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Grammar with the. Subject Verb Agreement Contractions: Don’t and Doesn’t Don't is a contraction of do not and should be used only with a plural subject.

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Presentation on theme: "Grammar with the. Subject Verb Agreement Contractions: Don’t and Doesn’t Don't is a contraction of do not and should be used only with a plural subject."— Presentation transcript:

1 Grammar with the

2 Subject Verb Agreement

3 Contractions: Don’t and Doesn’t Don't is a contraction of do not and should be used only with a plural subject. They don't like grenades. Doesn't is a contraction of does not and should be used only with a singular subject. Pauly D doesn't like grenades.

4 Compound Subjects When a compound subject contains both a singular and a plural noun or pronoun joined by or or nor, the verb should agree with the part of the subject that is nearer the verb. Ronnie’s friends or Ronnie party at Karma.

5 Exceptions: I and You The exception to these rules appears in the case of the first person and second person pronouns I and you. With these pronouns, the contraction don't should be used.

6 Split Phrases Do not be misled by a phrase that comes between the subject and the verb. The verb agrees with the subject, not with a noun or pronoun in the phrase. The people who listen to dubstep are few.

7 Singular Verbs The words each, each one, either, neither, everyone, everybody, anybody, anyone, nobody, somebody, someone, and no one are singular and require a singular verb. Everybody knows that Snooki got punched in the face.

8 There is/are In sentences beginning with there is or there are, the subject follows the verb. Since there is not the subject, the verb agrees with what follows. There are many questions in Sammi’s head.

9 Subject Verb Agreement Expressions such as with, together with, including, accompanied by, in addition to, or as well do not change the number of the subject. If the subject is singular, the verb is too. Ronnie, accompanied by Sammie, is traveling to Italy.

10 Irregular Verbs

11 Types of Verbs Two Types of Verbs  Regular  Punchpunched  A douchebag punched Snooki in the face, and there was much rejoicing.  Irregular  Swimswum  No one has ever swum at the Jersey Shore.

12 Regular Verbs Three ways to form the past tense and past participle of regular verbs  Add “-ed”  Add an extra consonant and “-ed”  Add “-d”

13 Regular Verbs, cont’d Examples: Injectinjected  Ronnie injected himself with steroids before working out. Dragdragged  Snooki dragged J-Woww by her hair extensions.

14 Regular Verbs, cont’d Example: Fadefaded  After The Jersey Shore was cancelled, the cast members faded into obscurity and rehab.

15 Past Tense/Past Participles  Change the interior vowel  Keep the same form of the verb  Change the ending  Many add “-en” for past participles  Change the form of the verb completely

16 Past Tense/Past Participles, cont’d Examples: Beginbeganbegun  Pauly D began to turn orange after his skin had begun to absorb the spray tan. Burst burstburst  J-Woww burst into tears after the silicon in her chest had burst due to a sudden change in air pressure.

17 Past Tense/Past Participles, cont’d Examples: Getgotgotten  Snooki got plastered after her face had gotten hammered by a tool. Bewas/werebeen  Pauly D was upset because his hair gel had been stolen.

18 Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement

19 Pronoun - word used as a substitute for a noun or, sometimes, another pronoun. Antecedent - an earlier noun, pronoun, phrase, or clause in the same sentence or, if the reference is unambiguous, in a previous sentence. Definitions

20 Common Misuses Missing Antecedent:  Ex: Ronnie asked J-Woww if those were real. Multiple antecedents:  Ex: “Pauly D and Ronnie met for some GTL before continuing to his house to sleep.” Multiple pronouns and antecedents in the same sentence:  Ex: “J-Woww and Snooki were angry at each other, so Ronnie told her to hide in the bathroom when she came in.

21 Pronouns without Antecedents I You Expletives (Ex: This, it’s ) Relative pronoun – What Interrogative pronoun – who, which, and what

22 Adjective as an antecedent A pronoun normally requires a noun or another pronoun as its antecedent. Therefore adjectives should not be used as the assumed antecedent, with the exception of possessives.

23 Pronoun Antecedent Agreement Pronouns and antecedents must agree in:  Number  Person  Gender  Case

24 Number  Collective noun – singular pronoun  Singular noun with two or more adjectives – plural pronoun  Two or more singular nouns or pronouns joined with and – plural pronoun

25 Person Nouns connected by and, or, or nor use one form of antecedent. First person>Second Person>Third Person Ex: Ronnie said to Pauly D, “ You and I need to head out for our GTL.”

26 Gender Two antecedents connected by and use a plural pronoun. If the pronoun only refers to one antecedent when connected by and use the gender of the noun referred to.

27 Case Nominative case: pronoun functions as the subject.  I, you, he, she, it, we, they Genitive case: pronoun which expresses ownership  My, mine, your, yours, his, her, its, our, ours, their, theirs Objective case: pronoun functions as an object  Me, you, him, her, it, us, you, them

28 Case Examples Ex: The Situation’s abs deserve their own show. (Genitive Case) Ex: Snooki yelled at J-WOWW, “ You and I are so not going to fight over him. (Nominative and Objective)

29 Sentence Fragments

30 A sentence fragment is a group of words that is similar to a sentence but lacks a complete independent clause.

31 Deciding if it is a fragment Is there both a verb and a subject? Is it a subordinate clause?

32 Examples of Sentence Fragments Out on the beach.  Lacks a verb Going to the gym.  Lacks a subject Because they were on sale.  Is a subordinate clause

33 How to fix fragments  Snooki and JWOWW tanned on the beach.  Ronnie is always going to the gym.  Snooki got a great deal on some hot heels, because they were on sale.

34 Run-on Sentences

35 Run-On Sentences A run-on sentence is a series of statements that are not punctuated correctly. Comma splices are also a form of run-on sentences.

36 Examples: I am just a girl I like to party. Snooki slept in late today she had too many shots last night. Ronnie wanted to work out today, he went to the gym this afternoon.

37 How do you know? If parts of your statements contains a subject and a verb, then that is an independent clause and can be separated into its own sentence. I am just a girl I like to party.

38 Fixing Run-Ons To correct run-on sentences:  Separate the independent clauses  Combine the two statements with a coordinating conjunction

39 Examples I am just a girl. I like to party. I am just a girl, and I like to party. Snooki slept in today. She had too many shots last night. Snooki slept in today, because she had too many shots last night.

40 Comma Splice Correction Ronnie wanted to work out today. He went to the gym this afternoon. Ronnie wanted to work out today, so he went to the gym this afternoon.

41 Ways to fix run-on sentences I am just a girl. I like to party. I am just a girl, and I like to party. I am just a girl, so I like to party. I am just a girl, but I like to party. I am just a girl ; I like to party.

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