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ACT English: Passage Drill 2, Problem 11. Which of the following sentences would make the most effective transition?
In this ACT English passage drill determine if the writer of the passage may or may not have achieved their proposed goal.
ACT English: Passage Drill Drill 3, Problem 2. What would the paragraph lose if the writer omits the underlined phrase?
ACT English 2.13 Passage Drill 183 Views
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ACT English: Passage Drill 2, Problem 13. How would you correct the underlined portion from the passage?
Transcript
- 00:03
Here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by
- 00:06
hydrophobia. A great excuse for skipping a bath.
- 00:14
Check out the following passage and answer the question below.
- 00:26
How would you correct the following underlined portion from the passage? Does it need correcting?
- 00:38
Here, we're looking for the word or phrase that helps the writer clearly describe the
Full Transcript
- 00:42
kind of water that most cats detest:
- 00:45
...the odious water of bathtubs.
- 00:48
Choice (B) suggests the phrase "in fact," but the phrase doesn't mesh with this sentence.
- 00:53
"In fact" is a transition, meaning that it's used to help the reader progress from one
- 00:58
idea to the next. This particular transition is often used when an author wants to refute
- 01:03
a previous idea. One might say something like, "Some people think cats love tub water; in
- 01:10
fact, cats loathe it with every ounce of their beings."
- 01:15
This isn't what the author is going for, though, so we'll eliminate choice (B).
- 01:19
Choice (C) is incorrect as well. The word "actually" often serves the same purpose as
- 01:23
"in fact" by helping an author contrast a previously stated idea. Someone might say,
- 01:29
"Eddy thinks I'm his friend; actually, I'm bent on his demise." But that person is probably
- 01:36
reading too much Edgar Allen Poe.
- 01:41
In any case, we're sure that (C) is wrong, and we can move on from here.
- 01:44
Choice (D) suggests the phrase "at most," which means "not more than." We might say,
- 01:49
"The miniature potbelly pig was at most 100 pounds."
- 01:52
Why might we say that? Whatever, we can say what we want.
- 01:56
This phrase does nothing to help the writer get his or her point across, so we'll nix
- 02:00
choice (D). The correct answer is (A). The phrase "at
- 02:03
least" can mean more exactly. Here, it helps the author specify that cats hate tub water,
- 02:09
not every drop of water in the world.
- 02:12
If cats hated all water, they'd be a pretty dehydrated species.
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