Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Do Now Get into partners for perspective skits Begin practicing immediately. We will begin performances in 10 minutes. Remember: At least 1 minute Skit.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Do Now Get into partners for perspective skits Begin practicing immediately. We will begin performances in 10 minutes. Remember: At least 1 minute Skit."— Presentation transcript:

1 Do Now Get into partners for perspective skits Begin practicing immediately. We will begin performances in 10 minutes. Remember: At least 1 minute Skit must illustrate each side’s point of view/not only WHAT each person is feeling, but WHY that person is feeling that way Written portion: What roles you drew, what disagreement you acted out, an explanation of EACH side’s perspective

2 Answer in your grammar section What is a sentence? What elements are needed to have a complete sentence? Terms to know (Copy these down. Leave space for definitions. If you already know what any of these terms mean, start defining them now). Complete sentence Sentence fragment Subject (simple & complete) Predicate (simple & complete) Clause (independent & dependent) Conjunction (coordinating & subordinating)

3 Sentence Subject + predicate + a complete thought A group of words missing one or more of the above elements is a sentence fragment Subject: a (pro)noun/group of words containing a (pro)noun, the actor in the sentence, performs the main verb, often appears before the predicate Bob plays the guitar. The guitar made the prettiest sounds. All the 8 th graders prepared for the dance. In the theater sat all the audience members. On the table lies a book.

4 Simple Subject vs. Complete Subject The main (pro)noun within the subject is called the simple subject Complete subject: The small carton of nails was found under the seat. All the employees at my mom’s job were excited for the holiday party. Simple subject: The small carton of nails was found under the seat. All the employees at my mom’s job were excited for the holiday party. Adjectives/other words that modify your simple subject (main [pro]noun/actor) are still part of the complete subject Verbs must match with the simple subject (singular/plural)

5 Predicate Contains the main verb, expresses the action being performed by the subject, often appears after the subject I have always been afraid of the dark. Jenny smiled. The little kids laughed at the movie. Under the apple tree sat a beautiful girl.

6 Simple Predicate vs. Complete Predicate The main verb within the predicate is called the simple predicate Complete predicate That was not a very nice thing to do. I remember everything from elementary school. Simple predicate That was not a very nice thing to do. I remember everything from elementary school. Adjectives/other words that modify your simple predicate (main verb/action) are still part of the complete predicate Simple predicate must match with simple subject (singular/plural)

7 How to find subject/predicate 1. Find the predicate (main verb) FIRST 2. Then ask: who/what is performing this action? 3. The performer/actor is the subject You should always be thankful for what you have. My mom never lets me go anywhere fun. People just don’t understand. Why won’t he talk to you anymore?

8 Clause Subject + predicate = clause (An actor/[pro]noun + performing an action/verb) Independent clause: expresses a complete thought A.K.A. a “full sentence” Amy is a nice girl. Dependent clause: does not express a complete thought Even though Amy is a nice girl…

9 Conjunction Word that joins two words/clauses together Coordinating conjunctions: FANBOYS (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) Signal that you are continuing a previous thought, so these should never start a sentence Subordinating conjunctions (most common): after, although, as, as if, as long as, as much as, as soon as, as though, because, before, even if, even though, how, if, inasmuch, in order that, lest, now that, provided (that), since, so that, than, that, though, till (‘til), unless, until, when, whenever, where, wherever, while Must connect two clauses. If there are not two clauses, then the thought will be incomplete and you will have a sentence fragment.

10 Sentence Fragments with Subordinating Conjunctions (Dependent Clauses) Ever since I left the city… Until the day I die… If students want to get an A… Whenever she hears that song… As soon as this school year is over…


Download ppt "Do Now Get into partners for perspective skits Begin practicing immediately. We will begin performances in 10 minutes. Remember: At least 1 minute Skit."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google