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Download Grammar Mechanics, Style, and the Rules of Language
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Grammar Mechanics, Style, and the Rules of Language The Rules of Language Change • There used to be a law in the UK in the 15th century called “For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge” (from serious law to slang curse). • Economy of language (they are= they’re)principle of least effort (lazy). • Archaic (old- thee or thou or whom) and borrowed words from other languages with travel / immigration or from invention (iPod). • Many changes are to vocabulary and format (ie: change between typing / word processing / texting)- not the structure of language. Does Punctuation Matter? A panda walks into a café. He orders a sandwich, eats it, and then draws and gun and fires two shots into the air. “Why?” asks the confused waiter, as the panda makes towards the exit. The panda produces a badly punctuated wildlife manual and tosses it over his shoulder. “I’m a panda,” he says, at the door. “Look it up.” The waiter turns to the relevant entry and, sure enough, finds an explanation. “Panda. Large black-and-white bear-like mammal, native to China. Eats, shoots, and leaves.” The goal of grammar is: • Make strong clear sentences so you can be understood by others. • Write clearly so you look smart. • Standardize language so we all understand each other. • Provide a similar language so we can all teach & learn how to improve writing / speaking (ie: is your participle dangling? Your noun needs modification) 8 Parts of Speech • Noun: person, place or thing (common= regular, proper = specific name) • Pronoun: takes the place of a noun. • Verb: action word or state of being • Conjunction: joins words and phrases • Adverb: modifies and verb • Adjective: modifies a noun • Article: specify number of nouns • Preposition: shows relationships, direction, placement The blue car was driving wildly down Oak Street and almost hit Susan. Capital Letters • A sentence begins with a capital. • Proper nouns require capitals (specific names of people, places, things) • Words derived from the names of places or languages (English muffins, French fries). • Major words in titles: The Lord of the Flies. • No matter how cool it looks- no random capitals- juLiA (huh?) Spelling • Canadian vs. American (no spell-checker) • Color / colour theater / theatre • Silent letters & spelling demons: government telephone Wednesday • I before E except after C or when it sounds like “ay” in neighbour or? • achieve chief weird weight seize Homonymns & Usage • Words that sound the same but mean different things and are used in different circumstances are often spelled differently- big problem for non-readers or phonetic language learning. • Problems with contractions & usage. • Mis-using these ones shows you are illiterate: • They’re = they are • Their= belongs to them • There= a place • Your = belongs to you • You’re = you are • To = direction • Too = more than enough • Two= 2 • Than= comparison • Then= time More usage issues • Accept= to receive • Except = but for, exclude • Affect = verb • Effect= noun • Choose= present choice • Chose= past choice • Its = belonging to it • It’s = it is • Principal= leader of school • Principle = morals • Hear= with your ear • Here= place • Allowed= given permission • Aloud= spoken Plurals Singular= 1 Plural = more than one Ends in Y with consonant? remove Y and add “ies” activity= activities Ends in Y with a vowel? Just add s monkey = monkeys Words that sound like they end in EZ with an extra syllable must have “es” Church = churches • day = days • copy= copies • candy= candies • dress = dresses • branch= branches Punctuation • End marks: only three types of punctuation can end a sentence, exclamation or question. Commas don’t work. •Period. Ends most simple sentences •Exclamation! Looks childish unless it really is a warning, surprise, or yelling •Question? Only use for a proper question Apostrophes • Possession: shows that someone owns something. • John’s book • Chris’ car • The teachers’ staff room • Contraction: replaces removed letters in a shortened phrase/ not spacing of words • Do not = don’t • They are = they’re “Quotation Marks” • Used to show dialogue or words spoken aloud. • Used to show direct quotes borrowed from another text. • Punctuation connected to the quote goes inside the quotation marks. • Never used as air quotes. • The teacher said, “Do not write your answers in pencil.” • “Why?” asked John. • “In the event of a strike,” the teacher said, “please do your homework.” Commas • Used to separate items in a list of three or more, including the conjunction and. • Separate introductory words, phrases, or extraneous words not part of the main sentence. • Interruptions of thought or parenthetical comments. • John wore a hat, mittens, a toque, and boots. • No, John you may not go to the bathroom. • As usual, Richard lied. • My sister, who has red hair, never wears pink clothes. Other marks • Ellipsis… shows interruptions in thoughts, speakers trailing off, edited quotes. • Hyphen- splits words at the end of a line, reverse order words (bear-like). • Parentheses (brackets) used for citing sources in MLA format, sometimes examples, rarely used in standard writing. • Emoticons = NO!