ACT Punctuation Tips and Rules | Tricky Punctuation

Besides punctuation, here’s a handy list of ACT vocabulary works to review that’ll reduce any chances of surprise.

Three Tricky Punctuation Marks On The ACT

On the ACT English test, the comma is the most important punctuation mark to pay attention to regarding questions.

In addition to commas, you need to familiarize your understanding of colons, semicolons, and dashes. These punctuation marks often confuse students with their usage on test day. Here’s a brief look at each one to help practice before test day.

Semicolons

The semicolon is the most heavily tested one of these three marks.

The good news is the main rule with semicolon usage is easy: every semicolon must have an independent clause on either side of it. That’s it.

For clarity, an independent clause is a statement which can function as a complete sentence. To be really technical, an independent clause is a group of words that contains both a subject and a verb, while expressing a complete thought.

Here are a couple examples of what an independent clause looks like.

The clauses “I put on my boots” and “Football games are fun to watch” are independent clauses because they state complete thoughts.

Here’s an example of a sentence in need of a semicolon:

Both statements act as complete thoughts, with neither one dependent on the other. Because only a comma connects them, this sentence is a comma splice. The correct sentence replaces the comma with a semicolon.

Colons

Colons are often misused, but the good news is that you can learn the rules.

Most of those who commit colon errors were never taught that colons have specific grammar rules just like the semicolon does. Here are the main things that colons do: