Its removal, my father said, was like the erasure of a memory—the discarding of a traditional landmark.
(A)NO CHANGE
(B) There
(C) It’s
(D) Its,
The child with the ball wonders at the grown-up's odd, noisy behavior.
(A)NO CHANGE (B) grown-ups’ (C) grown-ups (D) grown-ups,
Correct Answer: B
The eggs are bright white and about two inches in diameter. You were watching as each turtle then slowly, laboriously, buries the eggs, turning in circle after circle, pushing sand back into the holes with surprisingly efficient flippers.
(A)NO CHANGE (B) watch (C) had watched (D) watched
Correct Answer: B
The farm connects to the Civil War general and U.S. president motivated the recent restoration by a team of National Park Service historians, laborers, and archaeologists.
(A)NO CHANGE (B) farm’s connection (C) farming connects (D) farmer’s conneting
Correct Answer: B
More ACT English Exam Questions
- 1Many Native peoples see the three plants as a model of cooperation and harmony, each plant benefiting from the others' growth.
- 2The Harlem Renaissance author Zora Neale Hurston is well known for her novels, especially Their Eyes Were Watching God, however, she was also a devoted chronicler of African American folklore.
- 3I remembered the way he is used to read to me when I was very young.
- 4The results indicated a problem that threatened to postpone the topping-out ceremony marking the placement of the final section between the two freestanding legs of the St. Louis Gateway Arch.
- 5Joy Kogawa was born in 1935 in Vancouver, British Columbia. Like Uchida, Kogawa and her family were removed from their home and relocated by the government, first to the interior of British Columbia, then to a farm in Alberta.