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10 CONCEPTS YOU NEED TO KNOW IN ORDER TO ACE THE ACT ENGLISH USAGE/MECHANICS RHETORICAL SKILLS
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PACING: 9 minutes/passage (5 passages – 15 questions per) ALLOWANCE: -5/passage = 20 -4/passage = 23 -3/passage = 26 -2/passage = 29 -1/passage = 32 BUT FIRST…
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40/75 QUESTIONS USAGE/MECHANICS SKILL# OF QUESTIONS PUNCTUATION10 GRAMMAR & USAGE12 SENTENCE STRUCTURE18
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35/75 QUESTIONS RHETORICAL SKILLS SKILL# OF QUESTIONS STRATEGY12 ORGANIZATION11 STYLE12
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COMMAS (,) Separate parts of a sentence (transition words, clauses, modifiers, and other add-ons). Provide breaks, similar to yield signs. Separate items in a list Ex1. Before the test, Max had a hearty breakfast. Ex.2 Bob, our contractor, is always late to the job site. Ex3. Max had two waffles with syrup, an egg, and a glass of OJ. POWER TIP = Consider taking commas away, not adding more of them (42-7) - (47-36) - (44-17) 1. PUNCTUATION
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SEMICOLONS (;) Separate two independent clauses (i.e. complete sentences) that are closely-related. Ex1. Max had a hearty breakfast this morning; it was just the fuel he needed to ace the ACT. Ex.2 Bob is always late to the job site; his supervisor is unhappy. POWER TIP = Look for complete sentences on both sides (46-34) – (42-3) 1. PUNCTUATION
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COLONS (:) Introducing something Creating a list Ex1. The weather was typical for Chicago: windy with light flurries. Ex2. For breakfast this morning, Max’s mom brought to the table the following items: two waffles with syrup, one egg, and one glass of OJ. POWER TIP = Look for complete sentence on the left side (43-14) 1. PUNCTUATION
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DASHES (—) Introduce sudden action Add info the author left out Ex1. Maria was walking her dog when, suddenly—CRASH—a car struck another head on. Ex2. In the clanging acoustics of the room, this sound—a kind of veech—echoed around grandly. – from Geoff Dyer POWER TIP = Be sure the sentence is still complete, even without the stuff inside the dashes (43-14) 1. PUNCTUATION
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APOSTROPHES (‘) possession contraction Ex1. The dog’s bone. Ex2. it’s, they’re POWER TIP = Know that whatever comes before the apostrophe, specifically, is what is in possession (153-6) 1. PUNCTUATION
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Common Issues Who/that, when, where – use them correctly. Parallel – one:one not one:you. Disagreement – pronoun:antecedent. Case – who vs. whom, etc. POWER TIP = The most common of these issues is non-parallel structure involving one and you. Pay careful attention for these key words. (152-3, 159-51, 156-33, 45-27) 2. PRONOUNS
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Common Issues Disagreement – subject:verb. Tense – be consistent with the time frame. Conjugation – swim vs. swum. POWER TIP = ALWAYS be on the lookout for subject:verb disagreement, especially when you think the answer is NO CHANGE. (155-22, 154-17, 158-44) 3. VERBS
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Common Issues Switch Errors – these should be obvious. POWER TIP = Look for endings in –ly to signify an adverb. These are easy points. (154-19) 4. ADJECTIVES/ADVERBS
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Common Issues Wrong idioms – look for the proper pairings of prepositions. We look things “up” in the dictionary, not “down.” We show up “on” time, not “at” time. POWER TIP = Let your grammar ear tip you off that something doesn’t sound quite right. It is a well- trained machine. (47-35, 48-44) 5. IDIOMS
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Common Issues Commonly confused – precede vs. proceed. Clear expression – is it the right word for the context? Homonyms – its vs. it’s, their vs. there (*its’ does not exist!). POWER TIP = The trickiest of this group is its vs. it’s. Make sure you have it down. (46-30, 153-10) 6. WORD CHOICE
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Common Issues Transitions – does it create the right logical relationship between ideas? Run-ons – two complete sentences separated by a comma. Fragments – subject + verb + complete thought = sentence. POWER TIP = with transitions, look for the odd man out. Re-reading your answer back in will usually help you avoid selecting fragment answers. Know the schematic for run ons = complete, complete. (47-40, 152-1, 152-2) 7. SENTENCE STRUCTURE
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Common Issues Adding/Deleting – logically, should this be added? If you were to delete it, what would you lose?? What you had there! Trust the obvious answer. Success of Essay – Did the author achieve what he/she meant to in writing this essay? Example: “Suppose the author set out to...did the author achieve this?” Ambiguity – make sure you always know to whom the pronoun, etc. is referring. Must be clear. POWER TIP = For adding/deleting, underline the focal area in the question – this is a great clue. Answer yes/no Success of Essay questions by first deciding between yes or no. (152-5, 155-23, 157-40, 160-60 (tough not having read the whole thing), 45-24) 8. EFFECTIVE WRITING
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Common Issues Placement of words, sentences, and paragraphs – occasionally things will be out of order. Questions involving the proper placement of adverbs will be tough, in general. POWER TIP = Look for clues about placement. If the sentence in question is discussing a topic, find out where that topic was first introduced. Look for transition words, etc. (159-49, 158-42) 9. ORGANIZATION
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Common Issues Too many words - verbosity Redundancy – the same idea repeated. POWER TIP = To fix redundancy, you will usually have to take one of the two ways of saying the same thing away. (42-2, 45-29, 157-37) 10. WORDINESS
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