Tuesday, 5 February 2013

E10 Expectations for sentence writing


EXPECTATIONS FOR SENTENCE WRITING FOR E10

Sentences- variety, styles, types

clause=subject and a verb
two kinds of clauses      -main clause (independent clause)
-subordinate clause (dependent clause)
                                               



**simple sentence- independent clause, main clause
subject+verb         “He is reading the newspaper.”
ss+v                     “Jan and John are playing football.”
s+vv
ss+vv                   “Mark and Tom ate pizza and watched the game.”
s+vvv
sss+v


**compound- two independent clauses, two main clauses
svsv
coordinating conjunctions       , FANBOYS= for and nor but or yet so
                   “I am wearing a sweater, for it is cold.”
                   “She likes dogs, yet but I like cats.”
LOW FREQUENCY
                  
                                                          , SOBA=so or buy and
                   “It is cold, so I am wearing a sweater.”
HIGH FREQUENCY

; semicolon SAME AS , SOBA , FANBOYS
“I am wearing a sweater; it is cold.”
“It is cold; I am wearing a sweater.”
“It is cold; therefore, I am wearing a sweater.”

; semicolon LOW FREQUENCY
“It is cold.  Therefore, I am wearing a sweater.”
                   HIGH FREQUENCY

“Transitional Terms”





**complex sentences- main clause+subordinate clause
                                      independent clause+ dependent clause

subordinate clauses


**adverb clauses  because if when

I am wearing a sweater (because it is cold). Why?
(If you want), you can go swimming. Situation?
The kids do their homework after they have supper.
      
KEY
time - when, while, whenever, before, after, until
        place - where, wherever
        degree - than, as ____ as _______
        reason, purpose or cause - because, since
        condition - if, unless
        concession - although, even though, though


**adjective clauses- that, who, which

          adjective describes a noun
          “a big green coat”
          “the expensive leather chair”
          “the angry dog”

The expensive leather chair (that was on sale) is nice.
My big green coat (that has the fur hood) is very beautiful.
The angry dog (that was barking at me) is scary.
that=subject pronoun

The expensive leather chair (that I bought) is nice.
My big green coat (that my sister gave me) is very beautiful.
The angry dog (that I saw) was scary.
that=object pronoun, can be omitted AUTHENTIC

who
My sister (who is a nurse) plays volleyball.
My sister (whom I was talking to) plays volleyball.

who/whom?
whom         When? object pronoun
                   REAL ANSWER (SECRET)   Never.

“To whom it may concern,”



noun clauses

feel, think, know, believe, say

that “I think (that it will rain today).”
          “She felt that he was lying.”
          “He knows that he has to work harder.”
          “Jon believes that he will do well in the race.”


Very useful verb forms

verb tenses
“I am be live in Vancouver.” X
“He watching TV.” X

verb tense             present                 past            future

simple                            YES                     YES            YES
progressive           YES                     YES            YES
perfect                            YES                     NO              NO
perfect prog                   YES                     NO              NO




***modals

Modal         Meaning                                   Example
can              to express ability            I can speak English very well.
can              to request permission              Can I go to Foundations 4?
could           to express ability           I could help you tomorrow.
could           to express possibility              She could be an Olympian.
may             to express possibility               I may be late for class.
may             to request permission              May I take the test again, please?
might to express possibility              She might call you later.
must            to express obligation               I must leave at 4 o’clock.
must           to express strong belief  You must be kidding!
should         to give advice                          You should go to the doctor.
will             to show future                         I will not drive my car today.
would         to request or offer           Would you prefer a tea or coffee?
would         in if-sentences                          If I were you, I would complain.

LOWER FREQUENCY
had better- should
have to- must
have got to- must
need to- must
ought to- should
used to “He used to play football.
be able to- can
be going to- will
be supposed to- should



**phrasal verbs
prepositions- ~75, idiomatic,  meaning is in the culture not the
dictionary

talk “to”

http://www.englishclub.com/vocabulary/phrasal-verbs-list.htm
http://www.learn-english-today.com/phrasal-verbs/phrasal-verb-list.htm

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