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English Sample Questions

Click on the letter choices to determine if you have
the correct answer and for question explanations.
(An actual ACT English Test contains 75 questions
to be answered in 45 minutes.)
  •  
DIRECTIONS: In the passage that follows, certain words and phrases are underlined and numbered. In the right-hand column, you will find alternatives for the underlined part. In most cases, you are to choose the one that best expresses the idea, makes the statement appropriate for standard written English, or is worded most consistently with the style and tone of the passage as a whole. If you think the original version is best, choose "NO CHANGE." In some cases, you will find in the right-hand column a question about the underlined part. You are to choose the best answer to the question. You will also find questions about a section of the passage, or about the passage as a whole. These questions do not refer to an underlined portion of the passage, but rather are identified by a number or numbers in a box. For each question, choose the alternative you consider best and fill in the corresponding oval on your answer document. Read the passage through once before you begin to answer the questions that accompany it. For many of the questions, you must read several sentences beyond the question to determine the answer. Be sure that you have read far enough ahead each time you choose an alternative.
Bessie Coleman: In Flight
[1]
 

    After
practice landing, the French instructor nodded to the
young African-American woman at the controls and
jumped down to the ground. Bessie Coleman was on

1.
A. NO CHANGE
 
B.
one finally ultimate
 
C.
one final
 
D.
one last final



her own now. She lined the nose of the open

2.
F. NO CHANGE

  G. off
  H. along
  J. OMIT the underlined portion.




cockpit biplane on the runway's center gave
the engine full throttle, and took off into history. [2]
    It was a long journey from the American

3.
A. NO CHANGE
  B. mark,
  C. mark, Coleman
  D. mark that




born in 1893, to these French skies.

4.
F. NO CHANGE
  G. Southwest that she'd been
  H. Southwest, where she'd been
  J. Southwest, she was





There hadn't been much of a future for her in Oklahoma

5.
A. NO CHANGE
  B. It is now just about a century since the year of her birth.
  C. Just about a century has passed since the year of her birth.
  D. OMIT the underlined portion.


The best answer is D. The most appropriate decision is to delete the information-presented in Choices A, B, and C in different phrasings-that Bessie Coleman was born about a century ago. This information is a mere digression in terms of the focus or development of this essay. It sidetracks the readers. Besides, it provides information that readers could easily infer on their own, since they are told in the previous sentence that Coleman was born in 1893.

then. After
at Langston Industrial College, Coleman headed for
Chicago to see what could be done to realize a dream.
Ever since she saw her first airplane when she was
a little girl, Coleman had known that someday, somehow,
she would fly. [3]
    Try as she might, however, Coleman could
not obtain flying lessons anywhere in the city. Then

6.
F. NO CHANGE
  G. a year
  H. a year like two full semesters
  J. one year filled with two semesters



she sought aid from Robert S. of the Chicago
Weekly Defender.
The newspaperman got in touch
with a flight school in France that was willing to
teach this determined young woman to fly. [4]

7.
A. NO CHANGE
  B. Abbott:
  C. Abbott, whose
  D. Abbott;



    [1] While one of her
instructors Anthony Fokker, the famous aircraft
designer. [2] Bessie Coleman took a quick course in

8.
F. NO CHANGE
  G. they're
  H. there,
  J. there, she had as


The best answer is J. It proposes the correct form of the adverb (there) and ensures that the main clause is a complete sentence. Choices F and G are both wrong because they propose using the contracted form of they are. Although they're sounds like there, it has a different meaning, which would not make sense in the context of this sentence. Choice H proposes the correct adverb but also proposes deleting "she had as," which would create a sentence fragment: "While there, one of her instructors Anthony Fokker, the famous aircraft designer."

French, her affairs, and sailed for

9.
A. NO CHANGE
  B. as if to settle
  C. to settle
  D. settled


The best answer is D. It logically presents this sentence as a series of three verb phrases, all in the simple past tense. Choices A, B, and C all incorrectly attempt to relate the second phrase in this series to the first phrase. There is no information in this essay nor any logic to support the idea that "Bessie Coleman took a quick course in French, to settle her affairs" (Choice C) or "took a quick course in French, as if to settle her affairs" (Choice B). Likewise, the sense of probability or expectation or futurity that might be expressed by "should she settle her affairs" has no logical support in the context of this essay.


Europe. [3] Coping with a foreign language
and flying in capricious, unstable machines held
together with baling wire was daunting, but Coleman

10.
F. NO CHANGE
  G. (Place after with)
  H. (Place after flying)
  J. (Place after in)



persevered. [5]
    On June 15, 1921, Bessie
11. Which of the following sequences of sentences will make Paragraph 4 most logical?
  A. NO CHANGE
  B. 1, 3, 2
  C. 2, 1, 3
  D. 3, 2, 1




issued by the International Aeronautical Federation.
Not only was she the first black woman to win her
pilot's wings, she was the first American woman to
hold this coveted license. [6]
    She was ready for a triumphant return to the

12.
F. NO CHANGE
  G. Coleman earned an international pilot's license
  H. Coleman, earned an international pilot's license
  J. Coleman earned an international pilot's license;



United States to barnstorm and that if

13.
A. NO CHANGE
  B. lecture and proof
  C. lecture, proof
  D. lecture proof,



the will is one's dream can be
attained.

14.
F. NO CHANGE
  G. stronger than
  H. strongly enough,
  J. strong enough,


The best answer is J. It effectively coordinates the various elements of this noun clause, which is functioning as an appositive for the subject of the main clause of this sentence. The entire noun clause should read: "proof that if the will is strong enough, one's dream can be attained." You will see that within this noun clause, which is already serving a secondary role in terms of the main clause of the sentence, there is a main clause ("one's dream can be attained") and a subordinate clause related to that main clause by the conjunction if ("the will is strong enough"). Choice H is wrong because it proposes an adverb (strongly) where a predicate adjective is required. Choices F and G are both wrong because they coordinate these clauses in ways that don't make sense and that make clause fragments: "if the will is strong enough for one's dream can be attained" (Choice F) and "if the will is stronger than one's dream can be attained" (Choice G).




The writer intends to add the following sentence to the essay in order to provide a comparison that would help underline the challenges that Bessie Coleman faced: Her dream of becoming the world's first black woman pilot seemed as remote in Chicago as it had been in Oklahoma. In order to accomplish this purpose, it would be most logical and appropriate to place this sentence after the:
 

15.
A. first sentence in Paragraph 2.
  B. first sentence in Paragraph 3.
  C. last sentence in Paragraph 3.
  D. first sentence in Paragraph 5.