APPOSITIVES and APPOSITIVE PHRASES

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Grammar Level 3: Phrases A phrase is like a flying formation of birds; it is something made up of some things. It is a part of speech made of some words.
Advertisements

More About Prepositions
Used in place of a noun pronoun.
The Adjective Phrase.
Intro to Phrases: Prepositional, Appositive, Participial, Gerund, & Absolute English I.
Sentence Variety Brenham Writing Room Created by D. Herring.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS 8 Infinitives/Infinitive Phrases.
Grammar Level 3: Phrases A phrase is like a flying formation of birds; it is something made up of some things. It is a part of speech made of some words.
Pronouns.
Grammar Level 2: The Parts of the Sentence The study of the sentence is the study of thought itself. In order to express a thought, we must do two things:
PHRASES AND CLAUSES. REVIEW  A sentence needs a subject and predicate (the action of the subject)  Modifiers modify nouns and verbs  Adjectives modify.
An adverb is a word that can modify: 1. Verb 2. Adjective 3. Phrase 4. Clause ADVERBS.
Phrases A quick review… if you really don’t remember any of this, please see me for individual help.
November 11, \EOCT Prep\Conventions Worksheet.docx.
Assistance. Identify the Part of Speech of each word in this week’s sentence. Noun: Person, place, or thing Pronoun: Replaces a noun (he, she, we, etc.)
Understanding the Functions of the Parts of Speech Sentence Diagramming.
Prepositions List as many prepositions as you can on your paper, then answer the following: True or False: Prepositions can only be found in the subject.
Parts of Speech There are eight parts of speech: noun adverb
Subjects/Predicates & the types of grammatical sentences.
C. Putnam L. Raney.  Clause – a group of words that have a subject and a verb that must always agree  Phrase – a noun, verb, or preposition with all.
Grammar for Writing CLAUSES
Basic Parts of a Sentence. Subjects and Predicates Simple Subject: the key word(s) that tell who or what the sentence is about. Complete Subject: the.
Restrictive and Non-restrictive Clauses
English IV August 15, 2014 – Work through this PowerPoint. Follow the instructions for each slide. Turn in at the end of class. Write answers on the lines.
Functions of a Noun A noun is a person, place, thing or idea. A noun can be found in any part of a sentence. The function of a noun will vary depending.
Adjectives and Adverbs Ms. Sanacore 6 th Grade. What is an adjective? An adjective is a word that modifies, or describes, a noun or a pronoun. Adjectives.
IVAN CAPP The 8 Parts of Speech.
Complements (Not the ones you give to other people, like I like your outfit!)
Chapter 12 Adjective Clauses.
The 8 parts of speech By: Cody Frazier Noun, Verb, Pronoun, Adjective. Adverb, Preposition, conjunction, and Interjection.
The Building Blocks of Good Writing
Definitions Adjectives or Adverbs Conjunctions or Interjections Nouns or Prepositions Pronouns or Verbs
APPOSITIVES and APPOSITIVE PHRASES. WHAT IS AN APPOSITIVE? Appositive comes from the Latin word meaning “placing close by” or “to put near” It is a NOUN.
A PPOSITIVES BY : S ADIE AND I SABELLA Get it? ApPOSITIVES? A plus sign? Hahaha… no, never mind.
Sentence Structure By: Amanda Garrett Bailey. What is the function of: Nouns Pronouns Verbs Adjectives Adverbs.
1 SUBJECT LAY SENGHOR. 2 What is a subject? Definition: A subject is a word, phrase or clause that is mixed with that of actor or agent and other time.
Phrases These indispensable and adaptable groups of words add information and detail, and bring cohesiveness to ideas within a sentence. Phrases help build.
Show what you know.... Types of Nouns: Collective- one word/noun to represent a group ex. Team, company, flock Compound- 2 nouns put together to make.
Appositive Phrases. Phrases Phrases are groups of words that come together to act as one part of speech.
Learning Objective : Today we will combine simple sentences using conjunctions to make compound sentences.
The Four Levels of Grammar 1. Parts of Speech 2. Parts of the Sentence 3. Phrases 4. Clauses.
Appositives By: Emma spencer, Ja’ veonna, and aryail grammar.
A prepositional phrase has at least two parts, a preposition and a noun or pronoun that is the object of preposition. Prepositional phrases can be used.
Adjective Phrases  Who  Whom  Which  That  Whose  Where.
The Parts of Speech Parts of Speech Noun Pronoun Verb Adjective Adverb Conjunction Preposition Interjection.
A group of words with a subject and a verb that can stand alone.
Parts of Speech Review Part 2 (You ’ ll learn to love these PowerPoints.)
Lesson One: Nouns & Verbs.  Definition:  A person, place, thing, or an idea  Function: Subject or Object in a sentence.
Add ons Phrases that add details. Prepositional Phrases What it is?Preposition + object(noun/pronoun) + modifiers (sdj/adv) What it does?Shows the relationship.
Parts of Speech Review.
Little things mean a lot! PREPOSITIONS.
Phrases and Verbals.
Bringing English Together
For the week of November 16 – 20, 2009
Complements Predicate Nominatives, Predicate Adjectives, Direct Objects, and indirect objects.
Adjectival, adverbial, and nominal
Diagramming Sentences Notes
NOUNS person, place, thing, or idea
DGP Week Six.
OUR GOAL is to look for new and improved ways to achieve more sentence variety. Each sentence composing lesson will introduce you to a new phrase that.
Phrases Review Quiz Friday, March 2nd.
What part of speech is that word?
Phrases.
Brenham Writing Room Created by D. Herring
PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES
Brenham Writing Room Created by D. Herring
The Phrase.
Working with Commas.
PHRASES A phrase is a group of words that contains no subject/predicate set and acts as a single part of speech. A phrase is not a complete idea.
Prepositions and Prepositional Phrases
Presentation transcript:

APPOSITIVES and APPOSITIVE PHRASES

My brother’s car, a Gremlin, is the envy of my friends. WHAT IS AN APPOSITIVE? Appositive comes from the Latin word meaning “placing close by” or “to put near” It is a NOUN that is placed close by the noun it renames. My brother’s car, a Gremlin, is the envy of my friends. info that renames the car

WHAT’S AN APPOSITIVE PHRASE? Definition: a noun phrase—a group of words—that identifies the noun or pronoun near or next to it. My brother’s car, a tricked-out, lime-green Gremlin, is the envy of my friends. info that renames the car

APPOSITIVE PHRASES Because they always contain nouns, they often begin with the articles a, an, or the The dancer featured in the Six Flags TV ads, an overly-energetic old dude wearing giant glasses, always kind of creeped me out. Notice the commas offset the APPOSITIVE

APPOSITIVE PHRASES Because they set up nouns, they often begin with a, an, or the It went away slowly and painfully, the feeling of embarrassment that came after tripping in the cafeteria in front of all the cool kids. The Appositive Phrase identifies “it”

Appositive phrases can START a sentence A heart attack in the making, the colossal burger sat before me, waiting to be devoured.

Appositive phrases can CLOSE a sentence The colossal burger sat before me, waiting to be devoured, a heart attack in the making.

Appositive phrases can SPLIT the subject and predicate The colossal burger, a heart attack in the making, sat before me, waiting to be devoured. SUBJECT of sentence Main VERB/Predicate of sentence

What’s in this for me? Why are appositives useful in my writing? Making our writing more concise Rita, who has won many awards for juggling knives, agreed to perform at my birthday party. Rita, an award-winning knife juggler, agreed to perform at my birthday party. This is called an adjective clause. But we can be more concise with an appositive phrase.

What’s in this for me? Why are appositives useful in my writing? 2) Helping a paragraph flow Dr. Sam Rebold declares that sugar may be slowly killing us. Rebold is a professor of chemistry and nutritional studies at UCLA. He points out that the average child under twelve consumes 49 pounds of sugar each year. This interrupts sentence interrupts the flow of information and ideas for the reader

What’s in this for me? Why are appositives useful in my writing? 2) Helping a paragraph flow Dr. Sam Rebold, a professor of chemistry and nutritional studies at UCLA, declares that sugar may be slowly killing us. He points out that the average child under twelve consumes 49 pounds of sugar each year.

What’s in this for me? Why are appositives useful in my writing? 3) Defining a term or idea the reader may not know After hours of practice, Jane mastered the Nollie.

What’s in this for me? Why are appositives useful in my writing? 3) Defining a term or idea the reader may not know After hours of practice, Jane mastered the Nollie, a trick where you use the nose of the skateboard to slap against the ground and pop your board up into the air. This is one big appositive phrase that renames Nollie

Diagramming an Appositive Phrase SUBJECT PREDICATE house (dump) burned a His rambling down. article adverb (to what extent?) adjective (which one?) These go under dump because that’s the word they modify adjective (what kind?) His house, a rambling dump, burned down. The appositive phrase renames the noun house. Notice – the appositive phrase contains a noun - dump