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The SAT Punctuation Cheat Sheet

Every comma, semicolon, colon, and dash rule the digital SAT tests, on one printable page. It all hangs on a single question: is each side a complete thought or not? Answer that and the marks stop being a guessing game.

Short version: before you pick a mark, decide whether the words on each side of it form a complete thought (can stand alone as a sentence) or an incomplete one. Almost every punctuation question is testing that one distinction. Your ear is not.
 Read the full method
The one question behind every punctuation item:
  • Complete thought = has a subject and a verb and could be its own sentence. "The squirrel filed taxes."
  • Incomplete thought = cannot stand alone. "After the squirrel filed taxes…" or "a nervous accountant"

Label both sides first, then use the tables below. Want the reasoning and the traps in full? Read the punctuation method.

Joining two complete thoughts

This is the most tested rule on the whole section. When both sides could stand alone, you have exactly four legal joins and one illegal one.

JoinHow it works
PeriodJust make two sentences. Simplest fix, often the right one.
SemicolonA "fancy period" for two closely related complete thoughts. The plan was cheap; it failed.
Comma + FANBOYSThe only way a comma may join them, paired with for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so.
Colon / dashAllowed when the second thought explains or delivers the first. She had one goal: to win.
Comma aloneIllegal. Two complete thoughts + just a comma = a comma splice, the test's favorite trap.

Fast tip: if a period and a semicolon are both answer choices and the rest is identical, neither is the answer. They do the same job, and a question can't have two right answers.

The four marks, at a glance

MarkThe rule
Comma ,Separates, never joins two complete thoughts alone. Used for intro phrases, non-essential asides, lists, and before a FANBOYS.
Semicolon ;Needs a complete thought on both sides (works like a period). Exception: the super-comma in a messy list.
Colon :Needs a complete thought before it. After it: a list, an explanation, or a single word.
Dash One dash works like a colon (complete thought, then a reveal). A pair works like a pair of commas, walling off an aside.

Comma rules the SAT actually tests

Use a comma

yes
SituationExample
After an intro elementAfter filing taxes, the squirrel relaxed.
Around non-essential infoThe pigeon, a former pilot, rented a helicopter.
Before FANBOYS joining two complete thoughtsIt rained, but the game went on.
Between items in a listmaps, snacks, and a flashlight

Do not use a comma

no
TrapWhy it's wrong
Between a subject and its verbThe squirrel, filed taxes. Nothing separates a subject from its verb.
Around essential infoIf the sentence needs the phrase to make sense, don't wall it off. The delete test decides.
To join two complete thoughts aloneThat's the comma splice. Use a period, semicolon, or comma + FANBOYS.
Wherever you'd "pause"Your ear is not a rule. Points leak here.

The traps the test repeats

TrapThe rule it breaks
Comma spliceTwo complete thoughts joined by only a comma. Needs a stronger join.
Colon after an incomplete thoughtHer kit included: rope and a map. "Her kit included" can't stand alone, so no colon.
Mismatched pairWhatever opens an aside must close it. You can't start with a comma and end with a dash.
Semicolon with an incomplete sideA semicolon needs a complete thought on both sides, just like a period.
Two interchangeable choicesIf two options do the same job (period vs. semicolon), neither is correct. The question is steering you elsewhere.

The semicolon's second job: the super-comma

When a list's items already contain commas, semicolons become the stronger separator so the items don't blur together: Paris, France; Rome, Italy; and Rio, Brazil. This is the one time a semicolon does not need a complete thought on both sides.

None of this rewards a good ear, which is exactly why it is reliable once you switch to labeling complete and incomplete thoughts. Forge can tell you whether punctuation is a quiet point-leak for you, and these are among the fastest points on the test to win back, because the rules are finite and the same handful of traps keep coming around.

Find your fastest points to recover.

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