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ACT English: Punctuation (Drill 4)

Drill 4 · English · Punctuation

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About This Drill

ACT English: Punctuation (Drill 4) is a English practice drill covering Punctuation. It contains 5 original questions created by Brian Stewart, a Barron's test prep author with over 20 years of tutoring experience.

Punctuation questions ask you to fix comma splices, run-ons, and incorrectly placed commas, semicolons, colons, and apostrophes. This mixed drill draws on all major punctuation categories, with an emphasis on the interactions between punctuation marks — cases where fixing one error requires reconsidering the surrounding sentence structure.

Questions & Explanations

Passage Excerpt
After forty years of failed attempts, setbacks, and near-misses, the team had finally achieved something no one had thought possible — a complete map of the ocean floor.

Question 1. Which choice makes the sentence most grammatically acceptable?

  • A) No Change (something no one had thought possible — a complete map of the ocean floor.) ✓
  • B) something no one had thought possible, a complete map of the ocean floor.
  • C) something no one had thought possible: a complete map of the ocean floor.
  • D) something no one had thought possible; a complete map of the ocean floor, as punctuated in the sentence.

Explanation: Choice A (No Change) is correct. A dash is the ideal punctuation here — it introduces "a complete map of the ocean floor" with dramatic emphasis after the buildup of "something no one had thought possible." The dash signals a reveal, which perfectly matches the sentence's tone. Choice B uses a comma, which is too mild for this dramatic moment; a comma simply apposes the phrase without conveying the sense of revelation. Choice C uses a colon, which is also technically defensible — a colon can introduce a clarifying explanation. However, "a complete map of the ocean floor" follows "something no one had thought possible," which is not a complete independent clause, so a colon is less appropriate than a dash here. Choice D uses a semicolon, which must join two independent clauses; "a complete map of the ocean floor" is a noun phrase, not a clause.

Passage Excerpt
The new bridge design, which had been praised by engineers across the country, reduced construction costs by nearly a third compared to traditional methods.

Question 2. Which choice makes the sentence most grammatically acceptable?

  • A) No Change (which had been praised by engineers across the country, reduced) ✓
  • B) which had been praised by engineers across the country reduced
  • C) which had been praised, by engineers across the country, reduced, as punctuated in the sentence
  • D) which had been praised by engineers across the country; reduced

Explanation: Choice A (No Change) is correct. "Which had been praised by engineers across the country" is a nonrestrictive relative clause — it adds information about the bridge design but is not essential to identify which design is meant. The sentence opens with "The new bridge design," followed by a comma, so the nonrestrictive clause must be closed with a comma after "country" before the main verb "reduced." Choice B omits the closing comma, running the clause into the main verb. Choice C incorrectly breaks the clause mid-thought by placing commas around "by engineers across the country," treating that phrase as a separate nonrestrictive element when it is simply part of the "which" clause. Choice D uses a semicolon after "country," which would make "reduced construction costs by nearly a third" an independent clause missing a subject.

Passage Excerpt
The colony had survived three consecutive droughts, this one, however, proved too severe to overcome.

Question 3. Which choice makes the sentence most grammatically acceptable?

  • A) No Change (droughts, this one, however, proved)
  • B) droughts, this one however proved
  • C) droughts; this one, however, proved ✓
  • D) droughts: this one, however, proved

Explanation: Choice C is correct. The sentence joins two independent clauses — "The colony had survived three consecutive droughts" and "this one, however, proved too severe to overcome" — with the conjunctive adverb "however." A semicolon must precede "this one," and "however" must be set off by commas on both sides. Choice A creates a comma splice; a comma alone cannot join two independent clauses even with a conjunctive adverb. Choice B omits the commas around "however," and the comma before "this one" is still a splice. Choice D uses a colon, which would imply the second clause directly explains or enumerates the first — but the relationship here is contrast, not elaboration, making a semicolon the better choice.

Passage Excerpt
For years the town council had debated, whether to restore the original clock mechanism or replace it entirely with a modern electronic system.

Question 4. Which choice makes the sentence most grammatically acceptable?

  • A) No Change (debated, whether)
  • B) debated; whether
  • C) debated whether ✓
  • D) debated — whether

Explanation: Choice C is correct. "Whether to restore the original clock mechanism or replace it entirely" is a noun clause acting as the direct object of "debated." No punctuation should separate a verb from its direct object. "Debated whether" is clean and correct. Choice A inserts a comma between "debated" and "whether," incorrectly separating the verb from its direct object clause. Choice B uses a semicolon, which must be followed by an independent clause — "whether to restore..." is a noun clause, not an independent clause. Choice D uses an em dash, which signals a dramatic pause or interruption; there is no such pause needed here between a verb and its object.

Passage Excerpt
When the last of the sled dogs collapsed from exhaustion, the expedition leader knew that turning back was the only reasonable choice.

Question 5. Which choice makes the sentence most grammatically acceptable?

  • A) No Change (exhaustion the expedition leader)
  • B) exhaustion, the expedition leader ✓
  • C) exhaustion; the expedition leader
  • D) exhaustion, the expedition, leader

Explanation: Choice B is correct. "When the last of the sled dogs collapsed from exhaustion" is an introductory adverbial clause. A comma must follow an introductory clause to separate it from the main clause. "Exhaustion, the expedition leader" correctly places that comma. Choice A omits the comma, running the subordinate clause directly into the main clause. Choice C uses a semicolon, which can only join two independent clauses — the introductory "when" clause is dependent and cannot stand alone. Choice D inserts a comma after "expedition," incorrectly splitting the subject "the expedition leader."