All Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts
Which of the following best completes the sentence below?
___________ is one of my favorite ways to stay in shape.
I run
Ran
Running
Run
Running
Answer: Running. Here running is used as a gerund, a verb form that serves as a noun. You’re looking for a thing - a way to stay in shape - and of the options “running” is the only gerund that can perform the role of a noun.
Example Question #1 : Language
Which of the following best completes the sentence below?
Melodi is an avid artist whose favorite hobbies are _________ and sculpture.
using paint
paint
painting
to paint
painting
Answer: “painting” Here you’re looking for a noun that can pair with “sculpture” as a hobby for someone who likes art. “Painting” is a gerund, a verb form used as a noun (other -ing gerunds that make good hobbies are swimming, running, dancing, eating…), and fits perfectly: painting is a hobby. “Using paint” could also be considered a gerund but note that the structure “using paint and sculpture” seems to suggest that she’s using both paint and sculpture, when really the hobby is creating sculpture. So that is incorrect. The same goes for “to paint and sculpture” making it sound like “to sculpture” is the hobby. Finally “paint” is a noun, but it’s not a hobby - it’s something you might use while pursuing your hobby.
Example Question #2 : Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts
Which of the following best completes the sentence below?
Melodi is an avid artist whose favorite hobbies are _________ and sculpture.
paint
painting
using paint
to paint
painting
Here you’re looking for a noun that can pair with “sculpture” as a hobby for someone who likes art. “Painting” is a gerund, a verb form used as a noun (other -ing gerunds that make good hobbies are swimming, running, dancing, eating…), and fits perfectly: painting is a hobby. “Using paint” could also be considered a gerund but note that the structure “using paint and sculpture” seems to suggest that she’s using both paint and sculpture, when really the hobby is creating sculpture. So that is incorrect. The same goes for “to paint and sculpture” making it sound like “to sculpture” is the hobby. Finally “paint” is a noun, but it’s not a hobby - it’s something you might use while pursuing your hobby.
Example Question #3 : Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts
___________ merely by the scary music signifying the main character was in danger, Joshua hid behind the couch for the remainder of the movie.
Frightened
He was frightened
Frightening
To frighten
Frightened
The word “frightened” is a verb used as an adjective in this case, describing that Joshua was frightened by the scary movie. Because the phrase beginning with “frightened” appears next to a comma and then a complete thought (“Joshua hid behind the couch” could be its own sentence) you must use “frightened” as a modifier here, meaning that it should not get its own subject (e.g. “he was frightened”). You cannot connect two complete clauses with merely a comma (you need to have a coordinating conjunction like “and” or “but” after the comma to connect two clauses), so here you must simply have a verb used as an adjective, and “frightened” is the correct answer.
Example Question #4 : Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts
While enjoying a long run on a desolate dirt road, Joanna __________ by the sudden sound of a barking dog.
Which of the following best completes the blank above?
is startling
was startled
startled
startles
she became startled
was startled
Here the word “was” is used as a past-tense verb and “startled” is used as a description (a participle is a verb used to describe). Note that, when used as an active verb, “startled” requires a predicate: Joanna could have startled someone else or a dog, but you can’t say that she just “startled” without an object. The same goes for “startles” or “is startling” - neither has a recipient of the phrase “Joanna startles _____” so neither can be correct. And “she became startled” is a redundant phrase since the word “Joanna” immediately precedes the blank, so you don’t need “she” as a subject - you already have the subject “Joanna.”
Example Question #5 : Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts
Laura spent most of last summer at Lake Geneva, swimming with her friends every day and she enjoyed campfires every night.
she swam with her friends every day and was enjoying
NO CHANGE
swimming with her friends every day and she enjoyed
swimming with her friends every day and enjoying
swimming with her friends every day and enjoying
This sentence employs two -ing verbs as participial modifiers, a verb form used to describe. Notice that the sentence could end where the comma is: “Laura spent most of last summer at Lake Geneva” would be a perfectly grammatical and informative sentence. After the comma, “swimming...and enjoying” tells us more about how she spent that summer at the lake - it adds extra description and therefore fits a common type of verbal, an -ing participial modifier following a comma at the end of a complete clause. With the other answer choices, if you were to select NO CHANGE the verbs “swimming” and “she enjoyed” are not in the same tense even though they took place during the same time frame, and that is a mistake. The same mismatched tense mistake is inherent in the other wrong choices, and also note that the answer beginning with “she swam” leads the after-comma portion with a noun + verb - an independent clause - which cannot be separated by merely a comma (it requires a coordinating conjunction such as “and” or “so” to follow the comma).
Example Question #6 : Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts
__________ by her friend Pankaj’s propensity for cancelling plans at the last minute, Melissa vowed to simply not accept his invitations anymore.
Annoys
Annoying
Annoyed
Annoy
She annoys
Annoyed
Answer: Annoyed. The word “annoyed” here is used as a participle, a verb used as an adjective. Often the -ed form of a verb - looking like past tense - is used in a modifying phrase to begin a sentence; look for a phrase beginning with -ed, then a comma, then a person’s name and you’ll generally have that structure of a description of a person, then that person as the subject of the sentence.
Annoying could also be used as a participle, but it doesn’t fit in this instance because it doesn’t describe the subject, Melissa - she’s not the one annoying someone, she’s the one who has become annoyed by Pankaj.
Example Question #7 : Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts
In the profile that he submitted to the yearbook committee, Will listed his hobbies as photography, _______, and travel.
cooking
to cook
he cooks
cooks
cook
cooking
Cooking here is used as a gerund, a verb form used as a noun. Note that Will’s other hobbies - photography and travel - are each nouns, so to have a parallel and consistent list of items we need the blank to be a noun, also. The -ing form of verbs (cooking, sailing, swimming, hiking) can be used as a gerund, and you will often find it used for actions in lists of hobbies or activities.
Example Question #8 : Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts
___________ by a cupcake competition show she had seen on TV, Ally became enamored with __________ -- much to the delight of her family who got to taste all of her latest culinary creations.
Which of the following pairs of words, in order, best fills the blanks above?
Inspiring...baking
Inspired...baked
Inspired...baking
Inspiring...baked
To inspire...to bake
Inspired...baking
The first blank should use the word “inspired” as a participle, a verb used to describe. Note that the portion before the comma does not have a subject doing the verb “inspire” so it is there to modify the noun immediately after the comma, Ally. Note, too, the word “by” that follows the blank. You can certainly be inspired by something, but to say that you are “inspiring by” means that you’re the subject, and clearly here Ally is the one being inspired.
The second blank uses “baking” as a gerund, a verb used as a noun. Ally has become enamored with a new thing, and that thing is baking.
Example Question #10 : Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts
While to some it was simply a tree, the grand old oak became Jessica’s best summertime friend, provided shade from the hot sun and serving as both swingset and jungle gym.
became Jessica’s best friend, providing shade from the hot sun and acting
became Jessica’s best summertime friend, providing shade from the hot sun and serving
NO CHANGE
becoming Jessica’s best summertime friend, providing shade from the hot sun, it acted
became Jessica’s best friend, providing shade from the hot sun and acting
Here the first verb “became” needs to be an active verb so that this is a properly constructed sentence. The main clause of the sentence is “the oak became Jessica’s friend” (the phrase “while to some it was simply a tree” is a dependent clause that does have a subject and verb, but due to the word “while” it cannot stand alone as a sentence).
Later in the sentence, “providing” and “acting” are participles, verbs used to describe. The -ing form of a verb is very commonly used at the ends of complete clauses following a comma to tell us more about the action. Here these participles tell us how the tree acted as a friend to Jessica: it provided shade and acted as a variety of playground equipment.
Note that two answer choices mix the verb tenses past the comma: “providing and acted” and “provided and acting.” While you could have a list of three past tense verbs (the oak became, provided, and acted) as a list of things the oak did, you cannot mix and match verbs in a list. Since each of those sentences has at least one -ing verb and one -ed verb, you’re not dealing with a list of three verbs, so you know that the -ing verbs are being set up as participles.
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