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FOA In a paragraph discuss what you think civil rights means to you.

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Presentation on theme: "FOA In a paragraph discuss what you think civil rights means to you."— Presentation transcript:

1 FOA In a paragraph discuss what you think civil rights means to you.

2 Appositives and Appositive Phrases Essential Question: How do you identify and use appositives and appositive phrases?

3 Definition An appositive is: A noun or pronoun placed after another noun or pronoun to: identify, rename, or explain the preceding word.

4 Examples of appositives The painter Pablo Picasso lived in Spain. I want to visit Spain’s famous museum, The Prado. The painting Guernica impressed my father

5 Appositive Phrase An appositive phrase is: A noun or pronoun with modifiers (describing words). It stands next to a noun or pronoun and adds information or details.

6 Examples of appositive phrases Willa Cather, an American novelist, wrote My Antonia. Lisbon, a thriving port in Portugal, has often been the scene of espionage. The shopping center—a network of cars, shops, and people--provides many jobs.

7 Appositives and appositive phrases CAN be compound The two settings, a city in England and a city in Russia, are contrasted in the book.

8 An appositive is NOT a prepositional phrase The boy with the broken arm is my brother. The boy, the one with the broken arm, is my brother.

9 Commas and appositives When this word or group of words interrupts a sentence, it needs commas on both sides. Riley, my dog, is gregarious EXCEPTION: If it is one word, name, or title, NO COMMA IS NEEDED! My dog Riley is gregarious.

10 Commas and appositives Commas are put around the appositive phrase because it is NOT necessary to the meaning of the sentence. This means if you take the appositive phrase out of the sentence, it still makes sense. EXAMPLE Riley, my gregarious dog, will jump up on his hind legs when he meets people.

11 Examples from Tuck Everlasting “Winnie, the only child of the house, never went there…” It was Mae Tuck with her other son, Jesse’s older brother. son, Jesse’s older brother.

12 Examples from Tuck Everlasting Then she stood and took from the washstand beside the bed, a little square-shaped object, a music box painted with roses and lilies of the valley.

13 Examples from Tuck Everlasting On the left stood the first house, a square and solid cottage with a touch-me-not appearance, surrounded by grass cut painfully to the quick and enclosed by a capable iron fence…

14 Examples from Tuck Everlasting The last stains of sunset had melted away, and the twilight died, too, as he stood there, though its remnants clung reluctantly to everything that was pale in color— pebbles, the dusty road, the figure of the man himself— turning them blue and blurry.

15 Examples from Tuck Everlasting But in another part of her head, the dark part where her oldest fears were housed, she knew there was another sort of reason for staying at home: she was afraid to go away alone..

16 Examples from Tuck Everlasting And at once, when she saw the two of them, Jesse with his foot on the pile of pebbles and Winnie on her knees beside him, she seemed to understand.

17 Part I: Identify and underline the appositive found in each sentence. 1. The monkey, a nimble animal, is often found in the jungle. 2. Dave Lewis, a teacher at Lawson, works with many aspiring musicians. 3. Before you trash BoBo, your last childhood stuffed animal, consider saving it. 4. The coast of Africa, one of the world's largest continents, is a prosperous trading region. 5. Mr. Sonntag hired two new teachers, Mr. Davies and Ms. Parker. 6. The fastest animal, the peregrine falcon, can travel more than 100 miles per hour at certain times. 7. Our family visited The Smithsonian Institution, a vast network of galleries in Washington, D.C. 8. Our neighbor and his daughters, Parvi and Sonya, take walks every evening. 9. The giant plane, a Boeing 747, launched into the air. 10. The flashlight should be returned to Mark, the owner.

18 http://teacherweb.com/ON/SacredHeartHighSchool/Wilkin/appositives.pdf

19 Exit Slip Compare and contrast a prepositional phrase and an appositive phrase?


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