SAT Writing : Identifying Punctuation Errors: Other Punctuation

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for SAT Writing

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Example Questions

Example Question #3 : Identifying Other Punctuation Errors

Choose the punctuation mark that, when inserted into the blank, makes the sentence meet the requirements of standard written English.

The defendant claimed that he had been unjustly incarcerated ­__________ and that key evidence had been falsified.

Possible Answers:

. (period and capital)

; (semi-colon)

— (dash)

No punctuation

, (comma)

Correct answer:

No punctuation

Explanation:

The phrase following the blank is not a full sentence, nor is it a modifying phrase. No punctuation is needed.

Example Question #4 : Identifying Other Punctuation Errors

Choose the best punctuation for the blank:

Because it was the only recourse left to me ­­­__________ I swallowed my pride and called my high school math teacher.

Possible Answers:

; (semi-colon)

No punctuation

, (comma)

— (dash)

. (period and new sentence)

Correct answer:

, (comma)

Explanation:

If a sentence starts with because, it needs a comma before the main clause starts.

Example Question #5 : Identifying Other Punctuation Errors

Select the underlined word or phrase that needs to be changed to make the sentence correct. Some sentences contain no error at all.

Far from passive players in their colonial fate, Africans throughout the nineteenth-century responded to the encroaching European presence with various forms of resistance and negotiation. No error

Possible Answers:

No error

Far from passive players

encroaching

nineteenth-century

fate, Africans

Correct answer:

nineteenth-century

Explanation:

“Far from passive players” correctly modifies the subject, “Africans.” The phrase “fate, Africans” illustrates the correct use of a comma to link a dependent clause with an indepent clause when the dependent clause precedes the independent clause. “Encroaching” is an appropriate vocabulary word to describe the “European presence.” The problem comes with “nineteenth-century.” Because the phrase is used as a noun here, it should not be hyphenated. It would be hyphenated if the two words together were functioning as an adjective modifying a different word, as in the phrase "nineteenth-century problems."

Example Question #152 : Identifying Punctuation Errors

Select the underlined word or phrase that needs to be changed to make the sentence correct. Some sentences contain no error at all.

The tourists were enamored with the brightly-colored dresses and necklaces, and they nearly bought out the entire market. No error

Possible Answers:

enamored with

No error

they

necklaces, and

brightly-colored

Correct answer:

brightly-colored

Explanation:

Because “brightly” is an adverb, not an adjective, it shouldn’t be hyphenated. Only compound adjectives—two words together functioning as a single adjective—need hyphenation.

Example Question #5 : Identifying Other Punctuation Errors

Select the underlined word or phrase that needs to be changed to make the sentence correct. Some sentences contain no error at all.

As part of their defense, the lawyers presented a ninety page document that asserted their client’s innocence in exhausting detail. No error

Possible Answers:

their client's

ninety page document

defense,

No error

asserted

Correct answer:

ninety page document

Explanation:

“Ninety page” is a compound adjective that appears directly in front of a noun. In standard English, compound adjectives that immediately precede nouns are always hyphenated for clarity’s sake. “Ninety-page document” is the correct form.

Example Question #6 : Identifying Other Punctuation Errors

Select the underlined word or phrase that needs to be changed to make the sentence correct. Some sentences contain no error at all.

The heiress wept when she discovered that her favorite two year old horse had broken a leg and would never race again. No error

Possible Answers:

would never race again

wept

No error

heiress

two year old horse

Correct answer:

two year old horse

Explanation:

Here, “two year old” is a compound adjective that appears immediately before a noun, so it must be hyphenated. “Two-year-old horse” is the correct form.

Example Question #151 : Identifying Punctuation Errors

Select the underlined word or words that need to be changed to make the sentence correct. Some sentences may not contain an error.

“If you’ve never seen a group of ninety year olds dance the polka, you’ve never lived,” he laughed. No error

Possible Answers:

No error

"If

lived,"

laughed.

ninety year olds

Correct answer:

ninety year olds

Explanation:

Here, “ninety year olds” needs to be hyphenated as it is functioning as a noun.

Example Question #7 : Identifying Other Punctuation Errors

Select the underlined word or phrase that needs to be changed to make the sentence correct. Some sentences contain no error at all.

“In all my years on the force, I’ve never seen such a thinly-veiled attempt at blackmail,” the police captain said. No error

Possible Answers:

No error

thinly-veiled

"In all my years

blackmail,"

force,

Correct answer:

thinly-veiled

Explanation:

Because “thinly” is an adverb, not an adjective, it shouldn’t be hyphenated. Only compound adjectives that immediately precede nouns require hyphenation.

Example Question #701 : Sat Writing

Select the underlined word or phrase that needs to be changed to make the sentence correct. Some sentences contain no error at all.

I was wondering if, after the fair, we could stop by the farmers market? No error

Possible Answers:

if,

No error

fair,

market?

stop by

Correct answer:

market?

Explanation:

In this sentence, the speaker is making a statement (“I am wondering”), not answering a question (“Am I wondering?”). Even though the sentence is expressing uncertainty, it is not an interrogative sentence and therefore should not end with a question mark. A period is the correct punctuation to use to end this sentence.

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