adjectives modify nouns & adverbs modify verbs
act english often tests your ability to distinguish between adjectives and adverbs. for example, you might see a sentence that says “what i love the most about my favorite restaurant its fast, politely service.” can you see the mistake? service is a noun, but politely is an adverb, so you’ll want to look for an answer choice that changes politely to polite. a similar act english sentence might say something like “the staff at the restaurant serve me very polite.” in that case, you need to change the adjective polite to adverb politely, so it can correctly describe the verb serve.
an ending of “ly” usually means that the word form is an adverbs… but not always!
this is a small rule that can trip you up if you scan a passage a little too quickly. yes, many words with “ly” at the end are adverbs, including quickly from the previous sentence, but there are also some common “ly” words that are not adverbs. scholarly is an adjective. monopoly is a noun. multiply is a verb.
there are other exceptions too. if you take a careful look at any of these in the text, you can immediately know their grammatical function. scan carefully so that you don’t make any mistakes as you answer the questions.
the verb and noun forms of a word are usually different
some words don’t change when they become a verb or noun. you can take a test, or you can test someone’s knowledge. more often the word form does change when the grammar function switches between noun and verb. compute (verb) becomes computation (noun), assess (verb) becomes assessment (noun), and so on.
the takeaway
words in written english often contain small but very important differences. if you miss these differences on the act, it will hurt your score. for a top score, teach yourself to notice these differences and recognize correct word forms quickly.
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