dolphin

SAT Reading and Writing skill page

SAT Boundaries Between Clauses Practice

Check whether each side of the punctuation can stand alone as a complete clause.

10-16 min practice time 3 examples on page Standard English Conventions
Practice time 10-16 min
On-page examples 3 examples
Best for Standard English Conventions

What this tests

What to know for this SAT skill

Practice examples

Try a few SAT-style questions

Example 1 Easy

Which choice correctly joins the clauses? The data were incomplete ___ the team repeated the trial.

  1. ,
  2. ;
  3. because
  4. and because
Show answer and explanation

Answer: ;

Both sides are complete clauses, so a semicolon can join them.

Example 2 Medium

Which sentence avoids a run-on?

  1. The battery failed the device shut down.
  2. The battery failed, the device shut down.
  3. The battery failed, so the device shut down.
  4. The battery, failed so the device shut down.
Show answer and explanation

Answer: The battery failed, so the device shut down.

A comma plus the coordinating conjunction so correctly joins the clauses.

Example 3 Hard

Which punctuation best completes the sentence? The museum opened a new exhibit ___ visitors lined up around the block.

  1. ,
  2. ;
  3. :
  4. because
Show answer and explanation

Answer: ;

The two complete clauses are closely related and can be joined by a semicolon.

Quick drills

Practice this skill from more angles

Drill 1

Identify independent and dependent clauses

Pause before the answer choices, write the rule or setup you need, then check whether the question is asking for the value, the relationship, or the best-supported conclusion.

Drill 2

Fix run-ons and comma splices

Pause before the answer choices, write the rule or setup you need, then check whether the question is asking for the value, the relationship, or the best-supported conclusion.

Drill 3

Choose periods, semicolons, commas, and conjunctions

Pause before the answer choices, write the rule or setup you need, then check whether the question is asking for the value, the relationship, or the best-supported conclusion.

Drill 4

Avoid punctuation that separates words that belong together

Pause before the answer choices, write the rule or setup you need, then check whether the question is asking for the value, the relationship, or the best-supported conclusion.

Avoid these traps

Common mistakes on this skill

Solving before naming the task

The SAT often hides the real skill inside familiar wording. Identify the rule, relationship, or question type first.

Choosing an answer that only partly fits

Many wrong answers are close. Check every condition in the question before committing.

Skipping the final check

Reread what the question asks for so you do not answer a nearby but different question.

Study plan

How to practice this skill in Dolphin

  1. Read the question and name the tested skill before looking at the choices.
  2. Write the equation, rule, or passage relationship in plain language.
  3. Eliminate answers that violate the setup or overstate the evidence.
  4. Review misses by writing the exact trap that pulled you toward the wrong answer.
Practice boundaries between clauses in Dolphin SAT

Related practice

Build the surrounding skills

Skill cluster

Keep practicing SAT Reading and Writing

FAQ

Questions about SAT Boundaries Between Clauses Practice

What is the best way to practice SAT Boundaries Between Clauses Practice?

Start with a few focused examples, review the mistake pattern, then mix the skill into full SAT practice so you can recognize it in context.

Why does this skill matter on the SAT?

It shows up in short, high-leverage questions where one missed rule or setup can quickly cost a point.

Can Dolphin SAT help me drill this skill?

Yes. Dolphin SAT can surface targeted practice, track missed questions, and help you review the patterns that keep repeating.