Tuesday, July 7, 2020
Misplaced Modifiers â⬠SAT Grammar
What Are Misplaced Modifiers? The SAT has always loved to test this concept. There is a clear logical reasoning behind the correct answer, yet many disregard this in their everyday speech. When ââ¬Å"what sounds rightâ⬠and ââ¬Å"what is actually rightâ⬠conflict, you can bet the SAT is waiting there with a carefully engineered question to trap the unwary. In this post, well review what you need to know about them as you work on SAT grammar rules. So take a look at the following sentences: is anything wrong? Studying for finals and playing high school sports, it is hard for many to find time. Living for seven months in Madrid, Marthaââ¬â¢s fluency in Spanish increased rapidly. Not so sure? Well, what about the following examples? Running down the street, a bicycle hit him. Flipping through channels, the television suddenly turned off. Something weird is clearly going on. Was the bicycle running down the street? Was a television sitting on a couch and eating Doritos while flipping through channels? To avoid such absurd scenarios, we have to make sure that when we have a phrase beginning with an ââ¬âing verb (called a participle) that the phrase, which ends right before the comma, accurately describe the subject that comes right after the comma. Running down the street, he had to jump out of the way of an oncoming bicycle. Flipping through channels, Dexter threw his hands up in frustration when the television suddenly turned off. Now letââ¬â¢s go back to those first two examples. Can you think of ways to improve those sentences? Give it a shot. Makes sure the ââ¬Å"ââ¬âing phraseâ⬠correctly modifies the subject, as the examples below show. Studying for finals and playing high school sports, many students find it hard to focus on anything else. Living for seven months in Madrid, Martha became fluent in Spanish. Modification is basically a fancy way of saying ââ¬Å"describingâ⬠and you can think of the ââ¬Å"-ing phraseâ⬠as a large adjective that should logically (donââ¬â¢t forget the Doritos-eating television) describe the subject. Sometimes, though, modification comes after the subject. John sat on the couch eating Doritos and watching a blank screen. John sat on the couch, eating Doritos and watching a blank screen. One of these sentences implies that the couch eats Doritos (which isnââ¬â¢t too absurd if you look under some couches). The other is correct because it describes (correctly) John eating the Doritos and watching a blank screen. The correct sentence uses a comma to separate the phrase, ââ¬Å"John sat on the couchâ⬠from the phrase that says ââ¬Å"eating Doritosâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ . When the ââ¬Å"ing phraseâ⬠comes after the comma, the action in that phrase should always describe the subject of the sentence. In this case, John is that subject of the subject. On the other hand if you donââ¬â¢t have a comma separating the ââ¬Å"-ing phraseâ⬠from the rest of the sentence, then that phrase must logically describe the noun that comes immediately before it. In the first sentence (the one without the comma) there is no comma separating ââ¬Å"couchâ⬠and ââ¬Å"eatingâ⬠. Therefore, that sentence implies (incorrectly) that the couch is eating Doritos and watching a blank screen. Misplaced Modifiers Mini-Quiz Students multitask everyday, indeed many times a day, students believe they are very adept at juggling two or three different activities while studying for a midterm. Though he may well be able to learn while multitasking, it is not nearly as efficient as focusing only on studying. Yet many students continue to pass up an optimal studying environment preferring to multitask at every opportunity. 1) A) NO CHANGE B) To multitask C) Students multitasking D) Multitasking 2) A) NO CHANGE B) environment; preferring C) environment, preferring D) environment, they prefer Answers and explanation As is, this sentence has two subjects (ââ¬Å"studentsâ⬠and ââ¬Å"studentsâ⬠). Since students is already the subject of the clause beginning ââ¬Å"students believeâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ , it is easy to add a dependent clause, specifically an ââ¬Å"-ing phraseâ⬠and voila! We have a valid sentence. Answer: D). C) is wrong because it also repeats the subject, ââ¬Å"studentsâ⬠. As is, the sentence implies that the environment prefers to multitask. By putting a comma between ââ¬Å"environmentâ⬠and ââ¬Å"preferringâ⬠, the sentence is correctly structured to indicate that ââ¬Å"preferringâ⬠refers to the subject, ââ¬Å"many studentsâ⬠. Answer: C).
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