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Grammar Voyage Michael Clay Thompson Art by Milton N. Kemnitz Royal Fireworks Press Unionville, New York Grammar Voyage 1 Copyright © 2012, Royal Fireworks Publishing Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. No copying or reproduction of any portion of this book is permitted without the express written consent of the publisher. Royal Fireworks Press First Avenue, PO Box 399 Unionville, NY 10988-0399 (845) 726-4444 fax: (845) 726-3824 email: [email protected] website: rfwp.com ISBN: 978-0-89824-383-3 Printed and bound in the United States of America using vegetable-based inks on acid-free recycled paper and environmentally-friendly cover coatings by the Royal Fireworks Printing Co. of Unionville, New York. html/ Design and graphics by Michael Clay Thompson Ship paintings by Milton N. Kemnitz Michael Clay Thompson 2 Table of Contents Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Level One: Parts of Speech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 Level Two: Parts of Sentence . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 Level Three: Phrases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 Level Four: Clauses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134 How to Implement Grammar Voyage . . . . . . . . . 153 Grammar Voyage 3 INTRODUCTION Michael Clay Thompson 4 A GRAMMAR VOYAGE We set sail now on rolling seas that fall on beaches far and near. Like passengers on rusty ships, we scan the water, trying to hear the sound, the voice, the mystery, the whispery report, the words, the clear austere details. Around the seas we search, inspecting every port of call, the harbors, inlets, most of all the coastal cities on the far horizons, distant and inviting our arrival. In the misty night we sail, in the sea we make our trail until the vivid dawn reveals our destination. Now we feel it drawing near, we hear the sounds, the voices, words, clamor of birds and people walking toward the pier. We steer, we cast our ropes, and we are here. Grammar Voyage 5 On any grammar voyage, wild words pervade the world, like freighter, storm, and cable, later, form, affable, and able. There are words like strike, and flake, and croak, opaque, and words like sudden, sodden, and redden. Happily is a word, and snappily, and mug, and log, and dog. There are names for seagulls, and seaweeds, and seashores, and more. The wind might roar, a bird might soar, the knocking oar might dip into the water of the port, and row us to the dock. We climb up from the rocking boat and step into a new world full of language. There are voices, and tacit choices, and faces behind the words that rise and fall and tell us all the secrets of the heart. So let us start. Michael Clay Thompson 6 FOUR WAYS OF THINKING ABOUT LANGUAGE When we think about language, that is called grammar. The captain of a ship uses grammar to command, the man on the wharf uses grammar as he works, and sailors on the seawalls tell their secrets to one another— all in grammar. With grammar, we talk of fishing, and talk while fishing, and eat fish while talking. Sometimes we fish for words. On our grammar voyage, we will think about language in four ways. These four ways of thinking about language are called 1. parts of speech 2. parts of sentence 3. phrases 4. clauses Grammar Voyage 7 The ship moved softly off into the harbor mist, into the shifting fog, the lifting tide and smell of sea breeze easing the departure from the shore to Africa, Asia, Singapore. Michael Clay Thompson 8 We could think about language from our windy deck, approaching Hong Kong, Brisbane, or Abidjan. We think of language as we sail the Coral Sea, or as we sail east from Manakara to Mauritius, and we will think about the four ways of thinking about language more, much more, but here, as we begin, is a subtle hint: 1. parts of speech: the eight kinds of words 2. parts of sentence: the parts of ideas 3. phrases: little groups of words 4. clauses: making simple or complicated ideas with subjects and predicates All of these ideas are abstractions, concepts we create to understand our own language. Grammar Voyage 9 WORD FRAGMENTS FROM THE ANCIENT WORLD Before we study the four levels of grammar, let us learn some of the ancient Latin words or word fragments that we will see in the grammar words we will study. Memorize these meanings: pre - before ante - before pos - put com - together ad - to pro - for nom - noun ject - throw inter - between con - together junct - join pound - weigh plex - twist or fold dict - say verbum - wordsub - under in - notap - beside fin - endpend - hang de - downcede - go co - togetherapo - beside preposition appositive nominative dependent antecedent independent antecedent subordinate interjection adjective coordinating pronoun conjunction infinitive interjection compound complex Michael Clay Thompson 10 LEVEL ONE PARTS OF SPEECH There are only eight kinds of words. Grammar Voyage 11 LEVEL ONE: THE EIGHT PARTS OF SPEECH Our sails unfurl and fill with wind, as the world is filled with language, and language is filled with words. Grammar lets us think about words. On our grammar voyage we discover many things, and because there are many things, there are many words: whale, sand, salt, wind, barracuda, shark, and ray, eel, seal, sail, trail, nail, stark, and gray... lights, tune, bright, moon, engine, wake, and mast, from, hum, some, run, singing, ache, and past. There are stormy oceans of words. But how many KINDS of words are there? Michael Clay Thompson 12 THERE ARE ONLY EIGHT KINDS OF WORDS. These eight kinds of words are called the eight Parts of Speech. Our whole language is made of only these eight kinds of parts. You could not build a ship with only eight kinds of parts, or a sea port, or a marine chronometer. But you could build a language, even a great language like English, with only eight kinds of parts. Here are the names of the eight parts we use: NOUN pronoun adjective VERB adverb preposition conjunction interjection Grammar Voyage 13 There are profound waters, rolling and blue, and wine-dark seas that Homer knew, and there are secrets, deep and true, like this: Even though there are eight kinds of words, there are only two main kinds of words, and the other six are helpers that support the main two. The two main kinds of words are the NOUN and the VERB, and the other six kinds of words help them. What is the meaning of this secret? Deep in the hidden interior of language, there is a beautiful simplicity, a profound simple center: a verb about a noun. Our vast and complicated language has beautiful simplicity at its core. n/v Michael Clay Thompson 14 Almost every sentence has a noun (or pronoun that means it), and every sentence has a verb. No other part of speech is in every sentence. This simple image shows us what our thinking is like. This sublime simplicity gives our language its flexibility and power. Grammar Voyage 15 1. NOUN Nouns name persons, places, and things—a world of things... The ship chugged up the torpid Congo, gray smoke long ago passing the stern, the sharp bow cutting unconcerned the flowing blue, indolent crew knowing they will see the lurid lights of Kisangani bright beneath the vast and vivid sunset. The word noun comes from the Latin nomen, meaning name. Michael Clay Thompson 16 PROPER nouns, such as Madagascar and Titanic and Bombay, are capitalized. COMMON nouns, such as fuel, dishes, foam, and horizon, are not capitalized. A noun naming one thing, such as rail, or tide, or smokestack, or buoy, or quay, is SINGULAR. A noun naming more than one thing, such as sails, or shores, or cultures, or ports, or songs, or seamen, is PLURAL. Micronesia is a singular proper noun. Ships is a plural common noun. There are also POSSESSIVE nouns: We watched John’s ship. But many nouns such as Micronesia and bioluminesence are long words and take energy and time to say, so... we use a short word that means the noun, and it is called the pronoun. Grammar Voyage 17 2. PRONOUN Pronouns are quick words, code beeps, speedy shortcuts we use when we do not want to repeat a long noun. Instead of saying Joseph Theodore Conrad, the author of Heart of Darkness, whose real name was Jozef Teodor Konrad Nalecz Korzeniowski, we can just say he. The noun the pronoun replaces is called the ANTECEDENT. Pronouns must agree with their antecedents in number: WRONG: Some person dropped their book. RIGHT: Some person dropped his or her book. Michael Clay Thompson 18 There are several groups, or CASES, of pronouns. One important group of pronouns is the SUBJECT pronouns: I you he she it we you they He sailed west across the Pacific toward the Solomon Islands. • Another important group of pronouns is the OBJECT pronouns: me you him her it us you them She gave him the map of Polynesia and taught him how to navigate by the stars at night. Grammar Voyage 19 MEMORIZE SUBJECT PRONOUNS singular plural first person I we second person you you third person he she it they OBJECT PRONOUNS singular plural first person me us second person you you third person him her it them You must memorize these two groups of pronouns. Keep repeating them until you feel certain that you will know them for the rest of your life. We will think more about this later, but do you notice anything now about how we use these pronouns? I saw him, and she saw me, but we gave him and her the squid. Michael Clay Thompson 20