Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Passage II (Jane Austen's reputation...)

Passage II (Jane Austen's reputation...)

16. G - ...grown so steadily that.... There's no break or separation between steadily and that, right? So no comma. The comma's job is to separate (a softer separation than a period or semicolon).

17. D - The -ly makes it an adverb telling us how her novels were published. This one probably just sounded correct (but you can't totally rely on how it sounds for the ACT; they test around that).

18. J - F is almost correct, but that comma is in the wrong place. G creates a run-on. H uses Although, which makes no sense.

19. B 

20. J - All choices are grammatically ok, but J is the clearest and least awkward.

21. B - What two things are being contrasted? The contributions, so only B and D are possibilities, and only "those" work. (We haven't seen Sir Walter Scott's contributions yet, so there are no "these.")  

22. G - Everything else in this passage has been past tense, so we stick with became.

23. B - Subject / verb agreement. "Was" is working with "term."

24. G - Dangling Modifier!  "Noted...society," is a modifying phrase. How do we know? Because it's a participial (a phrase based on something that looks like a verb, usually ending in -ing or -ed, in this case noted). Whatever comes right after the phrase has to be described by the phrase. Obviously it's describing her, so we would look for "Jane" or "Austen" or in this "Miss Austen."

25. B - You probably were deciding between putting before or after sentence 2. Both sentences would see to flow ok after sentence one, but only sentence 2 fits right before sentence 3. One strategy for this kind of question is to look at those transitions, the words that join the sentences. 

26. H

27. A - No separation

28. H - Parallel structure. We need both parts (to be personally inadequate ... to lack breeding) to be the same kind of thing, in this case infinitive phrases (both begin with "to" and a verb).

29. B - Simple conjunction: "not only [solely]...but also"

30. F - You could read these as verbs: Does the passage primarily inform, sensationalize, confess, or accuse?Pass