ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
TNReady Videos 296 videos
ACT Reading Prose Fiction Drill 1, Problem 4. How does the narrator feel about the prediction made at his birth that he would have the ability...
AP® English Language and Composition: Comprehension Drill 1, Problem 1. The speaker would agree with all of the following statements except what?
AP English Literature and Composition 1.6 Passage Drill 5. Death is primarily characterized as what?
Where Does the Semicolon Fit Best? 1621 Views
Share It!
Description:
ACT English: Punctuation Drill 2, Problem 3. Where does the semicolon fit best?
- Punctuation / Semicolons
- Product Type / ACT English
- Conventions / Demonstrate command of capitalization, punctuation, and spelling
- Conventions / Demonstrate command of capitalization, punctuation, and spelling
- Conventions / Demonstrate command of capitalization, punctuation, and spelling
- Usage/Mechanics / Punctuation
Transcript
- 00:03
Here's your shmoop du jour, brought to you by Mountain Climbing. Because your Everest
- 00:08
is the actual Everest.
- 00:12
They couldn't make it to the peak and back; before dark they decided to camp for the night.
- 00:28
Scary, what if they get eaten by bears, or get poison oak, or get snatched by mountain
- 00:33
trolls? Okay, it's possible we watch too much Lord of the Rings.
Full Transcript
- 00:37
Let's see if we can at least fix the semicolons in this sentence to lift our campers' spirits...
- 00:41
Well, there are four possible places that the semicolon can go.
- 00:45
On either side of the semicolon, the clause has to stand alone, so let's check each place
- 00:51
to see if it forms two complete thoughts. In C, the first clause makes sense, but the
- 00:56
second is a confusing mess. The sentence "to the peak and back before
- 01:00
dark they decided to camp for the night" doesn't work. At all.
- 01:04
B is a similar situation. Although "They couldn't make it to the peak" works as a complete sentence,
- 01:10
"and back before dark they decided to camp for the night" does not.
- 01:16
A? "Before dark they decided to camp for the night" isn't a complete sentence either. Buh-bye.
- 01:24
Although those sentences were painful to read, at least we're left with one good answer.
- 01:28
The last one of the bunch, D, forms two complete thoughts that are independent clauses, and
- 01:33
separates them with a semicolon. Much the same way that mountain troll plans
- 01:36
to separate the campers' heads from their bodies.
Related Videos
ACT English: Punctuation Drill 1, Problem 3. Is that comma being used correctly?
ACT English: Punctuation Drill 2, Problem 2. Where should the semi-colon be placed?
ACT English: Punctuation Drill 3, Problem 1. How should this sentence be changed so that it is grammatically correct?
ACT English: Punctuation Drill 3, Problem 2. How should we properly hyphenate the words in this sentence?
ACT English: Punctuation Drill 3, Problem 4. Which choice best formats this list of items?