1 / 11

Monday, 9/15

Monday, 9/15. Turn in your annotated packet into the homework tray. (Due in first 5 minutes!) Take out grammar notebook. Turn to new page. Label “ What does it mean to be American based on Native American stories ?” 9/15.

Download Presentation

Monday, 9/15

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Monday, 9/15 Turn in your annotated packet into the homework tray. (Due in first 5 minutes!) Take out grammar notebook. Turn to new page. Label “What does it mean to be American based on Native American stories?” 9/15

  2. What does it mean to be American based on the Native American stories? 9/15 • Write a MEL-Con paragraph • M = Main Idea Sentence • E = Evidence (do not need a quote today, just a specific example from a story you remember) • L = Link and explanation of your evidence (explain HOW/WHY this example answers the question and supports your main idea) • Con = Conclusion Sentence

  3. SIX Basic Comma Rules 9/15 Label your next free grammar page!

  4. Comma Rule #1 • The Serial Comma • Place a comma between items in a series as in the example below. • I have my laptop, my pens, my pencils, and my MP3 Player in my backpack.

  5. Comma Rule #2 • The Coordinating Conjunction Comma... • Place a comma before a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS) that joins two independent clauses. • The FANBOYS are: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, and so • The best place to take a vacation is Chicago, but the best place to take a honeymoon is Hawaii.

  6. Comma Rule #3 • The Introductory Word or Phrase comma… • Always place a comma after an introductory word or phrase • John, what are you doing to my car? • As I walked down the street, I ran into a friend I hadn’t seen in years.

  7. Comma Rule #4 • The Interrupting Word/Phrase Comma… • Always place a comma before and after any word or phrase that can be removed from the sentence and still make sense. • John, the teacher, wrote his name on the board. • I ran down the street, though I didn’t have to, and fell down and hurt my crown.

  8. Comma Rule #5 • The Concluding Word/Phrase Comma… • Always place a comma before any word or phrase that is just tagged on at the end of the sentence. • Is that you in the corner, John? • I hadn’t seen John in years, though that didn’t make much difference in our friendship.

  9. Comma Rule #6 • The Catch-all Comma…use it… • to separate numbers more than four digits long (1,000,000), • to separate city from state, (Paris, Texas), • to separate month & year (August 15, 1980), • before and after titles (James Smith, M.D., is no longer working here.), • to prevent confusion (To err is human; to forgive, divine.)

  10. Go back to your bell ringer MEL-Con Take 5 minutes to check for any comma mistakes. Use a different colored pen to make corrections. Insert comma : Delete comma :

  11. Homework Answer the essential questions based on the NA unit. Follow the directions.

More Related