Standard Convention With Answers
Standard Convention With Answers
ID: bd11fe93
Dr. Rocío Paola Caballero-Gill is a paleoceanographer. This means that Dr. Caballero-Gill doesn’t just study oceans as
they are today. She uses chemistry and fossil evidence ______ oceans as they were in the past.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. has studied
B. to study
C. studied
D. studies
Rationale
Choice B is the best answer. The convention being tested is the use of verb forms within a sentence. The nonfinite to-
infinitive verb “to study” is correctly used to form a subordinate clause that indicates what Dr. Caballero-Gill uses
chemistry and fossil evidence for (to study oceans as they were in the past).
Choice A is incorrect because it results in an ungrammatical sentence. The finite verb “has studied” can’t be used in this
way to form a subordinate clause that indicates what Dr. Caballero-Gill uses the evidence for. Choice C is incorrect
because it results in an ungrammatical sentence. The finite verb “studied” can’t be used in this way to form a subordinate
clause that indicates what Dr. Caballero-Gill uses the evidence for. Choice D is incorrect because it results in an
ungrammatical sentence. The finite verb “studies” can’t be used in this way to form a subordinate clause that indicates
what Dr. Caballero-Gill uses the evidence for.
ID: 9f0ac61d
Dolores Huerta’s advocacy on behalf of farmworkers was rooted in her experience as a schoolteacher in Stockton,
California, in the early 1950s. Hoping to help her students and their families outside the ______ Huerta left teaching to
start the Stockton chapter of the Community Service Organization, a group focused on the needs of local farmworkers.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. classroom.
B. classroom;
C. classroom,
D. classroom
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is the use of punctuation within a sentence. This choice
correctly uses a comma to mark the boundary between the introductory participial phrase ("Hoping…classroom") and the
main clause ("Huerta…farmworkers").
Choice A is incorrect because it results in a rhetorically unacceptable sentence fragment beginning with "hoping." Choice
B is incorrect because a semicolon can’t be used in this way to mark the boundary between the participial phrase
("Hoping…classroom") and the main clause ("Huerta…farmworkers"). Choice D is incorrect because it fails to mark the
boundary between the participial phrase ("Hoping…classroom") and the main clause ("Huerta…farmworkers").
ID: d1482e27
One of the earliest known maps is a Babylonian clay tablet thought to be almost 4,500 years old. The map ______ the area
of a plot of land, shows a river valley, and includes the cardinal directions.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. describes
B. describe
C. have described
D. are describing
Rationale
Choice A is the best answer. The convention being tested is the use of verb forms within a sentence. The singular verb
"describes" agrees in number with the singular subject "map."
Choice B is incorrect because the plural verb "describe" doesn’t agree in number with the singular subject "map." Choice C
is incorrect because the plural verb "have described" doesn’t agree in number with the singular subject "map." Choice D is
incorrect because the plural verb "are describing" doesn’t agree in number with the singular subject "map."
ID: 78b88c04
Joshua Hinson, director of the language revitalization program of the Chickasaw Nation in Oklahoma, helped produce the
world’s first Indigenous-language instructional app, Chickasaw ______ Chickasaw TV, in 2010; and a Rosetta Stone
language course in Chickasaw, in 2015.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is the punctuation of items in a complex series. It’s
conventional to use a semicolon to separate items in a complex series with internal punctuation, and in this choice, the
semicolon after “2009” is conventionally used to separate the first item (“the world’s…2009”) and the second item (“an
online…2010”) in the series of things that Hinson helped create. Further, the comma after “Basic” correctly pairs with the
comma after “app,” and the comma after “network” correctly pairs with the comma after “TV” to set off the supplemental
elements (“Chickasaw Basic” and “Chickasaw TV”) that provide the names of the app and the TV network, respectively.
Altogether, the punctuation in this choice results in a sentence that clearly indicates that Hinson helped make a language
app in 2009, an online TV network in 2010, and a language course in 2015.
Choice A is incorrect because it fails to punctuate the complex series in a way that makes clear that Hinson helped make
a language app in 2009, an online TV network in 2010, and a language course in 2015. Choice B is incorrect because it
fails to punctuate the complex series in a way that makes clear that Hinson helped make a language app in 2009, an
online TV network in 2010, and a language course in 2015. Choice D is incorrect because the comma after “2009” doesn’t
match the semicolon used to separate the second and third items in the complex series.
ID: 67614549
After winning the 1860 presidential election, Abraham Lincoln appointed Edward Bates, Salmon P. Chase, and William H.
Seward to his cabinet. Lincoln’s decision was surprising, since each of these men had run against him, but historians
have praised it, noting that Lincoln ______ his rivals’ diverse talents to strengthen his administration.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. has leveraged
B. is leveraging
C. will leverage
D. leveraged
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The subject of the verb is “Lincoln,” and the first sentence tells us that we’re talking about
something that Abraham Lincoln did in 1860. So the simple past tense “leveraged” fits the logic of the text.
Choice A is incorrect. This choice creates a tense issue. “Has leveraged” is the present perfect tense, which is used for
an action that began in the past and continues into the present. Lincoln started leveraging his rivals’ talents in 1860—it’s
definitely not still happening today. So the present perfect tense isn’t appropriate. Choice B is incorrect. This choice
creates a tense issue. “Is leveraging” is the present tense, but Lincoln leveraged his rivals’ talents in 1860, so the present
tense isn’t appropriate. Choice C is incorrect. This choice creates a tense issue. “Will leverage” is the future tense, but
Lincoln leveraged his rivals’ talents in 1860, so the future tense isn’t appropriate.
ID: 3ed5ebb4
In her analysis of Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth (1905), scholar Candace Waid observes that the novel depicts the
upper classes of New York society as “consumed by the appetite of a soulless ______ an apt assessment given that The
House of Mirth is set during the Gilded Age, a period marked by rapid industrialization, economic greed, and widening
wealth disparities.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. materialism”; and
B. materialism” and
C. materialism,”
D. materialism”
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is punctuation between a main clause and a supplementary
noun phrase. This choice correctly uses a comma to mark the boundary between the main clause (“scholar…
materialism”) and the supplementary noun phrase (“an apt assessment”) that describes Waid’s observation about how
The House of Mirth depicts the upper classes of New York society.
Choice A is incorrect because a semicolon and the conjunction “and” can’t be used in this way to mark the boundary
between a main clause and a supplementary noun phrase. Choice B is incorrect. Joining the main clause (“scholar…
materialism”) and the following noun phrase with the conjunction “and” results in a confusing and illogical sentence that
suggests that the novel depicts the upper classes of New York society as “an apt assessment,” which doesn’t make
sense in this context. Choice D is incorrect because it fails to mark the boundary between the main clause and the
supplementary noun phrase with appropriate punctuation.
ID: 12bd5b75
With its towering, six-spired exterior of granitelike quartz monzonite, the Salt Lake Temple is one of the most instantly
recognizable structures in the state of Utah. However, many people do not know that ______ built over the course of forty
years, with construction beginning in 1853 and ending in 1893.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. it was
B. one was
C. they were
D. both were
Rationale
Choice A is the best answer. The convention being tested is pronoun-antecedent agreement. The singular pronoun "it"
agrees in number with the singular antecedent "the Salt Lake Temple."
Choice B is incorrect because the singular pronoun "one" is ambiguous in this context; the resulting sentence leaves
unclear whether there is only one Salt Lake temple or multiple. Choice C is incorrect because the plural pronoun "they"
doesn’t agree in number with the singular antecedent "the Salt Lake Temple." Choice D is incorrect because the plural
pronoun "both" doesn’t agree in number with the singular antecedent "the Salt Lake Temple."
ID: 2c4cd76d
Researchers studying magnetosensation have determined why some soil-dwelling roundworms in the Southern
Hemisphere move in the opposite direction of Earth’s magnetic field when searching for ______ in the Northern
Hemisphere, the magnetic field points down, into the ground, but in the Southern Hemisphere, it points up, toward the
surface and away from worms’ food sources.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. food:
B. food,
C. food while
D. food
Rationale
Choice A is the best answer. The convention being tested is colon use within a sentence. A colon used in this way
introduces information that illustrates or explains information that has come before it. In this case, the colon introduces
the following explanation of why some roundworms in the Southern Hemisphere move in the opposite direction of Earth’s
magnetic field.
Choice B is incorrect because it results in a comma splice. A comma can’t be used in this way to join two long
independent clauses (“Researchers…food” and “in…sources”) such as these. Choice C is incorrect because it results in a
run-on sentence. The two clauses (“Researchers…food” and “in…sources”) are fused without punctuation. Furthermore,
the conjunction “while” fails to indicate that what follows is an explanation of why some roundworms in the Southern
Hemisphere move in the opposite direction of Earth’s magnetic field. Choice D is incorrect because it results in a run-on
sentence. The two clauses (“Researchers…food” and “in…sources”) are fused without punctuation and/or a conjunction.
ID: 96e5da01
The alga species Chlorella vulgaris is very efficient at making oxygen. For this reason, scientists are currently exploring
ways to use this species in space. C. vulgaris might be used, for example, to build future biological air exchange systems
that ______ oxygen for astronauts.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. are producing
B. produced
C. produce
D. have produced
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is the use of verbs to express tense. Simple present tense
verbs can be used to describe actions that tend to occur, including in a hypothetical or future scenario. In this case, the
simple present tense verb “produce” indicates what the air exchange systems might be able to do in the future (produce
oxygen for astronauts).
Choice A is incorrect. The present progressive tense verb “are producing” suggests that the oxygen is currently being
produced, not that it might be produced in the future. Choice B is incorrect because the past tense verb “produced”
suggests that the oxygen was produced in the past, not that it might be produced in the future. Choice D is incorrect
because the present perfect tense verb “have produced” suggests that the oxygen has been produced from a point in the
past up to the present, not that it might be produced in the future.
ID: 265e7f4c
The Globe Theatre in London is a reconstruction of the famed venue where many of Shakespeare’s plays were first
performed. In 1613, a prop cannon ______ during a performance and ignited the Globe’s thatched roof. No one was hurt,
but in two hours the original Globe was gone.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. malfunctions
B. will malfunction
C. has malfunctioned
D. malfunctioned
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is the use of verbs to express tense. In this choice, the past
tense verb "malfunctioned" is consistent with the other past tense verbs ("ignited" and "was") used to describe the
destruction of the original Globe Theatre.
Choice A is incorrect because the present tense verb "malfunctions" isn’t consistent with the other past tense verbs used
to describe the destruction of the original Globe Theatre. Choice B is incorrect because the future tense verb "will
malfunction" isn’t consistent with the other past tense verbs used to describe the destruction of the original Globe
Theatre. Choice C is incorrect because the present perfect tense verb "has malfunctioned" isn’t consistent with the other
past tense verbs used to describe the destruction of the original Globe Theatre.
ID: 64a40675
In 1953, a fellow performer tripped on legendary jazz musician Dizzy Gillespie’s trumpet, bending its bell upward. When
Gillespie tested the damaged instrument, he realized that he ______ sound of a bent bell over that of a straight one.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. preferred; the
B. preferred the
C. preferred, the
D. preferred. The
Rationale
Choice B is the best answer. The convention being tested is punctuation use between a verb and its object. No
punctuation is needed between the verb "preferred" and its object "the sound of a bent bell over that of a straight one."
The object helps complete the idea of the verb—in this case, it explains what type of sound Gillespie preferred—and any
punctuation between the two results in an ungrammatical sentence.
Choice A is incorrect because no punctuation is needed between the verb and its object. Choice C is incorrect because
no punctuation is needed between the verb and its object. Choice D is incorrect because no punctuation is needed
between the verb and its object.
ID: de55ec71
Generations of mystery and horror ______ have been influenced by the dark, gothic stories of celebrated American author
Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849).
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. writers
B. writers,
C. writers—
D. writers;
Rationale
Choice A is the best answer. The convention being tested is punctuation between a subject and a verb. When, as in this
case, a subject (“Generations of mystery and horror writers”) is immediately followed by a verb (“have been influenced”),
no punctuation is needed.
Choice B is incorrect because no punctuation is needed between the subject and the verb. Choice C is incorrect because
no punctuation is needed between the subject and the verb. Choice D is incorrect because no punctuation is needed
between the subject and the verb.
ID: e38b3e4f
The radiation that ______ during the decay of radioactive atomic nuclei is known as gamma radiation.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. occurs
B. have occurred
C. occur
D. are occurring
Rationale
Choice A is the best answer. The convention being tested is subject-verb agreement. The singular verb "occurs" agrees in
number with the singular subject "radiation."
Choice B is incorrect because the plural verb "have occurred" doesn’t agree in number with the singular subject
"radiation." Choice C is incorrect because the plural verb "occur" doesn’t agree in number with the singular subject
"radiation." Choice D is incorrect because the plural verb "are occurring" doesn’t agree in number with the singular subject
"radiation."
ID: 89fbc3eb
The Mission 66 initiative, which was approved by Congress in 1956, represented a major investment in the infrastructure
of overburdened national ______ it prioritized physical improvements to the parks’ roads, utilities, employee housing, and
visitor facilities while also establishing educational programming for the public.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. parks and
B. parks
C. parks;
D. parks,
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is the coordination of main clauses within a sentence. This
choice uses a semicolon to correctly join the first main clause (“The Mission…parks”) and the second main clause that
begins with “it.”
Choice A is incorrect. When coordinating two longer main clauses such as these, it’s conventional to use a comma
before the coordinating conjunction. Choice B is incorrect because it results in a run-on sentence. The two main clauses
are fused without punctuation and/or a conjunction. Choice D is incorrect because it results in a comma splice. Without
a conjunction following it, a comma can’t be used in this way to join two main clauses.
ID: 960dec02
A recent study tracked the number of bee species present in twenty-seven New York apple orchards over a ten-year
period. ______ found that when wild growth near an orchard was cleared, the number of different bee species visiting the
orchard decreased.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is punctuation use between a name and title and between a
subject and a verb. No punctuation is needed between the proper noun “Heather Grab” and “entomologist,” the title that
describes Grab. Additionally, no punctuation is needed between the sentence’s subject (“Entomologist Heather Grab”)
and the main verb (“found”) that indicates what Grab did.
Choice A is incorrect because no punctuation is needed between the subject and the verb. Choice B is incorrect because
no punctuation is needed. Setting the entomologist’s name off with commas suggests that it could be removed without
affecting the coherence of the sentence, which isn’t the case. Choice D is incorrect because no punctuation is needed
between the subject and the verb.
ID: 37e5c794
Despite being cheap, versatile, and easy to produce, ______ they are made from nonrenewable petroleum, and most do
not biodegrade in landfills.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is subject-modifier placement. This choice ensures that the
modifying phrase “despite being cheap, versatile, and easy to produce” appears immediately before the noun it modifies,
“commercial plastics,” clearly establishing that the commercial plastics—and not another noun in the sentence—are being
described as cheap, versatile, and easy to produce.
Choice A is incorrect because it results in a dangling modifier. The placement of the function word “there” immediately
after the modifying phrase illogically and confusingly suggests that “there” is cheap, versatile, and easy to produce.
Choice B is incorrect because it results in a dangling modifier. The placement of the noun “two problems” immediately
after the modifying phrase illogically suggests that the “problems” are cheap, versatile, and easy to produce. Choice C is
incorrect because it results in a dangling modifier. The placement of the noun phrase “commercial plastics’ two
associated problems” immediately after the modifying phrase illogically suggests that the “problems” are cheap,
versatile, and easy to produce.
ID: 4b0c7b62
The algaita is a double reed wind instrument from West Africa. The reed of a wind instrument is the mouthpiece ______ A
double reed contains two pieces of cane that vibrate and produce sound as air passes between them.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is end-of-sentence punctuation. This choice correctly uses a
period to punctuate a declarative sentence ("the reed of a wind instrument is the mouthpiece") that ends with a
prepositional phrase ("where sound is made").
Choice A is incorrect. It’s unconventional to use a question mark to punctuate a declarative sentence. Choice B is
incorrect. The structure requires that the sentence continue as a declarative clause, not end with an interrogative clause.
Choice D is incorrect. The structure requires that the sentence continue as a declarative clause and end with a period, not
end with an interrogative clause and a question mark.
ID: 6f08641e
On April 5, 1977, Kitty Cone and 150 other disability rights activists entered a San Francisco federal building. After
pleading for years—to no effect—for the passage of key antidiscrimination legislation, ______ until their demands were
addressed. Finally, on April 28, the legislation was signed.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
C. lawmakers came under increased pressure when the activists staged a sit-in protest
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is subject-modifier placement. This choice makes the noun
phrase “the activists” the subject of the sentence and places it immediately after the modifying phrase
“after...legislation.” In doing so, this choice clearly establishes that the activists—and not another noun in the sentence—
were pleading for the passage of antidiscrimination legislation.
Choice A is incorrect because it results in a dangling modifier. The placement of the noun phrase “pressure on
lawmakers” immediately after the modifying phrase illogically suggests that the “pressure” was pleading for the passage
of antidiscrimination legislation. Choice B is incorrect because it results in a dangling modifier. The placement of the
noun phrase “a sit-in protest” immediately after the modifying phrase illogically suggests that the “protest” was pleading
for the passage of antidiscrimination legislation. Choice C is incorrect because it results in a dangling modifier. The
placement of the noun phrase “lawmakers” immediately after the modifying phrase suggests that “lawmakers” were
pleading for the passage of antidiscrimination legislation. While it’s possible for lawmakers to plead for the passage of
legislation, the context strongly suggests that it’s the activists who pleaded for years for the passage of
antidiscrimination legislation.
ID: 3580533b
In recent years, economists around the world have created new tools that quantify the overall well-being of a country’s
citizens. Economists in India, for example, use an Ease of Living Index. This tool ______ economic potential, sustainability,
and citizens’ quality of life.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. measures
B. had measured
Rationale
Choice A is the best answer. The previous sentence tells us how economists in India "use" a certain tool, while this
sentence describes general facts about that tool. To express general facts (and also to match the simple present tense
of "use"), we should use the simple present tense form "measures."
Choice B is incorrect. This choice uses the past perfect tense, but the previous sentence tells us that the tool is currently
used to measure things, so the past tense doesn’t make sense for this verb. Choice C is incorrect. This choice uses the
future perfect conditional tense, but the previous sentence tells us that the tool is currently used to measure things, so
the future tense doesn’t make sense for this verb. Choice D is incorrect. This choice uses the future perfect continuous
tense, but the previous sentence tells us that the tool is currently used to measure things, so the future tense doesn’t
make sense for this verb.
ID: 2c49940e
French philosopher René Descartes doubted whether he could prove his own existence. Eventually, he found proof in his
famous phrase “I think, therefore I am.” The ______ complexity: only those who exist would be able to ponder their
existence.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The conventions being tested are the use of possessive nouns and the use of possessive
determiners. The singular possessive noun "phrase’s" correctly indicates that there is only one simple phrase. The
singular possessive determiner "its" agrees in number with the singular possessive noun "phrase’s," reinforcing the idea
that there is only one simple yet complex phrase.
Choice A is incorrect because the context requires the singular possessive noun "phrase’s," not the plural possessive
noun "phrases’." Choice B is incorrect because the context requires the singular possessive noun "phrase’s" and the
corresponding singular possessive determiner "its," not the plural noun "phrases" and the corresponding plural
possessive determiner "their." Choice C is incorrect because the context requires the singular possessive determiner "its,"
not the plural possessive determiner "their."
ID: e62241b7
What is the correct pronunciation of Kiribati? In the Gilbertese language spoken by residents of the island nation, the
letter combination -ti makes the -s sound; as a result, the country’s name ______ pronounced “Kiribas.”
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. are
B. have been
C. are being
D. is
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is subject-verb agreement. The singular verb "is" agrees in
number with the singular subject "the country’s name."
Choice A is incorrect because the plural verb "are" doesn’t agree in number with the singular subject "the country’s name."
Choice B is incorrect because the plural verb "have been" doesn’t agree in number with the singular subject "the country’s
name." Choice C is incorrect because the plural verb "are being" doesn’t agree in number with the singular subject "the
country’s name."
ID: 7f226b4b
In a 2023 study, researchers documented a fascinating behavior in the aquatic plant Elodea densa. When exposed to low
levels of light, the plant’s ______ the cellular organs that generate energy from light—reshuffled to form a tightly packed,
glass-like surface ideal for collecting more light.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. chloroplasts
B. chloroplasts;
C. chloroplasts,
D. chloroplasts—
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is the punctuation of a supplementary element within a
sentence. The dash after "chloroplasts" pairs with the dash after "from light" to separate the supplementary element "the
cellular organs that generate energy from light" from the rest of the sentence. This supplementary element functions to
define the term "chloroplasts," and the pair of dashes indicates that this element could be removed without affecting the
grammatical coherence of the sentence.
Choice A is incorrect because it fails to use appropriate punctuation to separate the supplementary element from the rest
of the sentence. Choice B is incorrect because a semicolon can’t be paired with a dash in this way to separate the
supplementary element from the rest of the sentence. Choice C is incorrect because a comma can’t be paired with a
dash in this way to separate the supplementary element from the rest of the sentence.
ID: 74ce2f05
A study led by scientist Rebecca Kirby at the University of Wisconsin–Madison found that black bears that eat human
food before hibernation have increased levels of a rare carbon isotope, ______ due to the higher 13C levels in corn and
cane sugar. Bears with these elevated levels were also found to have much shorter hibernation periods on average.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. carbon-13, (13C)
B. carbon-13 (13C)
C. carbon-13, (13C),
D. carbon-13 (13C),
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is the punctuation of a supplementary element within a
sentence. The comma after “(13C)” pairs with the comma after “isotope” to separate the supplementary element
“carbon-13 (13C)” from the rest of the sentence. This supplementary element defines the “rare carbon isotope,” and the
pair of commas indicates that this element could be removed without affecting the grammatical coherence of the
sentence.
Choice A is incorrect because it fails to use appropriate punctuation to separate the supplementary element “carbon-13
(13C)” from the rest of the sentence. Choice B is incorrect because it fails to use appropriate punctuation to separate the
supplementary element “carbon-13 (13C)” from the rest of the sentence. Choice C is incorrect because it fails to use
appropriate punctuation to separate the supplementary element “carbon-13 (13C)” from the rest of the sentence. The
comma after “carbon-13” isn’t necessary because the parentheses around “13C” already separate this element from the
rest of the sentence.
ID: a2816c7f
American abstract artist Richard ______ his installations to make passersby keenly aware of how one’s movements are
affected by the physical features of one’s environment, assembles large-scale steel plates into sculptures that dominate
the outdoor spaces they occupy.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. Serra is intending
B. Serra, intends
C. Serra, intending
D. Serra intends
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is the use of verb forms within a sentence. This choice pairs
the comma after "Serra" with the comma after "environment" and uses the nonfinite present participle "intending" to
correctly form a supplementary phrase describing the reaction Serra intends his sculptures to provoke. This
supplementary phrase appears between the noun phrase that it modifies ("American abstract artist Richard Serra") and
the finite present tense verb ("assembles"), which functions as the sentence’s main verb and describes what Serra does.
Choice A is incorrect because it results in an ungrammatical sentence. The finite present continuous tense verb "is
intending" can’t be used in this way in conjunction with the finite present tense verb "assembles," which already functions
as the main verb in the sentence. Choice B is incorrect because it results in an ungrammatical sentence. The finite
present tense verb "intends" can’t be used in this way to supplement the noun phrase "American abstract artist Richard
Serra." Choice D is incorrect because it results in an ungrammatical sentence. The finite present tense verb "intends" can’t
be used in this way in conjunction with the finite present tense verb "assembles," which already functions as the main
verb in the sentence.
ID: a7c85001
Researchers Amit Kumar and Nicholas Epley investigated how ______ In a series of experiments conducted in 2022, they
found that people performing small acts of kindness underestimated the positive effect their actions had on others.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is end-of-sentence punctuation. This choice correctly uses a
period to punctuate a declarative sentence that asks an indirect question ("Researchers Amit Kumar and Nicholas Epley
investigated how people perceive acts of kindness").
Choice A is incorrect. The structure of the sentence requires a declarative clause at the end of the sentence that states
what Kumar and Epley did, not an interrogative clause that asks a direct question, such as "how do people perceive acts
of kindness." Choice B is incorrect. The structure of the sentence requires a declarative clause at the end of the sentence
that states what Kumar and Epley did, not an interrogative clause that asks a direct question, such as "how do people
perceive acts of kindness?" Choice C is incorrect. It’s unconventional to use a question mark in this way to punctuate a
declarative sentence that asks an indirect question, such as "Researchers…kindness."
ID: eb95235b
The Limón technique, developed by Mexican-born dancer and choreographer Jose Limón, is known for its emphasis on
breath control and its interplay of weight and ______ dancers may explore, for example, the moment of mid-air
suspension at the top of a jump.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. weightlessness
B. weightlessness which
C. weightlessness,
D. weightlessness;
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is the use of punctuation within a sentence. This choice uses a
semicolon in a conventional way to join the first main clause ("The Limón…weightlessness") and the second main clause
("dancers…jump").
Choice A is incorrect because it results in a run-on sentence. The two main clauses are fused without punctuation and/or
a conjunction. Choice B is incorrect. The relative pronoun "which" can’t be used in this way to join two main clauses.
Choice C is incorrect because it results in a comma splice. Without a conjunction following it, a comma can’t be used in
this way to join two main clauses.
ID: adf210e7
The haiku-like poems of Tomas Tranströmer, which present nature- and dream-influenced images in crisp, spare
language, have earned the Swedish poet praise from leading contemporary ______ them Nigerian American essayist and
novelist Teju Cole, who has written that Tranströmer’s works “contain a luminous simplicity.”
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. writers. Among
B. writers among
C. writers; among
D. writers, among
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is punctuation use between a main clause and a
supplementary phrase. This choice correctly uses a comma to mark the boundary between the main clause (“The haiku-
like…writers”) and the supplementary phrase (“among…Cole”) that specifies a contemporary writer who has praised
Tomas Tranströmer’s haiku-like poems.
Choice A is incorrect because it results in a rhetorically unacceptable sentence fragment beginning with “among.” Choice
B is incorrect because it fails to mark the boundary between the main clause and the supplementary phrase with
appropriate punctuation. Choice C is incorrect because a semicolon can’t be used in this way to join the main clause
(“The haiku-like…writers”) and the supplementary phrase (“among…Cole”).
ID: b7363ba2
Mathematician and meteorologist Edward Lorenz used the metaphor of the “butterfly effect” to explain how seemingly
minor events can have major impacts on future weather. According to Lorenz’s metaphor, the wind from a butterfly
flapping ______ in Brazil might eventually grow into a storm elsewhere across the globe.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. its wings
B. its wings’
C. it’s wing’s
D. it’s wings’
Rationale
Choice A is the best answer. The conventions being tested are the use of possessive determiners and plural nouns. The
singular possessive determiner "its" and the plural noun "wings" correctly indicate that the butterfly has multiple wings.
Choice B is incorrect because the context requires the plural noun "wings," not the plural possessive noun "wings’."
Choice C is incorrect because the context requires the singular possessive determiner "its" and the plural noun "wings,"
not the contraction "it’s" and the singular possessive noun "wing’s." Choice D is incorrect because the context requires the
singular possessive determiner "its" and the plural noun "wings," not the contraction "it’s" and the plural possessive noun
"wings’."
ID: 908a76b8
When a given industry—water and electricity are two well-known examples—carries high infrastructural start-up costs and
other barriers that discourage competition, ______ of just one or two suppliers per municipality. Such industries are
known as natural monopolies.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
C. it often consists
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is pronoun-antecedent agreement. The singular pronoun "it"
agrees in number with the singular antecedent "industry" and clearly indicates that the industry consists of just one or
two suppliers per municipality.
Choice A is incorrect. The plural pronoun "these" neither agrees in number with the singular antecedent "industry" nor
clearly indicates that the industry—not another plural noun in the sentence, such as "start-up costs" or "barriers"—
consists of just one or two suppliers per municipality. Choice B is incorrect because the plural pronoun "they" doesn’t
agree in number with the singular antecedent "industry." Choice D is incorrect because the singular pronoun "this" is
ambiguous in this context; the resulting sentence leaves unclear what consists of just one or two suppliers per
municipality.
ID: 1ee7b429
Bonnie Buratti of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory ______ data about Saturn’s rings collected by the Cassini spacecraft
when she made an interesting discovery: the tiny moons embedded between and within Saturn’s rings are shaped by the
buildup of ring material on the moons’ surfaces.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. studies
C. will study
D. was studying
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is the use of verbs to express tense in a sentence. In this
choice, the past progressive tense verb “was studying” is consistent with the other past tense verbs (e.g., “made” and
“collected”) used to describe Buratti’s discovery. Further, the past progressive tense correctly indicates that an ongoing
action in the past was occurring (she was studying) at the same time that another event occurred in the past (she made
an interesting discovery).
Choice A is incorrect because the present tense verb “studies” isn’t consistent with the past tense verbs used to describe
Buratti’s discovery. Choice B is incorrect because the present perfect progressive tense verb “has been studying” isn’t
consistent with the past tense verbs used to describe Buratti’s discovery. Choice C is incorrect because the future tense
verb “will study” isn’t consistent with the past tense verbs used to describe Buratti’s discovery.
ID: 13fcf575
Roughly 300 nights a year, when the cold air descending from the Andes Mountains meets the warm air rising from
Venezuela’s coastal Lake Maracaibo, the result is a spectacular lightning storm, its strikes so bright, so localized, and so
______ that it has become known as “Maracaibo’s Lighthouse.”
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. dependable:
B. dependable;
C. dependable
D. dependable,
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is the punctuation of an integrated relative clause. No
punctuation is needed before the relative clause beginning with "that" because the content of the relative clause
("that...Lighthouse") is integral to the meaning of the coordinated adjectival phrase ("so bright, so localized, and so
dependable") that it modifies.
Choice A is incorrect because no punctuation is needed between the coordinated adjectival phrase ("so
bright...dependable") and the integrated relative clause that modifies it. Choice B is incorrect because no punctuation is
needed between the coordinated adjectival phrase ("so bright...dependable") and the integrated relative clause that
modifies it. Choice D is incorrect because no punctuation is needed between the coordinated adjectival phrase ("so
bright...dependable") and the integrated relative clause that modifies it.
ID: 940ff6f7
Jamaican British artist Willard Wigan is known for his remarkable ______ so small that they are best viewed through a
microscope, Wigan’s sculptures are made from tiny natural materials, such as spiderweb strands.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. microsculptures creations
B. microsculptures, creations
C. microsculptures. Creations
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is punctuation between sentences. In this choice, the period is
used to correctly mark the boundary between one sentence ("Jamaican…microsculptures") and another ("Creations…
strands"). The noun phrase beginning with "creations" modifies the subject of the next sentence, "Wigan’s sculptures."
Choice A is incorrect because it results in a run-on sentence. The sentences ("Jamaican…microsculptures" and
"Creations…strands") are fused without punctuation and/or a conjunction. Choice B is incorrect because it results in a
comma splice. A comma can’t be used in this way to mark the boundary between sentences. Choice D is incorrect.
Without a comma preceding it, the conjunction "and" can’t be used in this way to join sentences.
ID: 333b2b65
While one requires oxygen and one does ______ and anaerobic respiration are both forms of cellular respiration—that is,
they are processes by which cells break down glucose to use as energy.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. not aerobic
B. not. Aerobic
C. not, aerobic
D. not; aerobic
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. A comma is the appropriate way to link the dependent clause “While...not” and the
independent clause that follows.
Choice A is incorrect. This choice creates a run-on sentence error. “While...not” is a dependent clause, which must be
separated from the independent clause that follows with some sort of punctuation. Choice B is incorrect. This choice
creates a sentence fragment. “While one requires oxygen and one does not” isn’t an independent clause, so it can’t stand
alone as a complete sentence. Choice D is incorrect. This choice creates a punctuation error. “While one requires oxygen
and one does not” isn’t an independent clause, so it can’t be linked to the clause that follows with a semicolon.
ID: aaa1907f
To serve local families during the Great Depression, innovative New York City librarian Pura Belpré offered storytelling in
both English and Spanish, an uncommon ______ celebrated el Día de los Tres Reyes Magos, an important community
holiday; and put on puppet shows dramatizing Puerto Rican folktales.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
Rationale
Choice B is the best answer. The convention being tested is the punctuation of elements in a complex series. It’s
conventional to use a semicolon to separate items in a complex series with internal punctuation, and in this choice, the
semicolon after "time" is conventionally used to separate the first item ("offered…time") and the second ("celebrated…
holiday") in the series of activities that librarian Pura Belpré offered. Moreover, the semicolon after "time" matches the
semicolon used later to separate the second item ("celebrated...holiday") and the third ("and...folktales") in the series.
Choice A is incorrect because it fails to use appropriate punctuation to separate the first item and the second item in the
complex series. Furthermore, a comma isn’t needed between the noun "practice" and the prepositional phrase "at the
time" because the prepositional phrase is essential to the full meaning of the phrase "an uncommon practice at the time."
Choice C is incorrect because a comma after "time" doesn’t match the semicolon used later to separate the second
("celebrated...holiday") and third ("and...folktales") items in the series. Furthermore, a comma isn’t needed between the
noun "practice" and the prepositional phrase "at the time" because the prepositional phrase is essential to the full
meaning of the phrase "an uncommon practice at the time." Choice D is incorrect because a comma after "time" doesn’t
match the semicolon used later to separate the second ("celebrated...holiday") and third ("and...folktales") items in the
series.
ID: 7f48b098
Photosynthesis, the mechanism by which plants use sunlight to turn carbon dioxide and water into ______ is fueled in part
by an enzyme called Photosystem II that harvests energy-giving electrons from water molecules.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. nutrients
B. nutrients and
C. nutrients,
D. nutrients—
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is the punctuation of a supplementary element within a
sentence. The comma after “nutrients” pairs with the comma after “photosynthesis” to separate the supplementary
element “the mechanism by which plants use sunlight to turn carbon dioxide and water into nutrients” from the rest of
the sentence. This supplementary element functions to define the term “photosynthesis,” and the pair of commas
indicates that this element could be removed without affecting the grammatical coherence of the sentence.
Choice A is incorrect because it fails to use appropriate punctuation to separate the supplementary element from the rest
of the sentence. Choice B is incorrect because a conjunction can’t be paired with a comma in this way to separate the
supplementary element from the rest of the sentence. Choice D is incorrect because a dash can’t be paired with a
comma in this way to separate the supplementary element from the rest of the sentence.
ID: 148be4da
Human-made (synthetic) fibers used in clothes and many other consumer products are more durable than most natural
plant ______ the manufacture of synthetic fibers requires toxic chemical solvents that can pollute air and water.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. fibers,
B. fibers but
C. fibers
D. fibers, but
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is the coordination of main clauses within a sentence. This
choice correctly uses a comma and the coordinating conjunction “but” to join the first main clause (“Human-
made...fibers”) and the second main clause (“the manufacture...water”).
Choice A is incorrect because it results in a comma splice. Without a conjunction following it, a comma can’t be used in
this way to join two main clauses. Choice B is incorrect because when coordinating two longer main clauses such as
these, it’s conventional to use a comma before the coordinating conjunction. Choice C is incorrect because it results in a
run-on sentence. The two main clauses are fused without punctuation and/or a conjunction.
ID: 9df6da04
Entomologists Yash Sondhi and Samuel Fabian have tried to explain why moths fly erratically around light sources at
night. Knowing that flying insects keep their backs pointed toward sunlight during the day, ______
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
the researchers theorize that moths, mistaking nighttime lights for the Sun, continually try to reorient their bodies
A. while flying near such lights.
the researchers’ theory is that moths mistake nighttime lights for the Sun, continually trying to reorient their bodies
B. while flying near such lights.
moths mistake nighttime lights for the Sun and continually try to reorient their bodies while flying near such lights, the
C. researchers theorize.
moths continually try to reorient their bodies while flying near nighttime lights, the researchers theorize, mistaking
D. such lights for the Sun.
Rationale
Choice A is the best answer. The convention being tested is subject-modifier placement. This choice makes the noun
phrase "the researchers" the subject of the sentence and places it immediately after the modifying phrase "knowing…
day." In doing so, this choice clearly establishes that the researchers—and not another noun in the sentence—know that
flying insects keep their backs pointed toward sunlight during the day.
Choice B is incorrect because it results in a dangling modifier. The placement of the noun phrase "the researchers’
theory" immediately after the modifying phrase illogically suggests that the researchers’ theory knows that flying insects
keep their backs pointed toward sunlight during the day. Choice C is incorrect because it results in a dangling modifier.
The placement of the noun "moths" immediately after the modifying phrase illogically suggests that moths know that
flying insects keep their backs pointed toward sunlight during the day. Choice D is incorrect because it results in a
dangling modifier. The placement of the noun "moths" immediately after the modifying phrase illogically suggests that
moths know that flying insects keep their backs pointed toward sunlight during the day.
ID: 0f39b19c
After a spate of illnesses as a child, Wilma Rudolph was told she might never walk again. Defying all odds, Rudolph didn’t
just walk, she ______ the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, she won both the 100- and 200-meter dashes and clinched
first place for her team in the 4x100-meter relay, becoming the first US woman to win three gold medals in a single
Olympics.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. ran—fast—during
B. ran—fast during
C. ran—fast, during
D. ran—fast. During
Rationale
Choice D is the best answer. The convention being tested is punctuation use between sentences. In this choice, the
period is used correctly to mark the boundary between one sentence (“Defying…fast”) and another sentence that begins
with a supplementary phrase (“During…Olympics”).
Choice A is incorrect. When a dash is present in a sentence (“ran—fast”), it’s not conventional to use another dash (“fast—
during”) to mark the boundary between sentences because it creates a potentially confusing sentence. In this context, a
period, semicolon, or colon would be clear and more conventional. Choice B is incorrect because it results in a run-on
sentence. The sentences (“Defying…fast”) and (“during…Olympics”) are fused without punctuation and/or a conjunction.
Choice C is incorrect because it results in a comma splice. A comma can’t be used in this way to mark the boundary
between sentences.
ID: 83617355
Each night in Gijón, Spain, a section of the city’s marina is bathed in a soft green glow. The source of the glow is the Árbol
de la Sidra, a large sculpture made up of 3,200 recycled glass bottles. A lamp inside the tree-shaped structure ______ the
green glass.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. will be illuminating
B. illuminates
C. would illuminate
D. illuminated
Rationale
Choice B is the best answer. The convention being tested is the use of verbs to express tense. In this choice, the present
tense verb "illuminates" is consistent with the other present tense verb ("is") used to describe the sculpture, correctly
indicating that the sculpture habitually glows ("each night") and that the lamp inside is the source of its illumination.
Choice A is incorrect because the future progressive tense verb "will be illuminating" isn’t consistent with the other
present tense verb used to describe the sculpture and the source of its glow. Choice C is incorrect because the modal
"would," which is used to indicate a typical behavior in the past, isn’t consistent with the other present tense verb used to
describe the sculpture and the source of its glow. Choice D is incorrect because the past tense verb "illuminated" isn’t
consistent with the other present tense verb used to describe the sculpture and the source of its glow.
ID: ae439895
In her 1983 book The Managed Heart: Commercialization of Human Feeling, sociologist Arlie Russell Hochschild first
explored at length her conception of a “sociology of emotions”—the idea that the various cultural and ideological
frameworks a person has internalized (class, gender, political affiliation, etc.) ______ each emotional reaction that person
has within a situation.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. underlies
B. is underlying
C. underlie
Rationale
Choice C is the best answer. The convention being tested is subject-verb agreement. The plural verb "underlie" agrees in
number with the plural subject "frameworks."
Choice A is incorrect because the singular verb "underlies" doesn’t agree in number with the plural subject "frameworks."
Choice B is incorrect because the singular verb "is underlying" doesn’t agree in number with the plural subject
"frameworks." Choice D is incorrect because the singular verb "has been underlying" doesn’t agree in number with the
plural subject "frameworks."
ID: f0864217
Rabinal Achí is a precolonial Maya dance drama performed annually in Rabinal, a town in the Guatemalan highlands.
Based on events that occurred when Rabinal was a city-state ruled by a king, ______ had once been an ally of the king but
was later captured while leading an invading force against him.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
A. Rabinal Achí tells the story of K’iche’ Achí, a military leader who
C. the military leader whose story is told in Rabinal Achí, K’iche’ Achí,
Rationale
Choice A is the best answer. The modifier “Based on events…by a king,” is describing the drama “Rabinal Achí.” Modifiers
need to be next to the subjects they describe, so “Rabinal Achí” needs to be the first word after the comma.
Choice B is incorrect. This doesn’t complete the text in a way that conforms to the conventions of Standard English. The
modifier “Based on events…by a king,” is describing the drama “Rabinal Achí.” Modifiers need to be next to the subjects
they describe, so “Rabinal Achí” needs to be the first word after the comma. Choice C is incorrect. This doesn’t complete
the text in a way that conforms to the conventions of Standard English. The modifier “Based on events…by a king,” is
describing the drama “Rabinal Achí.” Modifiers need to be next to the subjects they describe, so “Rabinal Achí” needs to
be the first word after the comma. Choice D is incorrect. This doesn’t complete the text in a way that conforms to the
conventions of Standard English. The modifier “Based on events…by a king,” is describing the drama “Rabinal Achí.”
Modifiers need to be next to the subjects they describe, so “Rabinal Achí” needs to be the first word after the comma.