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Business English

Business English. January 18, 2018

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Business English

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  1. Business English January 18, 2018 Write the following sentences on a sheet of notebook paper. Circle the prepositional phrase(s) and underline the subject. Use the prepositions sheets that I gave you last week to help identify the prepositional phrase. You have 15 minutes. This is for a grade. 1)The strange man parked his car next to the tall trees. 2)The confused foreign exchange student walked through the school halls. 3)My cousin Jesse wore a bandage on his nose to cover the wound. 4)Our crazy dog escaped and wandered all around the neighborhood. 5)Your little brother had surgery and must stay in the hospital. 6)Following the candidates' speeches voting will begin. 7)Mr. Thompson had to drive through the large puddles. 8)Angelique came to visit from France.

  2. Sentence fragments What is a sentence fragment? A sentence fragment is a sentence which does not express a complete thought, or which only expresses part of an idea. If you look back at some of your writing assignments, you may notice sentence fragments which you did not notice before. Fragment: Children helping in the kitchen. Complete sentence: Children helping in the kitchen often make a mess. You can easily fix a sentence fragment by adding the missing subject or verb. In this example, the sentence was missing a verb. Adding often make a mess creates a S-V-N sentence structure.

  3. Sentence fragments What is missing in the following fragments? Fragment: Told her about the broken vase. What is missing? • Subject (noun or pronoun) Make the sentence complete…. Fragment: The store down on Main Street. What is missing? • Verb Make the sentence complete…

  4. Common sentence errors Fragments often occur because of some common error, such as starting a sentence with a preposition, a dependent word, an infinitive, or a gerund. If you see the six basic sentence patterns when you write, you should be able to avoid these errors, and you should be able to avoid writing fragments. When you see a preposition, check to see that it is part of a sentence containing a subject and a verb. IF it is not connected to a complete sentence, it is a fragment, and you will need to fix this type of fragment by combining it with another sentence. You can add the prepositional phrase to the end of the sentence. If you add it to the beginning of the other sentence, insert a comma after the prepositional phrase.

  5. Common sentence errors Look at the examples on pg. 17 of your handout.

  6. Common sentence errors Clauses that start with a dependent word—such as since, because, without, or unless—are similar to prepositional phrases. Like prepositional phrases, these clauses can be fragments if they are not connected to an independent clause containing a subject and a verb. To fix the problem, you can add such a fragment to the beginning or end of a sentence. If the fragment is added at the beginning of a sentence, add a comma. Look at the examples on pg. 17 of your handout.

  7. Common sentence errors When you encounter a word ending in –ingin a sentence, identify whether or not this word is used as a verb in the sentence. You may also look for a helping verb. If the word is not used as a verb or if no helping verb is used with the –ingverb form, the verb is being used as a noun. An –ingverb form used as a noun is called a gerund. Look at the example on pg. 18 of your handout. Once you know whether the –ingword is acting as a noun or a verb, look at the rest of the sentence. Does the entire sentence make sense on its own? If not, what you are looking at is a fragment. You will need to either add the parts of speech that are missing or combine the fragment with a nearby sentence.

  8. Fixing fragments caused by gerunds Incorrect: Taking deep breaths. Saul prepared for his presentation. How can we fix the fragment? Saul prepared for his presentation. He was taking deep breaths. Taking deep breaths, Saul prepared for his presentation. Incorrect: Congratulating the entire team. Sarah raised her glass to toast their success. How can we fix the fragment? She was congratulating the entire team. Sarah raised her glass to toast their success. Congratulating the entire team, Sarah raised her glass to toast their success.

  9. Fixing Fragments caused by infinitives An infinitive is a verb in its unconjugated form: to run, to begin, to see, to read. Another error in sentence construction is a fragment that begins with an infinitive. Although infinitives are verbs, they can be used as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs. You can correct a fragment that begins with an infinitive by either combining it with another sentence or adding the parts of speech that are missing.

  10. Fixing fragments caused by infinitives Incorrect: We needed to make three hundred more paper cranes. To reach the one thousand mark. How can we fix the fragment? Wee needed to make three hundred more paper cranes to reach the one thousand mark. We needed to make three hundred more paper cranes. We wanted to reach the one thousand mark.

  11. Homework Complete exercise 4 on the worksheets. You will be using what you learned in class today to create your own sentences with varying structures, and identifying and correcting sentence fragments. This assignment is for a grade and is due TUESDAY WHEN YOU RETURN TO SCHOOL.

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