Friday, 24 May 2013

Word of the Day

There are millions of words to learn   everyday.
Let me teach you a new word today!  


                                     

Grammar

                             Grammar    
   
    


SENTENCE STRUCTURE
Every sentence must have at least a subject and a predicate. The subject is the focus of the sentence. The predicate describes the subject; it explains what the subject is or what the subject is doing. The completed idea is called a clause, and it is the building block of all sentences.



 




To construct a sentence:

Always have at least one independent clause in the sentence.

Join two independent clauses with a semicolon or a comma and a     
    conjunction.
Do not run two or more independent clauses together without punctuation; that    

    error is  a run-on.
    Wrong: Chaucer was a narrator and he was a pilgrim in his
Canterbury Tales.
Do not separate two independent clauses with just a comma; that error is called a    
    comma splice.
    Wrong: Chaucer was a narrator, he was a pilgrim in his Canterbury Tales.
Do not use a conjunctive adverb (the words accordingly, besides, consequently,   
   furthermore, Hence. however, instead, moreover, nevertheless, otherwise, then,therefore,    
   thus) like a conjunction.


 Questions

 1.  ________ Sarah drives to the cabin several times a year, she is often nervous about
      finding her way.
      A. Besides
      B. Unless
      C. Nevertheless
      D. Although

  2. The ticket said the show would start at 8:00, but the curtains didn’t go up 
     _________8:30.
     A. less than
     B. until
     C. about
     D. since

 Let’s have more practice HERE
    
Choose the sentence that best combines the underlined        
   sentences.

3. I must buy my dog a new license. If I don’t, I will have to pay a
       fine.
    A. I must buy my dog a new license, and I will have to pay a fine.
    B. I must buy my dog a new license; I will have to pay a fine.
    C. Unless I buy my dog a new license, I will have to pay a fine.
    D. I will have to pay a fine since I must buy my dog a new license.

4. Elizabeth is an athletic woman. Elizabeth cannot swim or ride a bike.
   A. Elizabeth cannot swim or ride a bike, while she is an athletic woman.
   B. Elizabeth cannot swim or ride a bike and is an athletic woman.
   C. Although Elizabeth cannot swim or ride a bike, she is an athletic woman.
   D. Being an athletic woman, Elizabeth cannot swim or ride a bike.



MODIFIERS                                       

                             
A modifier describes or limits another word. For example, adjectives and adverbs
 modify subjects and/or their actions in a sentence.


Types of Modifier    
 ✓ Adjectives modify nouns or pronouns. (Hint: An adjective answers one of 
      three questions: which one, what kind, or how many?)
 
Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, other adverbs, or whole groups 
      of words. 
     (Hint: An adverb answers one of four questions: where, when, 
       how, or to what extent?)

Comparatives are adjectives and adverbs used to compare two things.

 ✓ Superlatives are adjectives and adverbs used to compare more than two things



Questions

1. In many popular movies today, the heroes are ________ armed than the villains. 
    A. more heavily
    B. more heavy
    C. heavier
    D. more heavier

2. The cake I made last week tasted ________than the one I made today. 
    A. best
    B. more better
    C. better
    D. more good

  Let’s have more practice HERE
                                                              



AGREEMENT

Agreement is a very important step in constructing a coherent sentence. There are three basic agreements in a sentence:   subject-verb agreement, tense agreement, and antecedent-pronoun agreement.






Subject-Verb Agreement
If the subject is singular, the verb is singular; if the subject is plural, the verb is plural  
    Mrs.Hendrickson feeds the birds every day. Or: The Hendricksons feed the birds every    
   day.
Subjects joined by and are plural and receive a plural verbJolie and Lara swim together    
    every Thursday.
Subjects joined by or or nor adopt the singularity or plurality of the last subject; accordingly,    
    the verb matches itEither that cat or those dogs have been eating my snacks!

Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement

Each, either, neither, anybody, anyone, everybody, everyone, no one, nobody, one,    
   somebody, and someone are singular pronouns and receive singular verbs.
Both, few, many, and several are plural pronouns and receive plural verbs.
All, any, most, none, and some can be singular or plural pronouns, depending on their use.   
   These pronouns can receive plural or singular verbs.

 


~Practice Makes Perfect!

After understanding, let’s have some practice on 
SUBJECT-VERB AGREEMENT ,  TENSE AGREEMENT,   
ANTECEDENT-PRONOUN AGREEMENT !



  

VOCABULARY

Fill in the blanks with the words in the box.


term
instructions
specimen
acceptable
peer
mental

1. Make sure you read all the_______carefully before setting
    up the device.

2. There are special schools for students with ________disorders.

3. In most countries, schools have two______, or semesters, while
    in others there can be up to six.

4. When the space probe landed in Mars, the first thing it did was to take
    a(n) ______from the Martian soil.

5. Three days was simply not a(n)__________amount of time to complete
    such a lot of work.                                  

Answers



     ANSWERS


   Sentence structure :
         1.      D       2. B       3. C     4. C    

   
  Modifiers:
         1.      A       2.  C     

  

  
   Vocabulary:  
                                                 
                                                  1.      instructions
                                                  2.      mental
                                                  3.      term
                                                  4.      specimen
                                                  5.      acceptable