1 / 15

Last Minute Review for Final

Last Minute Review for Final. What should be on your Cheat Sheet. . Pre-writing techniques. Brainstorm Cluster Outline Freewrite. types of essays/paragraphs. Illustration Narration Description Process Analysis (giving directions). Vocabulary (Commonly confused words ).

asha
Télécharger la présentation

Last Minute Review for Final

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Last Minute Review for Final What should be on your Cheat Sheet.

  2. Pre-writing techniques • Brainstorm • Cluster • Outline • Freewrite

  3. types of essays/paragraphs • Illustration • Narration • Description • Process Analysis (giving directions)

  4. Vocabulary(Commonly confused words) • What are the MOST COMMON words on the list?

  5. Identify Sentence vsFragment • To be a sentence it needs: • Subject (who/what is doing the action) • Verb (the action) • A complete thought. • Watch out for those prepositional phrases! • Prepositional phrases can NEVER have the subject or the verb!

  6. Run-ons (Pg 145) • Run-ons are independent clauses that have been combined incorrectly. • There are several types: • The AND run-on • The Fused run-on • The comma splice We will be going into detail on each one

  7. The and run on (pg 146) • The AND run-on: two or more relatively long independent clauses with a coordinating conjunction without any punctuation. • I met Charlyce in a yoga class a the YWCA and we liked each other immediately and we soon became friends and we often hang out at each other’s houses.

  8. The Fused run on (pg 146) • The Fused run-on : two or more independent clauses run together without any punctuation. • I met Charlyce in a yoga class at the YWCA we soon became friends.

  9. Preposition (pg 41!!!!!) • Pg 41 • Video - http://ttosspon.wikispaces.com/Grammar+Rocks%21#Prepositions • Over the rainbow.

  10. Finding the Subject The person/thing doing the action

  11. Commands and Requests • In 'commands' and 'requests' the subject is usually not stated. The predicate is the entire sentence. The pronoun 'you' is understood to be the subject. Examples are: Listen! Please see me. Be careful. [You] [You] [You]

  12. Questions • Questions frequently begin with a verb or a helping verb or the words 'who, whom, what, when, where, why,or how.' examples are: • Did he reply? Have you read Nikki Giovanni's poetry? What do they sing? • In these cases, the subject generally follows the verb or helping verb. • To find the subject of a question, rearrange the words to form a statement. • Example: He did reply. You have read Nikki Giovanni's poetry. They do sing. Verb Verb Verb

  13. Inverted Sentence Order • A sentence written in 'inverted order', in which the predicate comes before the subject, serves to add emphasis to the subject. • Examples are: Under the moonlight sat the old cypress tree. Above the forest circled three hawks. Verb Verb

  14. Here and There • The word 'there' or 'here is' is almost never the subject. • When the word 'there' or 'here' begins a sentence and is followed by a form of the verb 'to be', the subject follows the verb. • Example: Here 'are' (P) the 'quilts' (S)from my grandma. • Rephrase it!The quiltsarefrom my grandmother.

  15. Prepositional Phrases • Remember, a word in a prepositional phrase is never the subject. • Prepositions are words that tell where or what kind. Word list on pg 41:

More Related