Every sentence boundary error on the SAT comes down to one question: are two independent clauses being joined correctly? Two clauses, four legal ways to join them, and one test to diagnose anything that goes wrong.
When you have two independent clauses, exactly four structures are legal. Any other structure is a run-on or comma splice.
| Joiner | Structure | Example | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| . Period | IC. IC. | The study was inconclusive. Further research is needed. | Always correct. Two separate sentences. Safest option on the SAT. |
| ; Semicolon | IC; IC. | The results were surprising; no one had predicted this outcome. | Both sides must be independently valid sentences. Do NOT use a comma here. |
| , + FANBOYS Coordinating conjunction | IC, FANBOYS IC. | The study was limited, but the findings were compelling. For · And · Nor · But · Or · Yet · So |
Comma BEFORE the FANBOYS word — not after. Both sides must be ICs. |
| Sub. conjunction Subordinating | IC [sub.conj. DC]. or [Sub.conj. DC], IC. |
The results shifted after the team reanalysed the data. Although funding was limited, the study proceeded. |
Creates a DC, so no additional joiner needed. Common: although, because, since, while, when, if, unless, as, after, before, until. |
✓ The experiment — which had taken three years to design — produced unexpected results.✗ The experiment — which had taken three years to design produced unexpected results.✗ The scientist — a pioneer in the field, changed the way we understood immunity.✓ The scientist — a pioneer in the field — changed the way we understood immunity.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to Standard English conventions?
Key: C is the only option that legally joins two independent clauses (comma + FANBOYS "yet"). B is the comma splice trap. D is a semicolon followed by a dependent clause — illegal. A creates a dependent clause but leaves the first clause without a joiner.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to Standard English conventions?
Key: Whenever you see an opening dash in a sentence, the next punctuation mark that closes that parenthetical must be another dash. The comma (A) and semicolon (D) both mismatch. No punctuation (B) leaves the structure unclosed.
14 questions — comma splices, run-ons, fragments, and dash rules. Guided questions ask you to label clauses before answering. Timed section includes semicolon traps and paired-dash closure questions.
Open Session 10 Exercises →