SAT Subject-Verb Agreement Questions: Practice Drill #8
Boost your SAT Reading & Writing score with this Subject-Verb Agreement practice question from Walker Prep. Includes answer explanation and strategy walk-through.
Below is an expertly-crafted drill to help you master Subject-Verb Agreement (SVA) Questions, which appear on Digital SAT Reading and Writing. (While the format is slightly different, this drill will also help you improve on ACT English SVA Questions.)
The drill is followed by a detailed answer explanation, which demonstrates how to find the solution using the step-by-step strategy introduced in Mastering SAT and ACT Subject-Verb Agreement Questions.
Though the drill conforms to the formatting of the Digital SAT, this is only a superficial difference. The core strategy for this question type is the same for both the ACT and SAT.
A premium subscription to Walker Prep is the “skeleton key” that unlocks success on Digital SAT Reading & Writing, ACT English, and ACT Reading. As a premium subscriber, you’ll learn all of the powerful strategies that world-class test prep tutor Dave Walker teaches his private students, at just a fraction of the cost.
Plus, you’ll get the ability to post comments and questions and gain full access to all of Dave’s insightful podcasts and his complete archive of practice questions, answer explanations, and in-depth strategy guides.
Imagine the success you could help your student achieve with these incredible tools at your fingertips! Don’t miss out on this opportunity to attain that ACT or SAT dream score. Start on the road to score improvement now with a premium subscription.
Drill
In Emily Dickinson's collection of poetry titled Poems, published posthumously in 1890, the reclusive poet included nearly 1,800 poems, ranging from short, enigmatic verses like "Hope is the thing with feathers" to longer, more complex works such as "Because I could not stop for Death". These profound and often cryptic poems, written in Dickinson's distinctive style characterized by unconventional punctuation, _______ the innovative spirit of American literature in the 19th century.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
Keep reading with a 7-day free trial
Subscribe to Walker Prep to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.