<p>and do them correctly?I see the explanations,they go like : comma splice,no verb etc... but i don't even spot the error! I can barely identify if the sentence is a comma splice.Call me stupid.But I just go like this seems the right one..without referring to grammatical rules.Of course,I pay attention to general ones,but I answer most of the questions in grammar section based on my feelings:
A) it's so awkward
B) Meh
C)Good
D)retarded
E)Fits perfectly </p>
<p>I choose E.The explanation goes like E corrects the bla bla bla I didn't even pay attention to what it corrects I just chose it because I felt it is the right one! It isn't " a chance" or just a dead end,I've done a lot of practice tests and relied on this..and still I get over 600 in writing section</p>
<p>That’ll get you over 600, if you’re fluent in English, but it won’t get you to the really high scores. In fact, the test is designed to reveal people who do it “by ear” like you do.</p>
<p>I speak English Natively, and never could do ANY grammar stuff. I know absolutely nothing of “comma splice” “pluperfect subjunctive violation” and all that stuff lol.</p>
<p>Like you I did the ACT and SAT completely by “right sound” and got a 700 on SAT grammar and a 32 on ACT English (2220, 35)</p>
<p>A lot of people inherently know grammar rules from years of schoolwork, even if they don’t know the official names for those rules. For example, just by looking at the sentence “The dog was red, it was big” you know that something is wrong without ever hearing the term ‘comma splice’.</p>