Clauses, Phrases & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

31
Clauses, Phrases & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos Phrases Clauses Sentenc e Types Independe nt Dependent Fragments Fused Simple Compound Complex Compound- Complex Dependent Clauses in Complex Sentences

description

Clauses, Phrases & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos. Sentence Types. Phrases. Clauses. Independent. Fragments. Simple. Compound. D ependent. Fused. Dependent Clauses in Complex Sentences. Complex. Compound-Complex. Independent & Dependent (Subordinate) Clauses. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Clauses, Phrases & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Page 1: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Clauses, Phrases & Sentence TypesEnglish 10 Academic

Mrs. Llanos

Phrases

Clauses

Sentence

TypesIndependent

Dependent

Fragments

Fused

Simple

Compound

ComplexCompound-Complex

Dependent Clauses in Complex

Sentences

Page 2: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Independent & Dependent (Subordinate) Clauses

Expresses a complete thought and can stand

alone as a complete sentence

Does not express a complete thought and

cannot stand alone as a sentence

a group of words that contains a subject and a verb

Expresses a complete thought and can stand

alone as a complete sentence

Does not express a complete thought and

cannot stand alone as a sentence

Page 3: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Independent & Subordinate Clauses

Practice: Identify the italicized words as independent or subordinate clauses.

1. Before you sign up for a vacation trip, read the fine print.

2. Most tour companies are responsible operators.

3. However, travelers must agree to their terms and conditions.

4. Whenever you see the word “liability,” read the text carefully.

5. Pay attention to the details as you read.

Page 4: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Practice: Identify the italicized words as independent or subordinate clauses.

6. Tour companies hire outside services, but they aren’t responsible for mishaps with those services.

7. If the airline loses your luggage, the tour company isn’t accountable.

8. When there’s no heat in the mountain lodge, the tour guide can only sympathize.

9. In fact, he or she will probably complain as much as you will.

10.Of course, no one is responsible if Mother Nature rains on your vacation.

Page 5: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Simple & Compound Sentences

1. Simple Sentence = one independent clause

Ex: The cow jumps over the moon.

2. Compound Sentence = two or more independent clauses joined by conjunction(s)

- Independent clauses may be joined by a semicolon (used alone or with a transition).

Ex: The cow jumps over the moon, and the fork ran away with

the spoon.

Subject + Verb + Complete Thought

Conjunctions = connectors

Page 6: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Simple & Compound Sentences

Page 7: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Simple & Compound Sentences

Page 8: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Simple & Compound Sentences

Page 9: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Simple & Compound Sentences

Page 10: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

part of a sentence has been left out

A fragment doesn’t convey a complete thought.

Sentence Fragments

Page 11: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

My little sister has a dance recital tonight.Missing Subject

My mother sat up all night sewing her costume.

My sister will dance the part of the leading ladybug.

She is scheduled to perform at the end of the recital.

I feel I ought to go, since she goes to all my soccer games.OR

Since She goes to all my soccer games.

Missing Verb

Missing Helping Verb

Missing Subject & Verb

Subordinate Clause

Sentence Fragments

Page 12: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

In 1865 Western Union needed a telegraph cable. To link

America to Europe. Before they could lay the cable across

Siberia. Someone needed to survey the land. The task of

surveying to George Kennan, an accomplished telegrapher.

went

Sentence Fragments

Page 13: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

two or more sentences have been run together without adequate punctuation

It doesn’t show clearly where one idea begins and another ends.

Fused Sentences

Page 14: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

In 1972, a company called Atari created the first

video game. It was called Pong.

Missing End Mark

Comma Splice (Two complete thoughts are separated only by a comma.)

By modern standards it was a very simple game, but it quickly

achieved great popularity.

By modern standards it was a very simple game; it quickly achieved great popularity.

By modern standards it was a very simple game. It quickly achieved great popularity.

Fused (Run-On) Sentences

Page 15: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Kennan was not a linguist, he thought

Russian was impossible to learn.

Fused (Run-On) Sentences

Page 16: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Fused (Run-On) Sentences

Page 17: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Fused (Run-On) Sentences

Page 18: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Fused (Run-On) Sentences

Page 19: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Fused (Run-On) Sentences

Page 20: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Complex SentencesComplex Sentence = one independent clause + 1 or more

dependent clauses

Ex: While Mary cooks dinner, she watches the evening news.

Subject + Verb + Complete Thought

Page 21: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Complex Sentences

Page 22: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Complex Sentences

Page 23: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Dependent Clauses in Complex Sentences

although what(ever) where(ver)

before that because

when(ever) which(ever) during

if (even) though who(m)(ever)

while after since

Page 24: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Dependent Clauses in Complex Sentences

Page 25: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Dependent Clauses in Complex Sentences

Page 26: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Dependent Clauses in Complex Sentences

Page 27: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Compound-Complex Sentences

Compound-Complex Sentence = 2 independent clauses joined

by a conjunction + 1 or more dependent clause(s)

Ex: I read Frankenstein, which Mary Shelley wrote, and I

reported on it.

Subject + Verb + Complete Thought

Page 28: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Compound-Complex Sentences

Page 29: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Compound-Complex Sentences

Page 30: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Sentence Type Review

Page 31: Clauses,  Phrases  & Sentence Types English 10 Academic Mrs. Llanos

Sentence Type Review