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Unit 2

Unit 2. Unit Assessment Review for Unit 2 7 th grade. Relative Pronouns- NOTES 7.19Avi. relative pronoun [who, whom, whose, that, or which] Usually used for adjective and adverb clauses. Examples as follow :.

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Unit 2

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  1. Unit 2 Unit Assessment Review for Unit 2 7th grade

  2. Relative Pronouns- NOTES 7.19Avi • relative pronoun [who, whom, whose, that, or which] • Usually used for adjective and adverb clauses. • Examples as follow:

  3. Underline the relative pronouns & answer the question that follows the sentence- ACTIVITY7.19Avi 1. To calm his angry girlfriend, Joey offered an apology which Francine did not accept. What did Francine not accept?_______________ 2. We tried our luck at the same flea market where George found Amazing Spider-Man #96 in fair condition. • Where did he find the comic book?__________________________

  4. 7.19Avi 3. Michelle screamed when she saw the spider that dangled from the one clean bathroom towel. What is it that dangled from the towel?_______ 4. Brian said goodnight to his roommate Justin, who continued to play video games until his eyes were blurry with fatigue. Who continued to play the games?___________

  5. Appositive Phrases- NOTES 7.19Aii • Is a noun phrase that follows the noun or pronoun it identifies or renames. • If it doesn’t rename or identify the noun, it isn’t an appositive phrase. • Use commas when the phrase is not necessary to the meaning of the sentence. • Example: My dog, a black dachshund named Coco, chews any shoes left out.

  6. Underline the appositive phrase and add commas.- ACTIVTY 7.19Aii • A talented man my father was often asked to play the piano at parties. • Bill Peschak my trumpet teacher plays with the symphony. • Trigger a palomino was Roy Rogers’ horse. • Vegetables the leafy kind make excellent contributions to the diet. • The house a log cabin had a green door. • We always look forward to Thanksgiving dinner a wonderful meal. • Kareem the new boy at school sings very well. • Have you met Mrs. Fernandez our substitute teacher?

  7. Clauses –NOTES 7.19B, 7.19Avii • An independent (Main)clause is the same as a simple sentence. It has a subject and a predicate (verb). It may also have an object and modifiers, such as adjectives, adverbs, and/or phrases. • A dependent (subordinate) clause is a group of related words that contains a subject and a verb but that cannot stand alone. It requires the addition of an independent clause to make it a complete thought.

  8. Sentence Types –NOTES 7.19B, 7.19Avii • Compound Sentences are made up of 2 independent (main) clauses joined together by a comma and a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS) OR by a semicolon. • Complex Sentences are made up of at least one independent clause and a dependent clause joined together through the use of a subordinating conjunction.

  9. Compound Sentences- Activity7.19B, 7.19Avii Separate the independent (Main) clauses by circling the coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS). Label each clause as Ind/Main • The cat was unsuccessful in his attempt to catch the mouse, and the mouse was equally as unlucky in his attempt to get the cheese. • The dog had watched all of this, but he had refused to become involved. • The mouse could wait until dark, or he could risk a daylight raid on the pantry. • The cat usually slept during the day, yet curiosity held him at the corner of the kitchen.

  10. Complex Sentences- ACTIVITY7.19B, 7.19Avii Separate the independent (Main) clauses from the Dependent (Subordinate) Clauses with a slash mark. Then label each clause as either Ind/Main or Dep/Sub • After he gave it some thought, the mouse decided to wait until later for his trek. • The cat fell asleep on the warm kitchen because he was deprived of sleep the night before. • When the mouse heard the soft snoring of his sleeping nemesis, he scurried to the pantry and grabbed enough food for a week. • The dedicated, feline sleuth keeps his nightly vigil even though the foresighted mouse will not be venturing out this week.

  11. Complex Sentences- Commas- NOTES 7.19B, 7.19Avii • When a complex sentence begins with a dependent (subordinate) clause, a comma is needed to separate it from the independent (main) clause. • When a complex sentence begins with the independent (main) clause the subordinating conjunction that begins the dependent (subordinate) clause acts to separate the clauses so no comma is needed.

  12. Complex Sentences- Commas- ACTIVITY Add Commas where needed 7.19B, 7.19Avii 1. When he handed in his homework he forgot to give the teacher the last page. 2. The teacher returned the homework after she noticed the error. 3. The students are studying because they have a test tomorrow.4. After they finished studying Juan and Maria went to the movies. 5. Juan and Maria went to the movies after they finished studying.

  13. Subject Verb Agreement-NOTES7.19Av • Singular subjects need singular verbs; plural subjects need plural verbs. • My brother is a nutritionist. • My sisters are mathematicians. • Sometimes modifiers will get between a subject and its verb, but these modifiers must not confuse the agreement between the subject and its verb. • The mayor, who has been convicted along with his four brothers on four counts of various crimes but who also seems, like a cat, to have several political lives, is finally going to jail.

  14. Subject Verb Agreement-ACTIVITY7.19Av The trick is to identify the subject and ignore the prepositional phrase. • That silk flower by the candles (look, looks) real. • One of my son’s worst habits (is, are) leaving an assortment of dirty plates on the kitchen counter. • The rust spots on the back of Emily’s car (need, needs) to be cleaned with a special polish. • The collection of medicine bottles in my parents’ bathroom (overflow, overflows) the cabinet shelves. • 10. A tired-looking student in my class (sleep, sleeps) through most of the lectures.

  15. Capitalization Rules Review- NOTES 7.20A • The first word of a sentence. 9. Salutation of a letter • Titles that goes with names. 10. Closing of a letter • Proper Nouns 11. Sections of a country • Names of races and religions 12. Geographical places • Names of SPECIFIC educational courses 13. Monuments • Names of languages 14. Titles of books • Day of the week 15. Titles of newspaper articles 8. Historical documents 16. Letters used to indicate shape

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