Doctoral Consortium@RuleML2015: Genetic Programming for Design Grammar Rule Induction
Grammar Rule of the Week
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Transcript of Grammar Rule of the Week
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Grammar Rule of the Week
Capitalize names of people, titles used in front of a person’s name, places, days, months, holidays, and special events.
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Vocabulary Word:
Altercation (n)—a noisy dispute
Sentence Correction:The altercation on friday between
joe and sam was recorded on cell phones and posted on the internet over the labor day weekend.
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Journal 1: (paraphrase the prompt in the space provided on your warm-up)
Many names have special meaning or history. For example, the name Hannah means “favor” or “grace.” The name Vito means “life.” Write your own name. Who named you? What does your name mean? Does it have a special ethnic or religious significance? Are you named after someone in your family? If you could change your name, would you?
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Grammar Rule of the Week
Capitalize names of nationalities, languages, direction words referring to parts of the country, school subjects from the name of a country or followed by a Roman numeral, and the first and all important words in titles of books, etc.
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Vocabulary Word:
Ambrosial (adj)—delicious; fragrant; divine
Sentence Correction:According to the cookbook, the
food of greece, the food in southern greece is ambrosial.
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Vocabulary Word:Ambulatory (adj)—walking or moving; alterable
Sentence Correction:The french patient was
ambulatory after the surgery; he fell in love with the american nurse.
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Vocabulary Word:Apex (n)—highest point, summit
Sentence Correction:The apex of the book around the world in
eighty days was when the protagonist almost lost his bet.
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Vocabulary Word:Appendage (n)—something attached to a larger
item
Sentence Correction:When traveling south on the highway
towards cousin’s house in the north, I saw an accident where someone lost an appendage.
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Journal 2: (paraphrase the prompt in the space provided on your warm-up)
To the naked eye, it looks like junk, but you know it’s precious: the beat-up stuffed animal you slept with every night as a kid, the raggedy baseball mitt you used in Little League, the tooth you couldn’t bear to throw away after it fell out. Choose a beloved object from your own childhood and explain why you feel sentimental about it or treasure it so much.
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Grammar Rule of the Week
Use apostrophes to show ownership, form contractions, and in place of omitted numbers in a year.
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Vocabulary Word:Bedlam (n)—uproar; confusion
Sentence Correction:
The teachers class was bedlam; it took five administrators to control it.
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Vocabulary Word:Bellicose (adj)—warlike; quarrelsome
Sentence Correction:
The students bellicose behavior made the teacher send him out of class.
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Vocabulary Word:Billet-doux (n) – a love letter
Sentence Correction:
The billet-doux taped to Sallys locker wasnt the first one she had received from Tom.
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Vocabulary Word:Bona fide (adj) – made in good faith; genuine
Sentence Correction:
The teenagers offer to wash the dishes was a bona fide one, even though he didnt follow through on it.
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Journal 3: (paraphrase the prompt in the space provided on your warm-up)
An almost infinite variety of types of love exists. The love of parents for their children is very different from the love of brothers for their sisters, of wives for their husbands, of kids for their pets, and on and on. Choose two people in your life whom you love, and explain how your love for each of them is different.
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Grammar Rule of the Week
Fragments may lack a subject, verb, or both, or may be punctuated incorrectly to form an incomplete thought.
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Vocabulary Word:Brouhaha (n)—hubbub; uproar; furor
Sentence Correction:
Creating a brouhaha in class.
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Vocabulary Word:Buffoon (n)—a clown, comedian, or laughable person
Sentence Correction:
The buffoon in first period.
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Vocabulary Word:Cacophonous (adj)—harsh-sounding or
confused-sounding
Sentence Correction:
The cacophonous music was coming from.
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Vocabulary Word:Cadence (n)—rhythm
Sentence Correction:
In cadence with each other, singing together.
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Journal 4: (paraphrase the prompt in the space provided on your warm-up)
If you had to give up one piece of technology that you use all the time, what would it be and why? Do you think you’d be better off without it?
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Grammar Rule of the Week
A run-on sentence is two or more complete sentences written as though they were one sentence; a comma splice is a type of run-on with only a comma separating the two sentences.
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Vocabulary Word:Circumvent (v)—to avoid by going around; to encircle; to
outwit
Sentence Correction:
Many people believe that you cannot circumvent your fate, others believe that you have no fate and can make your life what you want it to be.
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Vocabulary Word:Cogitate (v)—to ponder or think intently
Sentence Correction:
The teacher encouraged the students to cogitate about the answer to the question many students answered quickly.
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Vocabulary Word:Comatose (n)—unconscious; inactive
Sentence Correction:
After the surgery, Tom was comatose, he was moved to intensive care.
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Vocabulary Word:Conflagration (n)—large, destructive fire
Sentence Correction:
The conflagration in the mountains was the worst in history, the firefighters managed to extinguish it.
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Journal 5: (paraphrase the prompt in the space provided on your warm-up)
Suppose you win $10 million in the lottery, but there’s a catch: You have to donate half of the money to charity. What charity would you choose? What would you do with the money you got to keep?