Form Structure and Sense SAT Grammar

Subject-verb agreement, verb tense, modifier placement, pronouns, and possessives

This is the SAT grammar skill that tests agreement, tense, modifiers, pronouns, and possessives. The sentence has an error hiding in it. Your job: find the version that follows the rules.

Why this matters

Form, Structure, and Sense covers the core grammar rules the SAT cares about — agreement, tense, modifiers, pronouns, and possessives. Students who "go with their gut" get tricked because the SAT deliberately writes wrong answers that sound natural. Knowing the five patterns means you can check each rule mechanically instead of guessing.

The five patterns

The biggest trap: dangling modifiers that sound fine. "Having studied all night, the exam seemed easy" sounds okay — but "the exam" didn't study all night. The SAT counts on you reading too fast. Always check: does the noun right after the comma actually do the action in the opening phrase?

Learn the pattern. Then lock it in.

The SAT repeats question patterns. Miss them, and you lose points. Recognize them fast, and you gain points. JustLockedIn shows you which patterns are hurting your score and gives you focused practice to fix them.

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