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Provisional Points for Metaphrasing into English by G. Seligson
Provisional Points for Metaphrasing into English by G. Seligson

... 17. GENITIVES also appear in construction with a few verbs and adjectives. 18. If the verb is a verb of LINKING OR MAKING, A GENITIVE, DATIVE or ABLATIVE may function as the subject complement. See 11. 19. A DATIVE appears with any sentence. A DATIVE appears (may appear) in construction with verbs ...
grammar notes powerpoint1
grammar notes powerpoint1

... Spanish language North American auto show Bird food Vegetable soup ...
prepositional, appositive
prepositional, appositive

... used in almost every way that a noun can be used: subject, direct object, indirect object, predicate nominative, object of a preposition, appositive. The gerund phrase consists of the gerund, its modifiers and complements. ...
review_for_exam_powerpoint_handout
review_for_exam_powerpoint_handout

... least most farthest best worst ...
Prepositions
Prepositions

... Look at the names of each group. Which column can be used as the object of the preposition? Personal Pronouns ...
File - CyENGLISH TUTORIAL
File - CyENGLISH TUTORIAL

... Linking Verb (see Lesson 5): These connect a subject noun with a predicate noun that means the same thing or with a predicate adjective that describes the subject. Example: The man was a lawyer. man = lawyer. The lawyer is dishonest. dishonest describes lawyer. The most common Linking Verbs are: am, ...
on Phrases: prepositional, verbal and appositives
on Phrases: prepositional, verbal and appositives

... not contain both a verb and its subject. Example: for you and her (no subject or verb). Contrast with the definition of a clause: A group of words that has both a subject and a verb. There are three different types of phrases: prepositional, verbal and appositive. WRITING TIP: Using too many short s ...
Phrase Toolbox 2016
Phrase Toolbox 2016

... above across after against along amid among anti around as at before behind below beneath beside ...
parts of speech packet - Copley
parts of speech packet - Copley

... An abstract noun cannot be identified by any of the five senses. Usually it refers to an idea or feeling Examples of abstract nouns: happiness, sadness, hate ...
Proper nouns
Proper nouns

... A subordinate clause depends on the main clause to make sense. e.g. It was raining (main clause) so I took my umbrella (subordinate clause) ...
100305 Research Day 26
100305 Research Day 26

... There are five types of phrases: 1. Prepositional phrases, which begin with a preposition and include the object of the preposition. 2. Participial phrases, which begin with the participle and include the object of the participle or other words that are connected to the noun by the participle. 3. G ...
WORD CLASSES, SENTENCE STRUCTURE and TERMINOLOGY
WORD CLASSES, SENTENCE STRUCTURE and TERMINOLOGY

... Don’t get distracted if there’s another phrase between the subject and the verb. For example, you should say ...
Parallelism - St. Cloud State University
Parallelism - St. Cloud State University

... Boy Scouts learn cooking, canoeing, swimming, and how to make a rope. The last phrase is too heavy; it cannot balance the other –ing words. If we change the phrase to rope-making, it is balanced. A slightly different parallelism involves the common connectors either-or, neither-nor, not only-but als ...
journal-7
journal-7

... subject, move to the verb, and continue to an object, with modifiers tucked in along the way or put at the end. For the most part, such sentences are fine. Put too many of them in a row, however, and they become monotonous. ...
Grammar: English II
Grammar: English II

... Everyone selected to serve on this jury (has, have) to be willing to give up a lot of time. ...
Adjectives, Verbs, Adverbs
Adjectives, Verbs, Adverbs

... How? When? or Where? Examples: He ran quickly through the woods. Jonathan eagerly ate his hamburger. Mr. Johnson arrived late to class. McDonald’s will be selling croissants ...
Parts of Speech Guided Notes
Parts of Speech Guided Notes

... 2. PRONOUNS Function: Take the PLACE of NOUNS. (Pronouns can also function as a sentence’s SUBJECT.) Examples: ...
Old French
Old French

... Demonstrative determiners Ce/ço are non-inflecting Relative pronouns and interrogative pronouns Relative pronouns with antecedent are annotated as relatives. Determining whether a pronoun is relative or interrogative often relies on syntactic analysis (see: relative clauses) Nouns Nominalised forms ...
Nouns * people, places, things, and ideas
Nouns * people, places, things, and ideas

... Adjectives – describe, or modify, nouns and pronouns. Adjectives tell the reader what kind, which one, or how many. a, an, the – articles; types of adjectives which explain which one. A man walked down the quiet street. this, that, these, those – demonstrative pronouns which can be used as adjective ...
the parts of speech
the parts of speech

... questions it means there is a direct object and the verb is transitive. Example: Tom and Bobby drove their cars home. ...
Spellings for week beginning 29.6.15
Spellings for week beginning 29.6.15

... advice advise device devise licence license practice practise prophecy prophesy Task: ...
Verb Errors
Verb Errors

... watching TV and studying literature. ...
Parts of Speech
Parts of Speech

... – Verbs are words that express an action or a state of being. Every sentence has at least one action verb or one linking verb. – Some action verbs communicate an observable action; for example, they describe what people do—glide, laugh, applaud. But other action verbs tell us what people feel—apprec ...
Four-tiered Analyses
Four-tiered Analyses

... What you need to know: (a) Clauses, by definition, must have a subject and a verb. This is what distinguishes them from phrases. (b) All sentences contain at least one independent clause. (c) There are two types of dependent (or subordinate) clauses: adjective clauses and adverb clauses. The purpose ...
verbals - Tipp City Schools
verbals - Tipp City Schools

...  TURN TO PG. 530 ...
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English grammar

English grammar is the structure of expressions in the English language. This includes the structure of words, phrases, clauses and sentences.There are historical, social, cultural and regional variations of English. Divergences from the grammar described here occur in some dialects of English. This article describes a generalized present-day Standard English, the form of speech found in types of public discourse including broadcasting, education, entertainment, government, and news reporting, including both formal and informal speech. There are certain differences in grammar between the standard forms of British English, American English and Australian English, although these are inconspicuous compared with the lexical and pronunciation differences.
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