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The Elements of Style William Strunk, Jr. and E.B. White Glossary by Robert DiYanni Prepared by David Ambrose, 2010 For use by all MHS Humanities Faculty
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A word that names a… ◦ Person ◦ Place ◦ Thing ◦ Idea Most nouns have two forms: ◦ Plural ◦ Possessive Verbs can act as nouns sometimes, if you add an “-ing” – that’s called a “gerund.” ◦ Swimming is my favorite sport. ◦ Hiking is fun.
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A word that takes the place of a noun. The noun that the pronoun takes the place of is known as the antecedent. Subjective Case: I, you, he, she, they, we Objective Case: me, you, him, her, them, us Possessive Case: my, your, his, her, their, our Relative/Interrogative Pronoun: who, whom, what, when, where, why, which Indefinite Pronoun: anyone, anybody, anything, someone, somebody, something
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A word or group of words that expresses the action or indicates the state of being of the subject. Verbs activate sentences.
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A verb that combines with the main verb to show differences in tense, person, and voice. Also known as a “helping verb.” The most common auxiliaries are forms of be, do, and have. ◦ I am going. ◦ We did not go. ◦ They have gone.
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A word that modifies, quantifies, or otherwise describes a noun or pronoun. ◦ Drizzly November ◦ Midnight dreary ◦ Only requirement
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A special type of adjective. The words a, an, and the, which signal or introduce nouns. The definite article the refers to a particular item: the report. The indefinite articles a and an refer to a general item or one not already mentioned: an apple.
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A word that modifies or otherwise qualifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. ◦ Gestures gracefully ◦ Exceptionally quiet engine Many adverbs end in “-ly,” but not all do. Also, sometimes adjectives can end in “-ly” (as we’ve seen on a previous slide).
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A word that relates its object (a noun, pronoun, or –ing verb form) to another word in the sentence. ◦ She is the leader of our group. ◦ We opened the door by picking the lock. ◦ She went out the window. Think about how you can relate to a chair. ◦ You can be on, in, behind, over, under, with, beside, beneath, by a chair. NOTE: The “-ing verb form” is known as a “gerund,” and acts as a noun.
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A word that joins words, phrases, clauses, or sentences. Coordinating conjunctions: ◦ and, but, or, nor, yet, so, for Correlative conjunctions: ◦ both…and ◦ either…or ◦ neither…nor
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Hey, are you wondering what an interjection is? Oh, you don’t know? Man, you must be dumb. Ouch! Sorry, I just stubbed my toe. Yo, you still don’t know what an interjection is? Well, to be honest, I’m not sure I can help you then. Dude, why don’t you go look it up?
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Any questions? Guided Practice: ◦ Identify the parts of speech of all words in each of the practice sentences.
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