Sentence Skills Unit 6 Sentence Combining Sentence Unity and Coherence.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1. 2. · Designer:LI YU Teaching aims: 1.Revise some common grammars and language points. (Teaching Importances) 2.Manage to improve their ability of.
Advertisements

Construction of Clear Sentences and Paragraphs
Avoiding Fragments and Run-ons Writing with complete and proper sentences shows your command of Conventions “The pen is the tongue of the mind.”
Compound Sentences Complex Sentences Simple Sentence Compound-Complex
Jeopardy Phrases, Clauses, and Sentences Commas Semi- Colons Pronouns Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Common Sentence Errors Make your Writing More Clear and Interesting!
Revising your ICE Essay Tips to avoid Fragments & Run- On Sentences.
Sentence Combining Basic Guidelines. What is sentence combining? Combining short sentences and taking out the redundant elements to make more concise,
Have you ever been abroad? - Yes, I have. - No, I haven’t.
Avoiding Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers. What is a misplaced modifier?  A word, phrase, or clause that is improperly separated from the word it modifies/describes.
Fragments and Sentences © Capital Community College The Sentence is a group of words expressing a complete thought. expressing a complete thought.
Future Tense
Basic Sentence Structure This lesson comes from Grammar Troublespots by Ann Raimes. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1992.
Phrases & Clauses.
9 th Grade. Noun – person, place, thing, or idea Examples: The runner is very fast. The park is very beautiful. My book is heavy. The key to life is happiness.
Grammar Review.
Writing Effective Sentences. Misplaced Modifiers A misplaced modifier is a word, phrase, or clause that is improperly separated from the word it modifies.
© 2006 SOUTH-WESTERN EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING 11th Edition Hulbert & Miller Effective English for Colleges Chapter 12 EFFECTIVE SENTENCES.
Listening.
Avoiding Sentence Fragments
Peer Review Expectations Practice With Sentence Types.
Variety in structure & length. Why use variety in your sentences? Sentence variety is necessary for a number of reasons: Sentence variety makes your writing.
课标人教实验版 高一 Module 1 Unit 5. Listening 湖南 李日光 Listening P37 Using Language.
Basic Sentence Skills On-line Resource Adaptation EFS, Granville TAFE 2010.
Academic English I. Reading Review quiz Vocabulary from Unit 8 Reading Grammar Simple Past vs. Past Continuous Grammar in use Homework.
The Writing Process The process of writing varies for each individual who sets out to begin a task, however as a high school student, you are still developing.
FRAGMENTS AND RUN-ONS Identifying and Correcting Sentence Errors  Teri Tosspon Chapter 8, pg 142.
USING COMMAS CORRECTLY Using commas correctly is an important skill in writing clear sentences. LV4 Commas.ppt.
Complex Sentences How do you vary sentence structure? You will want to use a variety of sentence structures in your writing. There are three types of.
The 8 Parts of Speech What are the eight parts of speech? Noun Pronoun Adjective Verb Adverb Preposition Conjunction Interjection.
PUMPED-UP GRAMMAR! WHY BE A NUMBER- CRUNCHER WHEN YOU CAN BE A WORD-INATOR?! Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers.
Ms. López March 7th,  A modifier can be an adjective, an adverb, or a phrase or clause acting as an adjective or adverb.  In every case, the basic.
Adverbs and Prepositions
OVERVIEW OF VERB TENSE.
Sentence Skills Part 5 Sentence Combining --- Subordination.
Sentence Skills Part 6 Sentence Unity and Coherence.
Conjunctions Coordinate conjunctions- used to create compound sentences Subordinate conjunctions- used to create complex sentences. Correlative conjunctions-
Sentence Skills Part 7 Sentence Emphasis. Teaching Items Placement of important ideas Use of periodic sentences Climactic order Use of active voice Repetition.
LV4 Commas.ppt Using Commas Correctly Using commas correctly is an important skill in writing clear sentences. This presentation explains nine common uses.
Subject-Verb Agreement: The subject of a sentence specifies who or what the sentence is about. The subject consists of a simple subject and a complete.
Basic Sentence Skills On-line Resource Adaptation EFS, Granville TAFE 2010.
SENTENTIAL ERRORS IN WRITING
GE1153 COMPUTER IN EDUCATION
Verbals Bad, bad verbs Verbs that act like another part of speech Gerunds Participles Infinitives Bad, bad verbs Verbs that act like another part of speech.
Simple Past FORM Simple Past [VERB+ed] EXAMPLES: I visited my friends. I often visited my friends. NOTE: When you are using a verb tense with only.
Dangling Modifiers. Consider this sentence: Having finished the assignment, Jill turned on the TV.
Grammar Review. Clause vs. Phrase Clause: A group of related words with both a subject and a verb. May or may not be able to stand on its own. Phrase:
Unit 6 Grammar Forms & Functions 3
Amna khan Prof. Lauria 11/2/2015. What’s an adverb clause? Independent clause + Dependent clause (subject+ verb+ object) + (Subordinating conjunction.
CONJUNCTION Conjunction is a word or phrase used to combine words, phrases, and clauses. The kinds of conjunctions are: Coordinating Conjunction, Subordinating.
“The pen is the tongue of the mind.”
Combining Sentences.  Most of these combining techniques will include turning two or more sentences into one independent clause and one or more dependent.
This week’s topic…phrases! Prepositional phrases Verbal phrases Appositives.
Adverb Clauses Learn about adverb clauses and subordinating conjunctions, and their placement and use.
FUTURE PERFECT TENSE Grammar. Future simple Simple Future has two different forms in English: "will" and "be going to." Although the two forms can sometimes.
Is a group of words expressing a complete thought THE SENTENCE.
Sentence Week 5 and 6 Grammar Review. Words Sentence Paragraph a meaningful sound or combination of sounds that is a unit of language or its representation.
Modal Verbs of Probability. Modal verbs Моdal verbs canmaymustcould Have to Ought to should We use can to express… We use must to express… We use should.
Ch 18: conjunctions. Function: connect words, phrases, and clauses They do not all function the same way Categories: – Coordinating conjunctions – Conjunctions.
D.L.P. – Week Seven GRADE EIGHT. Day One – Skills Elimination of a double subject Avoid redundancy to avoid the repetition of a subject. (Incorrect: The.
Comma Rules 1. Use commas to separate items in a series. There are many different kinds of series, one for each part of speech except conjunctions. Examples:
Characteristics of Strong Writing 1.Idea Development (Unity & Development) 2.Organization (Format, Coherence, &Cohesion) 3.Voice & Audience 4.Sentence.
Dependent or Subordinate Clauses and Independent Clauses What are they? How do you I know which is which? What do they look like in sentences?
Unit 25 The accident Lesson 100. Revision What were you doing when I came into the classroom?
Module 4 山东省利津县 綦 昭颖 Unit 1 If you want to record, press the red key.
the building blocks of sentences
Faulty Coordination English III.
Unit 6 An old man tried to move the mountains. Section B 2b-3b.
Avoiding Sentence Fragments
English 1301 Eastfield College Prof. Lima
Presentation transcript:

Sentence Skills Unit 6 Sentence Combining Sentence Unity and Coherence

Sentence Combining: 1. Coordination: being of equal importance 2. Subordination : being of less importance

Coordination connects two or more sentence elements (words, phrases, and clauses) that have the same grammatical function.

For instance: a. I walked slowly and silently to town. b. We decided not to go to class. We planned to get the notes. Everyone else had the same plan. Most of us ended up failing the quiz. We decided not to go to class, but we planned to get the notes. Everyone else had the same plan, so most of us ended up failing the quiz.

Subordination puts less important ideas in a dependent clause or phrase and the more important idea in an independent clause. For instance: As soon as he arrived at the hotel, he began to write to his girl friend.

3. Misuse of Coordination and Subordination (1) Illogical coordination Illogical: Alice Adams has published four novels, and she lives in San Francisco. Revised: Alice Adams, who lives in San Francisco, has published four novels. [Dependent clause] Alice Adams, from San Francisco, has published four novels. [Modifying phrase]

(2) Illogical subordination Illogical: Because he was deaf when he wrote them, Beethoven’s final symphonies were masterpieces. Revised: Although Beethoven was deaf when he wrote his final symphonies, they are musical masterpieces.

Sentence Unity Ⅰ. What is sentence unity? Sentence unity means that only one idea or thought can be expressed in one single sentence. Unity refers to two qualities: there is only one main idea in a sentence, and that idea is complete.

For instance: He died in a traffic accident, and he had just reached the age of 73. (ineffective) He died in a traffic accident just after he had reached the age of 73.

Tips: 1. Change the sentence structure in order to make the hidden relation clear and bring unity to the sentence. 2. If a close relation can not be built in one sentence, change the sentence into two or more sentences.

Ⅱ.Put related thoughts into a sentence Unrelated: Yesterday Tom has hurt his foot, and he could not find his new bicycle. Related: Accident happening all day yesterday, Tom not only hurt his foot but also lost his new bicycle.

Ⅲ. Eliminating excessive detail Awkward: In 1788, when Andrew Jackson, then a young man of twenty-one years who had been living in the Carolinas, still a virgin country, came into Tennessee, the turbulent place of unknown opportunities, to enforce the law as the new prosecuting attorney, he had the qualifications that would make him equal to the task.

Revised: In 1788, when Andrew Jackson came into Tennessee as the new prosecuting attorney, he had the necessary qualifications for the task.

Sentence Coherence Ⅰ. The subject must be connected in meaning with its predicate. Incoherent: A comparison between the city and the town would be the ideal place to live. Improved: A community that offered the best qualities of both city and town would be the ideal place to live.

Ⅱ.All comparisons should be complete and logical 1. State a comparison fully enough to ensure clarity For instance: Tom likes bowling better than Jane. (Misleading) Tom likes bowling better than Jane likes bowling. Tom likes bowling better than he likes Jane.

2. Be sure that the items being compared are really comparable Illogical: Her English is much better than I. Revised: Her English is much better than mine.

3. Avoid comparisons that do not state what is being compared Incoherent: Brand X gets clothes whiter. [Whiter than what?] Coherent: Brand X gets clothes whiter than Brand Y does. Incoherent: Brand A is so much better. [Better than what?] Coherent: Brand A is so much better than Brand B.

Ⅲ. All modifiers should clearly modify the intended word 1. Place a limiting adverb immediately before the word it modifies For instance: I hit him in the eye only yesterday. [time of the action] I only hit him in the eye yesterday. [the action] I hit him only in the eye yesterday. [the position]

2. Avoid ambiguous modifiers Misplaced: The student Mr. Smith criticized angrily left the room. Revised: The student Mr. Smith angrily criticized left the room. Or: The student Mr. Smith criticized left the room angrily.

3. Avoid separating the parts of a verb phrase or the parts of an infinitive Awkward: Many students had, by spending most of their time on the assignment, completed it. Revised: By spending most of their time on the assignment, many students had completed it.

4. Dangling modifiers should be avoided A dangling modifier is a group of words which does not modify a correct word or no word at all. Most often, a dangling modifier does not correctly refer to the subject of the sentence.

For instance: On entering the classroom, the students stood up and said, “Good morning!” On entering the classroom, the teacher was greeted by the students, who stood up and said, “Good morning!

Exercises: 1. Revise the following sentences so that they are logical and clear. (1) I get along with my parents better than my sister. (2) His tip was larger than any customer I ever waited on. (3) A teacher’s income is generally lower than a doctor. (4) Lying in the hospital bed, my mind began to develop fearful fantasies. (5) Bill nearly finished the entire meal in five minutes. (6) Most children have by the time they are seven lost a tooth. (7) The computer needs repair in the library. (8)By turning the lights down, the room looked less dingy.

2. Sentence-combining 1. He would trudge ( 蹒跚地走 )into the classroom. He would be late. This was habitual. He would be unshaven. He wore a blue beach shirt. He wore seersucker( 泡泡纱 )pants. He wore no socks. He wore a pair of sandals.( 便鞋 ) 2. He would drag himself to the center of the room. He would drop his attaché case ( 公文包 ) on the desk. He would call the roll. He never smiled. He never said good morning.