1 / 41

An ELA CRCT Review

An ELA CRCT Review. Pronoun Agreement. Basic Principle. A pronoun usually refers to something earlier in the text (its antecedent ) and must agree in number — singular/plural — with the thing to which it refers. Example: Bryan lost his book. (His is pronoun that refers to Bryan.

lilike
Download Presentation

An ELA CRCT Review

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. An ELA CRCT Review

  2. Pronoun Agreement

  3. Basic Principle • A pronoun usually refers to something earlier in the text (its antecedent) and must agree in number — singular/plural — with the thing to which it refers. • Example: Bryan lost his book. (His is pronoun that refers to Bryan. • Example: The book had Dawn’s name written inside its cover. (Its agrees in number with book, which is the antecedent.)

  4. Singular and Plural Pronouns • Singular Pronouns: • anyone, anybody, everyone, everybody, someone, somebody, no one, and nobody • Also always singular: • Either • Neither • Plural Pronouns: • Both, few, many, several • Special Case: • All, any, more most, none, some • These may be singular or plural, depending on their meaning in a sentence.

  5. Pronoun Agreement Rules • The need for pronoun-antecedent agreement can create gender problems. One can pluralize to avoid the problem. • Each student must see his counselor before the end of the semester. • Students must see their counselor before the end of the semester.

  6. Pronoun Agreement Rules • Use a singular pronoun to refer to two or more singular antecedents joined by or or nor. • Juan or Michael will bring his soccer ball. • Neither the mother nor the daughter had forgotten her running shoes.

  7. Parts of a Sentence

  8. Subjects • Who or what a clause, phrase, or sentence is about.

  9. Verbs (Predicates) • What a subject is doing; what is being done to it; state of being • Verbs and subjects must agree in number • 2 singular subjects joined by and: verb is plural • 2 singular subjects connected by either… or, or neither… nor, the verb is singular • 2 plural subjects connected by either… or, or neither… nor, the verb is plural

  10. Modifiers • Adjectives • Modify nouns and pronouns • Answer questions which one, what kind, how many, how much • Adverbs • Modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs • Answer questions how, when, where, to what extent

  11. Objects • Direct object – noun or pronoun that receives the action of the verb. I have read the book. • Indirect object – noun or pronoun for whom or to whom something was done. I read the class the entire book. • Object of a preposition – answers the question whom or what after the preposition.

  12. Phrases • Prepositional phrases – made up of preposition plus object. Generally show location. • Common prepositions: about, above, according to, along, at, by, down, except, for, in, into, inside, outside, since, within, without. • Infinitive phrase – the word “to” plus a verb • Gerund phrase – the “-ing” form of the verb

  13. Clauses • Group of related words which contain a subject and verb. • Independent clause: contains subject, verb, makes sense by itself. • Dependent clause: may contain subject and verb, but does not make sense by itself - fragment

  14. Conjunctions • Conjunctions join words that link parts of sentences • FANBOYS • For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So

  15. Sentences • Kinds: • Declarative (statement), Imperative (command), Interrogative (question), Exclamatory (strong feeling) • Patterns: • S+V, S+V+O, S+V+IO+O • Forms • Simple, compound, complex, compound-complex

  16. Punctuation

  17. Commas 1 • Use with coordinate conjunctions: FANBOYS • Use to separate main clauses within a sentence or items in a series • Use with introductory elements • Use with dates (December 7, 1941) • Use with addresses (3301 Shoals School Rd, Douglasville, GA) • Use with numbers (1,345,000)

  18. Commas 2 • Use with parenthetical expressions (John’s car, in my opinion, is a clunker.) • With adjectives (We felt the salty, humid air near the beach.)

  19. Semicolons • Join related main clauses when a coordinating conjunction is not used (Sally built a tree house; she painted it blue.). • Work with conjunctive adverbs to join main clauses (I would like to go with you; however, I must visit my grandmother.) • Separate clauses when joined by words such as accordingly, besides, however, afterwards, consequently, furthermore, therefore.

  20. Colons • End main clauses and introduce modifications • Frank introduced four kinds of fish into his new aquarium: three angels, six tetras, a pair of Bala sharks, and a spotted catfish. • Other uses • Business letter salutation – Dear Mr. Brown: • Title with subtitle – Dudes, My Story • Biblical citation – Genesis 1:1 • Bibliographic entries – Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co.

  21. Apostrophes • Possession • Add ‘s to form the possessive of singular and plural nouns • Add ‘s to form the possessive of singular nouns ending in s • Add only an apostrophe to form the possessive of plural nouns ending in s • Omission • Cannot (can’t), will not (won’t)

  22. Quotation Marks • Examples of direct quotations • Martha whispered, “I’m scared of the dark.” • “When,” she breathed, “do we get out of here?” • Use quotation marks around article titles, essay titles, short stories, chapter titles, song titles, poems, TV programs, movie titles. • Put periods and commas inside quotation marks.

  23. Verb Usage

  24. Principal Parts of a Verb • Base Form (work) • Present Participle (is working) • Past (worked) • Past Participle (have worked)

  25. Regular Verbs • Regular verbs form their past and past participle by adding –d or –ed to the base form. • Use – used • Attack – attacked • Drown – drowned

  26. Irregular Verbs • An irregular verb forms its past and past participle in some other way than by adding –d or –ed to the base form. • Ring – rang • Bring – brought

  27. Verb Tense • The tense of a verb indicates the time of the action or state of being expressed by the verb. • The 6 tenses are: • Past perfect • Past • Present perfect • Present • Future perfect • Future

  28. Keep Tense Consistent • Inconsistent: When we were comfortable, we begin to do our homework. • Consistent: When we are comfortable, we begin to do our homework.

  29. Subject-Verb Agreement

  30. Subject-Verb Agreement 1 • When the subject of a sentence is made up of two or more nouns or pronouns connected by and, use a pluralverb. • She and her friends areat the fair. • When two or more singular nouns are connected by or or nor, use a singular verb. • The book or the pen is in the drawer. (One, but not both.)

  31. Subject-Verb Agreement 2 • When 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. • The boy or his friendsrun every day. • His friends or the boyruns every day.

  32. Subject-Verb Agreement 3 • The verb agrees with the subject, not with a noun or pronoun in the phrase. • Oneof the boxes isopen. • The people who listen to that music arefew. • The team captain, as well as the players, is anxious.

  33. Subject-Verb Agreement 4 • The words each, each one, either, neither, everyone, everybody, anybody, anyone, nobody, somebody, someone, and no one are singular and require a singular verb. • Each of these apples is rotten. • No one is listening.

  34. Fragments

  35. Fragments 1 • Fragments are incomplete sentences. Some fragments are obviously related to the sentences before or after them. • Therefore, one of the easiest ways to correct a fragment is to connect it to a nearby whole sentence.

  36. Fragments 2 • Fragment: I need to find a new friend. Because the one I have now is mean. • Revised: I need to find a new friend because the one I have now is mean.

  37. Research & Writing

  38. Terms to Know Writing Terms Research Terms Thesaurus Dictionary Encyclopedia Table of Contents Index Primary source Secondary source Footnote Bibliography Plagiarism • Thesis • Paragraph • Supporting detail • Persuasive • Expository • Narrative • Editing • Proofreading • Paraphrase • Summary

  39. The Writing Process • Prewriting • Brainstorm • Outline • Drafting– 1st draft • Editing & Revision – examining each part and asking if it’s really necessary or if it can be improved • Final Draft • Proofreading – spelling, punctuation; nothing major.

  40. Sample R&W Questions • Mark is doing a presentation on the Earth’s layers. Which resource would give him information on the Earth’s core? • A dictionary • An encyclopedia • A world atlas • The Reader’s Guide to Periodical Literature

  41. Sample R&W Questions • Rewrite the following: • The woman is our new principal standing in the hallway. • Standing in the hallway, our new principal is the woman. • The woman standing in the hallway is our new principal. • In the hallway standing the woman is our new principal. • Our new principal the woman is standing in the hallway.

More Related