pencil''  
*** nouns possess nouns and nouns can only possess nouns (not verbs)
#**= IC separated from a list by a dash (as would a colon)
*** punctuation can NOT separate the possessor noun from the possessed noun
#*the dash is often used for emphasis (as opposed to a colon, which adds information)
*** adjectives may separate the two nouns, as in "The cowboy's fast horse"
#act like parentheses (...) = -...- 
** possessive apostrophes singular v plural:
#* ''The stuff that she left behind '''-- a plastic ring, a cheap phone, and a pencil --''' wasn't that expensive''
*** ''''s''' for singular nouns ("that dog's toys") and '''s'''' for plural nouns ("those dogs' toys")
*elimination:
* elimination:
**if the dash is acting like a colon, and there is not an IC preceding it, eliminate
** if punctuation or a verb follow the possessor noun, eliminate (see examples below)
***if another possible answer is a colon, then the dash is not acting like a colon, since both cannot be correct
* 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
**if there is NOT another dash in the sentence, then the dash is NOT acting parenthetically (...)
** ex., "winning's good" for "winning is good" is informal
 
== Parentheses ( ) ==
 
* parentheses create agrammatical sentence elements
** i.e., the ( ) does not change the grammar or punctuation of the sentence
** a parenthesis may be inserted anywhere in a sentence
* <u>note</u>: the parenthetical element usually explains or gives an example for a word or idea that it follows
** ''Joey (a growing young man) is always hungry''
** ''Joey is always (I mean always!) hungry''
** ''Joey is always hungry (and voraciously hungry)''
 
* <u>note:</u> dashes and commas can create parenthetical elements
 
'''parentheses do ONE thing:'''
 
# add information between two parentheses ( ...  )
 
'''What PARENTHESES do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:'''
 
* if the parenthecal element does not explain the word or idea it follows, it or the word choice is likely incorrect
* parentheses or parenthetical elements may interrupt essential elements
** a subject and verb, or a verb and object, are never separated by punctuation
*** except a parentheses or parenthetical element may come in between them
*** all of these are correct:  
**** ''Five monkeys (dressed up like clowns) juggled bananas (''< parentheses)
**** ''Five monkeys, dressed like clowns, juggled bananas''  (< parenthetical commas)
**** ''Five monkeys dressed up like clowns juggled bananas  (''< no punctuation)
*** note that if we move the parenthetical phrase, it becomes illogical:
**** ''Five monkeys juggled (dressed up like clowns) bananas''
***** here the parenthetical phrase incorrectly adds information to the verb "juggled"
*** when "that" operates as a "relative pronoun," it is not separated from the clause or word it describes by punctuation, EXCEPT if that punctuation is parenthetical:
**** ''It was the choice of material (poetry rather than prose) that made it difficult  (<< parentheses)''
**** ''It was the choice of material, poetry rather than prose, that made it difficult  (<< parenthetical commas)''
**** ''It was the choice of material -- poetry rather than prose -- that made it difficult'' (<< parenthetical dashes)
 
== Apostrophe ' ==
 
* an apostrophe is a single hash mark that 1) creates contractions or 2) indicates possession
** contractions: cannot --> can't; they are --> they're; it is --> it's
** possesion:
** <u>note</u>:  
*** only nouns can be possessive
*** and only nouns can be possessed
**** ex. ''dog's bone''
*** if a verb, preposition or adverb follow the possessive noun it is wrong
*** an adjective may follow a possessive if that adjective is modifying the possessed noun
**** ex. ''dog's juicy bone''
*** possesive personal pronouns do not use apostrophes:
**** ''my/mine, your/yours, his, hers, its, our/ours, their/theirs''  


=== Conjunctions quick start guide ===
'''apostrophes do TWO things:'''
* '''conjunctions''' combine words, phrases, and clauses
*create contractions ("it's" from "it is" or "can't" from "can not")
** '''coordinating conjunction''' (CJ)
*show possession
*** combines ICs (FANBOYS)
**nouns possess nouns and nouns can only possess nouns (not verbs)
**** ''I was hungry, so I bought a burger''
**punctuation can NOT separate the possessor noun from the possessed noun
* note: the word '''however''' is NOT a conjunction,
**adjectives may separate the two nouns, as in "The cowboy's fast horse"
** therefore it must be combined with another CJ or a semicolon if combining two ICs
*possessive apostrophes singular v plural: 
** '''subordinating conjunction''' (SJ)
**''''s''' for singular nouns ("that dog's toys") and '''s'''' for plural nouns ("those dogs' toys")
*** = 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 quick start guide ===
* elimination:
* '''prepositions'''
**if punctuation or a verb follow the possessor noun, eliminate (see examples below)
** include ''about, by, from, near, of, on'' , etc.
* 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  
* prepositions create a relationship between nouns
**ex., "winning's good" for "winning is good" is informal
** 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"


=== Restrictive elements quick start guide ===
= Punctuation and "restrictive elements" quick start guide =


* a "restrictive" element is a sentence part that is not separated from the rest of the sentence by a comma or other punctuation
*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:
*restrictive elements include:
** '''subject - verb - object''' (or subject complement)
**'''subject - verb - object''' (or subject complement)  
*** are not separated from one another by punctuation
***are not separated from one another by punctuation
**** S V O
****S V O
***** cannot be separated from one another by punctuation, ex.:
*****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''  << incorrect
***** ''SoHo is fun to say and to visit'' << correct
***** ''SoHo is fun to say and to visit'' << correct
**** but could be separated by a parenthetical phrase or clause:
****but could be separated by a parenthetical phrase or clause:  
***** ''SoHo, a neighborhood in New York, is fun to say and to visit''
*****''SoHo, a neighborhood in New York, is fun to say and to visit''
***** ''SoHo, which is fun to say, is fun to visit''  
*****''SoHo, which is fun to say, is fun to visit''
** '''adjectives and adverbs'''
**'''adjectives and adverbs'''  
*** are not separated from the noun or verb they modify by punctuation
***are not separated from the noun or verb they modify by punctuation
**** ''That is one big, elephant!''  << incorrect
****''That is one big, elephant!''  << incorrect
**** ''That is one big, elephant!''  << correct
****''That is one big, elephant!''  << correct
*** <u>exception</u>: could be a list of coordinate adjectives that are separated by a comma:
***<u>exception</u>: could be a list of coordinate adjectives that are separated by a comma:
**** ''That is one big, angry elephant!''  
****''That is one big, angry elephant!''  
*** or, could be separated by a parenthetical element:
***or, could be separated by a parenthetical element:  
**** ''That is one big -- and I mean big! -- elephant''
****''That is one big -- and I mean big! -- elephant''
** '''possessive nouns'''  
**'''possessive nouns'''
*** are not separated from the noun they possess by punctuation
*** 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'' <<  incorrect
**** ''That bird flew right by my friend's head'' <<  correct  
****''That bird flew right by my friend's head'' <<  correct
*** <u>exception</u>: could be part of a list of adjective:
***<u>exception</u>: could be part of a list of adjective:  
**** ''That bird flew right by my friend's big, old head''  
**** ''That bird flew right by my friend's big, old head''
*** note: see rules below for possessives  
***note: see rules below for possessives
** '''prepositional phrases'''  
** '''prepositional phrases'''  
*** are not separated from the noun or verb they modify
***are not separated from the noun or verb they modify  
****''The book, on that table is interesting''  << incorrect  
**** ''The book, on that table is interesting''  << incorrect
**** ''The book on that table is very interesting'' << correct  
****''The book on that table is very interesting'' << correct
** '''relative clauses beginning with "that"'''  
**'''relative clauses beginning with "that"'''  
*** note that some "restrictive relative clauses" may also begin with the relative pronouns, ''which, who, whose'', etc.
***note that some "restrictive relative clauses" may also begin with the relative pronouns, ''which, who, whose'', etc.
*** but relative clauses starting with "'''that'''"  <u>are always restrictive</u> and thus are not separated from the word or sentence part they modify by punctuation
***but relative clauses starting with "'''that'''"  <u>are always restrictive</u> and thus are not separated from the word or sentence part they modify by punctuation
* <u>EXCEPTION</u>: parenthetical elements
*<u>EXCEPTION</u>: parenthetical elements
** only parenthetical elements with a pair of ''parentheses, commas or dashes'' may separate restrictive 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
**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
***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
***but they ALWAYS have paired punctuation, commas, dashes or parentheses, that isolate them from the rest of the sentence
 
[[Category:SAT verbal]]
[[Category:SAT Reading]]
[[Category:SAT Writing]]
[[Category:SAT exam prep]]
[[Category:SAT digital test]]

Latest revision as of 17:28, 27 April 2024

Quick start guide for punctuation & grammar rules for the new 2024 digital format SAT Test

Abbreviations

  • IC = independent clause
  • DC = dependent clause
  • RC = relative clause
  • Phr = phrase
  • S= subject (noun)
  • V = verb
  • O = object (noun)

Also:

  • CC = coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS)
  • SC = subordinating conjunction (creates DC)
  • RP = relative pronoun (creates a relative clause

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 quick start guide[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 creates a predicate which expresses the "idea" of the sentence
      • i.e., what the subject "is" or "does"
  • the verb "matches" the subject in terms of tense and "person"
    • ie. It goes v They go
  • since it matches to a subject the verb is "finite"
    • "finite verbs" have a subject
    • "finite verbs" create clauses (i.e., sentence parts that contain a Subject-Verb
  • 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/Predicate 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 aberrant behaviors for abiding characteristics."

  1. identify sentence core: "researchers [incorrectly] assumed"
  2. key nouns: "drought", "researchers", "behaviors", "characteristics"
  3. convert and simplify participle phrase: "Researchers studied marsupials during a drought."

Gives us:

Researchers studied marsupials during a drought. The field researchers incorrectly assumed aberrant [not normal??] behaviors for abiding [normal??] characteristics."

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 quick start guide[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
    • and not a clear "action"
  • 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:
Common verbs (present tense forms)
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)

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

Non-finite verb[edit | edit source]

  • 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)

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

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.

Person[edit | edit source]

Verbs: "person" of the subject
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
Conjugation: "to be"
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")

Conjugation: "to go"
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
  • HAS and HAVE finite verb forms are PRESENT TENSE
Present Tense: third person singular and plural
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 finite verb forms are PAST TENSE
Past Tense: third person singular and plural
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.*
  • note that HAVE can also create a "perfect participle" that is non-finite (does not have a subject)
    • Having practiced hard, the team won the championship
    • "having practiced" = perfect participle
      • and creates the participle phrase, "having practiced hard"
  • for use on the digital SAT, see Practice Test 2, Module 2, question 18:
18 For thousands of years, people in the Americas 
______ the bottle gourd, a large bitter fruit with a 
thick rind, to make bottles, other types of containers, 
and even musical instruments.

A) to use 
B) have used 
C) having used 
D) using
  • We see that the sentence needs a finite verb (a sentence must have a finite verb)
  • We can identify "people as the subject" and ______ as the finite verb to match the subject
    • (the objects of the __(missing)___ finite verb is "bottles" "containers" and instruments")
  • Elimination:
    • A) is incorrect bc it is a non-finite infinitive verb and thereby does not match the subject
      • people to use bottles << does not create a subject-verb match
    • B) is correct bc it is a present perfect verb that matches the subject "people"
      • people have used bottles << creates a subject-verb match
    • C) is incorrect bc it is a non-finite perfect participle verb and thereby does not match the subject
      • people having used << does not create a subject-verb match
    • D) is incorrect bc it is a non-finite present participle verb that does not match the subject "people"
      • people using the bottle gourd << does not create a subject-verb match

Sentence 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
  • 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


Clause quick start guide[edit | edit source]

  • a clause has a finite verb
    • i.e. it consists of a subject + verb

Independent clause (IC)[edit | edit source]

  • has a finite verb
  • makes a complete thought
    • i.e., if by itself it would make a (simple) sentence

Dependent clause (DC)[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 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
  • 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.:
The study that used more samples shows promise.
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"


  • 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

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)

Phrase (Phr) 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

Preposition / Prepositional Phrase 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 noun (like an adjective):
      • The ideas of the professor are hardly novel.
      • The keys on the desk are just sitting there.
      • The path up the hill is steep
    • ex. adding information to a subject noun (like a subject complement adjective):
      • The keys are on the desk
      • Those tired ideas are from that professor
      • The path goes up the hill
    • ex. adding information to a verb (like an adverb):
      • The professor was educated at Yale.
      • I left the keys on the desk
      • He ran up the hill
  • the noun in prepositional phrases are NEVER the subject of a sentence
    • i.e., for subject-verb matching, the preposition/ prepositional phrase is NOT the subject
      • ex. Books about sailing are fun and note Books about sailing is fun
        • "about" = a preposition, so "sailing" is not the subject and the verb is therefore matched to the plural "books"
  • Strategies:
    • identify prepositional phrases
      • identify the noun in the prepositional phrase
    • identify the noun or verb that the preposition modifies
    • recognize that prepositional phrases are modifiers that add information to a sentence core but are not the core of the sentence
  • 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
    • example from April 2018 paper test Writing question 20 (slightly modified here):
20. Finally, traditional methods of storage 
________ heat to compress the air, which can 
lower the energy efficiency of the process.

A) requires
B) had required
C) does require
D) require
  • the question is trying to trick the student into thinking that the object of the preposition, "of" is the subject of the sentence:
    • "of storage"
      • whereas, the object of a preposition is never the subject of a sentence!
  • thus the elimination:
    • A) requires < incorrect because the subject of the verb is the plural "methods" and not the singular "storage" (which is the object of the preposition)
    • B) had required < incorrect because the sentence is in the present tense ("can lower") and "had required" is past perfect tense
    • C) does require << incorrect because the modal verb "does" is singular (it does require v. they do require) and the subject of the sentence is the plural "methods"
    • D) require << correct because the plural "require" matches the plural subject, "methods"
  • Note that a prepositional phrase may come before the verb, while the subject of the verb is after it
24. The Progressive Era in the United States witnessed 
the rise of numerous Black women’s clubs, local 
organizations that advocated for racial and gender 
equality. Among the clubs’ leaders ______ Josephine 
St. Pierre Ruffin, founder of the Women’s Era Club 
of Boston. 

A) was
B) were
C) are
D) have been
  • the correct answer is A) was because "among the club's leaders" is a prepositional phrase
    • so the plural "leaders" is the object of the preposition and not the subject of the sentence
    • the subject, "Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin" follows the verb, as the sentence is in the passive voice
  • the sentence can be seen better by inverting the prepositional phrase and the subject, giving us:
Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, founder of the Women’s Era Club of Boston, was among the clubs’ leaders.
  • or, eliminating the parenthetical attributive noun phrase:
Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin was among the clubs’ leaders.

Participle phrase quick start guide[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

Conjunction quick start guide[edit | edit source]

  • conjunctions:
    • combine words, phrases, and clauses

Coordinating conjunction (CC)[edit | edit source]

  • combines ICs (FANBOYS)
    • I was hungry, so I bought a burger
  • note: the word however is NOT a coordinating conjunction ("FANBOYS" does not have an "H" !),
    • therefore it must be combined with another CC or a semicolon if combining two ICs
    • "however" is a "conjunctive adverb", or "transition word"

Subordinating conjunction (SC)[edit | edit source]

  • = 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 SC "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)
  • no comma if the dependent clause (DC) or phrase (Ph) is requisite or necessary
    • usually, when the SC follows the IC, there is not a comma
    • the subordinating conjunction becomes 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
    • some teachers use the term "SWABIs" for SC (Since, When, After, Because, If)
      • although that list is incomplete

Conjunctive Adverb ("transition words")[edit | edit source]

  • also called "transition words" because they "conjoin" predicates (ideas)
  • conjunctive adverbs DO NOT join grammatical sentence parts;
    • instead, they join ideas
  • therefore, they DO NOT combine clauses
    • which requires other punctuation or grammatical form (such as coordinating or subordinating conjunctions)
  • some teachers call conjunctive adverbs "THAMOs" although that list is incomplete (Though, However, Also, Moreover, Otherwise)

examples:

I love Oreos, however, I know they are bad for me.
IC
IC
'however' (a conjunctive adverb) incorrectly conjoins the ICs
I love to eat Oreos, but I know they are bad for me. ✓
IC
IC
'but' (a coordinating conjunction) correctly conjoins the ICs
I love to eat Oreos; however, I know they are bad for me. ✓
IC
IC
the semicolon correctly conjoins the ICs, and the prefatory 'however' is okay if followed by a comma
I love to eat Oreos, even though I know they are bad for me. ✓
IC
DC
'though' (a subordinating conjunction) correctly conjoins the IC to the DC
  • see below for "transition words" (which are conjunctive adverbs)

Transition Word quick start guide[edit | edit source]

  • "Transition words" are "conjunctive adverbs" that compare or relate two or more ideas (predicates) either between or within a sentence.
    • called "conjunctive" because it joins or relates ideas (predicates)
    • called adverb because it modifies predicates (which have a verb as their basis)
  • Transition words generally create
    • positive transition (thus, additionally, for example)
    • negative transition (but, nevertheless, alternatively),
    • neutral or chronological transition (next, meanwhile)
  • Here for list of Transition word definitions: Transition words translations
  • Notes on transition words questions:
    • "however" is a transition word and not a coordinating conjunction (i.e. it does not combine ICs)
    • students should summarize the idea (predicate) of sentences or clauses on either side of the transition word
      • and assess whether the second predicate (idea) supports, negates, or moves on from the first
    • always read several sentences before the transition word for context
    • if the transition word is in the middle of a sentence, it may be transitioning from the prior sentence
      • to check, put the transition word at the beginning of the sentence, and see if it makes sense.
      • ex.
October 2022 QAS, Writing section, question 14:
 
 In the early twentieth century, the Dutch were cycling enthusiasts, not only riding but also manufacturing bicycles in large numbers. As personal income grew in the postwar boom years of the 1950s and 1960s, [ in short ], car ownership rose sharply, and cars began to eclipse bikes in popularity.
 
 A) NO CHANGE
 B) in other words
 C) therefore
 D) however
  • note that the transition word falls within the sentence.
    • test if the transition is actually between the two sentences, i.e.
In the early twentieth century, the Dutch were cycling enthusiasts, not only riding but also manufacturing bicycles in large numbers. [ In short ] as personal income grew in the postwar boom years of the 1950s and 1960s, car ownership rose sharply, and cars began to eclipse bikes in popularity.
  • At that point, the transition becomes more clear
    • Sentence 1 summary: "Dutch = cycling enthusiasts"
    • Sentence 2 summary: "With more income i 1950s/60s they started buying cars
  • therefore we see that Sentence 2 creates a NEGATIVE transition from sentence 1
    • thus D) however is the correct answer

Punctuation quick start guide[edit | edit source]

Period .[edit | edit source]

  • periods separate sentences

periods do ONE thing =

  1. separate grammatically correct and complete thoughts that are distinct sentences (note: a sentence contains a finitve verb and makes a complete thought)

What PERIODS do & how to eliminate using the rule:[edit | edit source]

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 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

semicolon ;[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 TWO things:

1. combine ICs (independent clauses)

  • note that semicolons can -- but rarely: separate a list of IC's:
    • as in "IC; IC; IC; IC."

2. act as a "super comma"

  • a semicolon may also be used -- uncommonly -- as a "super comma" in order to emphasize separate elements in a list of common examples, usually following a colon
  • identify a colon working as a "super comma" by identiying other semicolons in the sentence
    • ex. Years later, the experiment had unexpected results: yielding new antibiotic drugs; uncovering prior laboratory mistakes; identifying new microorganisms.

What SEMICOLONS do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:[edit | edit source]

semicolons:

1. 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

2. semicolon as super comma:

  • as in, IC: this; that; the other thing.
    • ex. "On our trip, we will visit tons of places: in Africa, Egypt & Morocco; 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 & Morocco; in Europe, Greece and Italy; and in Asia, Turkey.
      • or We defeated the enemy at the gates; rescued the homeland; and saved the children.2.
  • *the "super comma" is rarely used in practice and on the SAT test (as on the May SAT QAS 2022 paper test Writing section question no. 35):
 35. Critics lauded the film’s predominantly Black 
[ cast ] its director, Ryan Coogler; its Kendrick
Lamar-produced soundtrack ; and its Afrofuturist aesthetic. 
A) NO CHANGE
B) cast: 
C) cast,
D) cast;
  • Elimination:
    • A) NO CHANGE is incorrect because it creates a run-on sentence between the IC ("critics lauded") and the examples that follow
    • B) cast: is correct because the colon is properly preceded by an IC and the colon sets up the the list that follows, which is separated by semicolons acting as "super commas"
    • C) cast, is incorrect because the comma does not set up the subsequent list
    • D) cast; is incorrect because the list that follows would not be parallel with the initial IC
      • (it would incorrectly create "IC; phrase; phrase; phrase", and IC and phrases are not conjoined by a semicolon)
The work of Kiowa painter T.C. Cannon derives its power in part from the tension among his ______ influences: classic European portraiture, with its realistic treatment of faces; the American pop art movement, with its vivid colors; and flatstyle, the intertribal painting style that rejects the effect of depth typically achieved through shading and perspective. 

Comma ,[edit | edit source]

  • commas create a pause
    • we use commas to distinguish -- but not separate -- grammatical parts or ideas
    • i.e., create a pause between them ("let the reader breathe")
  • instead of separating, as a period or a semicolon, commas combine those distinct sentence parts

commas do FIVE things:

commas:

  1. combine IC, DC, or DC, IC
    • or IC, Phr or Phr, IC
      • He ate fast, which upset his stomach = IC, DC
      • After eating too fast, his stomach was upset = Phr, IC
        • = prepositional phrase, independent clause
      • Eating too fast, he upset his stomach = Phr, IC
        • = participle phrase* + IC
  2. 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
  3. separate lists (subjects, verbs, objects)
    • ex.: S, S and S V, V O, O and O
  4. act parenthetically
    • ", .... ," (like these parentheses)
      • The movie, which was about Ancient Rome, was very informative = S, .... , V
  5. 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

Colon :[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:

  1. 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
    • 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 are that 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)
    • have multiple colons in a sentence

What COLONS do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:[edit | edit source]

colons:

  1. 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 the colon
      • but do not eliminate the dash yet, because it does two things, 1) act like a colon; 2) act like parentheses)

Dash --[edit | edit source]

  • separate ideas within a sentence, either parenthetically or like a colon

dashes do TWO things:

  1. act like a colon
  2. act like parentheses (...) = -...-

What DASHES do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:[edit | edit source]

dashes:

  1. act like a colon
    • ex. She left stuff behind -- a plastic ring, a cheap phone, and a pencil
      • = IC separated from a list by a dash (as would a colon)
    • the dash is often used for emphasis (as opposed to a colon, which adds information)
  2. act like parentheses (...) = -...-
    • The stuff that she left behind -- a plastic ring, a cheap phone, and a pencil -- wasn't that expensive
  • elimination:
    • if the dash is acting like a colon, and there is not an IC preceding it, eliminate
      • if another possible answer is a colon, then the dash is not acting like a colon, since both cannot be correct
    • if there is NOT another dash in the sentence, then the dash is NOT acting parenthetically (...)

Parentheses ( )[edit | edit source]

  • parentheses create agrammatical sentence elements
    • i.e., the ( ) does not change the grammar or punctuation of the sentence
    • a parenthesis may be inserted anywhere in a sentence
  • note: the parenthetical element usually explains or gives an example for a word or idea that it follows
    • Joey (a growing young man) is always hungry
    • Joey is always (I mean always!) hungry
    • Joey is always hungry (and voraciously hungry)
  • note: dashes and commas can create parenthetical elements

parentheses do ONE thing:

  1. add information between two parentheses ( ... )

What PARENTHESES do & how to eliminate using the rule/s:

  • if the parenthecal element does not explain the word or idea it follows, it or the word choice is likely incorrect
  • parentheses or parenthetical elements may interrupt essential elements
    • a subject and verb, or a verb and object, are never separated by punctuation
      • except a parentheses or parenthetical element may come in between them
      • all of these are correct:
        • Five monkeys (dressed up like clowns) juggled bananas (< parentheses)
        • Five monkeys, dressed like clowns, juggled bananas (< parenthetical commas)
        • Five monkeys dressed up like clowns juggled bananas (< no punctuation)
      • note that if we move the parenthetical phrase, it becomes illogical:
        • Five monkeys juggled (dressed up like clowns) bananas
          • here the parenthetical phrase incorrectly adds information to the verb "juggled"
      • when "that" operates as a "relative pronoun," it is not separated from the clause or word it describes by punctuation, EXCEPT if that punctuation is parenthetical:
        • It was the choice of material (poetry rather than prose) that made it difficult (<< parentheses)
        • It was the choice of material, poetry rather than prose, that made it difficult (<< parenthetical commas)
        • It was the choice of material -- poetry rather than prose -- that made it difficult (<< parenthetical dashes)

Apostrophe '[edit | edit source]

  • an apostrophe is a single hash mark that 1) creates contractions or 2) indicates possession
    • contractions: cannot --> can't; they are --> they're; it is --> it's
    • possesion:
    • note:
      • only nouns can be possessive
      • and only nouns can be possessed
        • ex. dog's bone
      • if a verb, preposition or adverb follow the possessive noun it is wrong
      • an adjective may follow a possessive if that adjective is modifying the possessed noun
        • ex. dog's juicy bone
      • possesive personal pronouns do not use apostrophes:
        • my/mine, your/yours, his, hers, its, our/ours, their/theirs

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

Punctuation and "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
    • 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
    • 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
    • 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
    • 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
  • 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