Monday, December 13, 2010

Relative Clauses

A relative clause is inserted into the middle of an independent clause and it acts as an adjective: it gives a description about the subject of the independent clause.

The three words that most often start a relative clause are that, which and who.

When starting a relative clause with "that," there is no need for commas. For example:

IC: The book is really good.
IC with RC: The book that I'm reading now is really good.

However, when starting a relative clause with who or which, you do need to separate the relative clause from the rest of the sentence with commas. For example:

IC: Johnny runs faster than anyone I've ever seen.
IC with RC: Johnny, who won the state championship last year, runs faster than anyone I've ever seen.

IC: Mom-mom is coming over for dinner.
IC with RC: Mom-mom, which is what I call my grandmother, is coming over for dinner.

Your Assignment:
Create six independent clauses and then create an independent clause with a relative clause from the independent clause, justu like I did above. So, six sets of sentences.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Independent and Dependent Clauses

THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION WAS PROVIDED IN PART BY PURDUE UNIVERSITY'S WEBSITE

Identifying Independent and Dependent Clauses
Summary: This handout defines dependent and independent clauses and explores how they are treated in standard usage.

When you want to use commas and semicolons in sentences and when you are concerned about whether a sentence is or is not a fragment, a good way to start is to be able to recognize dependent and independent clauses. The definitions offered here will help you with this.

Independent Clause

An independent clause is a group of words that contains a subject and verb and expresses a complete thought. An independent clause is a sentence.

Ex: Jim studied in the Sweet Shop for his chemistry quiz.

Dependent Clause

A dependent clause is a group of words that contains a subject and verb but does not express a complete thought. A dependent clause cannot be a sentence. Often a dependent clause is marked by a dependent marker word.

Ex: When Jim studied in the Sweet Shop for his chemistry quiz . . . (What happened when he studied? The thought is incomplete.)

Dependent Marker Word

A dependent marker word is a word added to the beginning of an independent clause that makes it into a dependent clause.

Ex: When Jim studied in the Sweet Shop for his chemistry quiz, it was very noisy.

Some common dependent markers are: after, although, as, as if, because, before, even if, even though, if, in order to, since, though, unless, until, whatever, when, whenever, whether, and while.

Your assignment:
This week, you will create six independent clauses and six sentences that begin with dependent clauses created from each of the independent clauses.

For example:

IC (independent clause): I went to the beach.
DCS (dependent clause sentence): After I went to the beach, I stopped for ice cream.

IC: Mark went to the museum.
DCS: Because Mark went to the museum, he developed an interest in sculpture.

IC: I babysit to earn money.
DCS: Until I babysit to earn money, I can't afford an iPod.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Compound Sentences, Take 2

From our first experience with compound sentences, I see that many of you still don't have it down. So we're going to try again, and I'll explain it a bit differently.

As we get more mature and adult in our lives, we also want to be more mature and adult in our writing. So something like this...

I like to ride my bike. I hate skating.

sounds babyish. So what we want to do is combine the two ideas into one compound sentence by joining the two sentences with a comma and a conjunction, like this:

I like to ride my bike, but I hate skating.

See? More sophisticated, right? You still have a complete sentence on both sides of the comma/conjunction, but the writing is more grown-up.

Now, there are situations where you want to join two thoughts, but you don't need two complete sentences in one compound sentence. This happens when your two separate sentences have the same subject (who the sentence is about) or the same verb (the action of the sentence). Let me show you.

I like baseball. I watch it on TV.

Both of these sentences have the same subject (I), so you don't need a compound sentence. You can combine them so that you have one subject and the two verbs (like and watch), like this:

I like baseball and watch it on TV.

Even though there is the conjunction joining the two ideas, it's not a compound sentence because only what's on the first side of the conjunction (and) can stand alone as its own sentence.

Here's another example with a shared verb.

Debbie rides bikes. I ride bikes.

If it were a compound sentence, it would sound a little babyish: Debbie rides bikes, and I ride bikes. So we want to combine these two ideas two have two subjects (Debbie and I) that share one verb (ride), like this:

Debbie and I ride bikes.

Starting to make more sense?

So for the homework this week, please create three sentences in which you combine two sentences into a compound sentence. Then, create three sentences in which you combine two sentences into one sentence with a shared subject or shared verb.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Compound Sentences

A compound sentence is a sentence that is created by joining two or more independent sentences with a conjunction and, in many cases to prevent a run-on sentence, a comma.

Examples of conjunctions:

F A N B O Y S
for and nor but or yet so

Other examples:

before
since
because
although
while
if
unless
whether

THE MAIN THING ABOUT A COMPOUND SENTENCE IS THAT WHAT'S ON EITHER SIDE OF THE CONJUNCTION COULD STAND ALONE AS A SENTENCE.

Example:
Peter went to the store, but he did not go to the post office.

Non-example:
Peter went to the store but not the post office. ("Not the post office" is not a complete sentence - there's no verb.)

Example:
I did my homework, and I also did all of my chores.

Non-example:
I did my homework and all of my chores.

Example:
I should have been allowed to go to the movies since I did all of my chores.

Non-example:
I should have since I did all of my chores.

YOUR HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT:
You are to write three examples and three non-examples of compound sentences. Unoriginal responses (copied or too close to someone else's post) will not receive credit.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Homonyms

Take a look at this link, which is a list of homonyms (words that sound alike, but have different spellings and meanings).

www.cooper.com/alan/homonym_list.html

Which set of words do you already get, and how? Which set gives you trouble and why do you think you get stuck on it? And what new information did you realize about a set of homonyms by reading through this list?

Monday, September 27, 2010

Ugh!

What is the one rule around grammar, mechanics or word usage that just always trips you up? What strategies do you use to try to get it right every time? Give examples of situations when you've found yourself struggling. If you can, provide that classmate with a suggestion that will help solve her/his problem.