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Course: Digital SAT Reading and Writing > Unit 4
Lesson 10: Form, Structure, and SenseForm, Structure, and Sense — Quick example
A quick example of an SAT Form, Structure, and Sense question. Form, structure, and sense questions focus on these Standard English conventions: subject-verb agreement, pronoun-antecedent agreement, verb forms, subject-modifier placement, and plural and possessive nouns. To learn more about these conventions, check out our corresponding grammar guides and lesson videos! Created by David Rheinstrom.
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- The first one is from Inferences lesson, right?(25 votes)
- Still too long time. Do you have a method that allows us to find answers faster . We deffinately can't complete everything on the exam(16 votes)
- It seems like a while because he is taking a long time to explain the question. In reality these questions should take about a min to finish.(1 vote)
- Aren't these the inference type questions?(10 votes)
- What is the meaning of ' after the word?(7 votes)
- I am reading the book first mentioned. It is sooooo good.(4 votes)
- for the first one why is it not A?(1 vote)
- this is because the passage does not contain any info specifically nodding towards tanner's contemporaries and political views, it just basically conveys that historians today shouldn't judge tanner's painting as per today's political standards. hope this helped:)(4 votes)
- when do you put an apostrophe after the s(2 votes)
- im so bad at grammer!! every one of the questions looked exactly the same to me!(2 votes)
- How did he know recruit is multiple?(1 vote)
- The note mentions "team of outlaws and misfits" which implies multiple people, hence: recruits (plural).(3 votes)
- Can someone explain why it wouldn’t start with recruits, like B? Thanks!(1 vote)