SAT Punctuation Rules

Master periods, semicolons, colons, and dashes for SAT success

Punctuation

Master the rules for periods, semicolons, colons, dashes, and coordinating conjunctions.

1Periods and Semicolons

Rule:

Use a semicolon to join two closely related independent clauses without a conjunction. Use a period to end an independent clause.

Key Points:

Correct: The experiment was successful; the results were published.
Correct: The experiment was successful. The results were published.
Incorrect: The experiment was successful, the results were published. (comma splice)

Practice Questions

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2Colons and Dashes

Rule:

Colons and em dashes (—) introduce lists and explanations. They must follow a complete sentence.

Key Points:

Correct: "She had one goal—to win."
Incorrect: "My brother—who lives abroad, is visiting." (Mixed dash and comma)

Practice Questions

Score: 0 / 5

3FANBOYS (Coordinating Conjunctions)

Rule:

FANBOYS (For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So) are coordinating conjunctions that join two independent clauses with a comma.

Key Points:

Correct: The experiment was successful, so the team celebrated.
Correct: He wanted to go to college and pursue a degree. (no comma - implied subject)
Incorrect: She studied all night, she still felt unprepared. (comma splice)

Practice Questions

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