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Prepare to become fabulous at grammar in just one hour... (fingers crossed) Wednesday 16th March Grammar at the heart of the curriculum Why are we here? • High grammar expectations embedded in new curriculum from Year 1 to Year 6 • Changing educational fashions • Build capacity to support our children • Develop knowledge and understanding together Let’s eat Grandma! Let’s eat, Grandma! Punctuation SAVES LIVES! What’s important? • Word classes • Verb tenses • Sentence construction ...Showing children how the experts do it Verbs: core knowledge be am are is was were being been have has had having The verbs ‘be’ and ‘have’ are always verbs They are often the most frequently occurring verbs in a text They are not ‘doing’ words Most children do not recognise them as verbs Lexical and auxiliary verbs The auxiliary verb: it helps to create shades of meaning in the verb phrase and is usually formed with variations of be and have but sometimes with ‘do’ or ‘get’ I dance I am dancing I danced I was dancing I had danced I could have danced I might have danced I should have been dancing Verbs introduced in Year 1 The modal verbs (Y5) expresses shades of possibility and certainty Shall, should, can, could, might, may, must, will, would Matilda: can you find the verb phrases – which are lexical, which are auxiliary including the modal verbs? Answers! The nice thing about Matilda was that if you had met her casually and talked to her you would have thought she was a perfectly normal fiveand-a half-year-old child. She displayed almost no outward signs of her brilliance and she never showed off. ‘This is a very sensible and quiet little girl’ you would have said to yourself. And unless for some reason you had started a discussion with her about literature or mathematics, you would never have known the extent of her brain power. Tenses Present and past (Y2) I walk You think She looks They run I walked You thought She looked They ran The present participle: (the ing form) I was walking, they were dancing The past participle: (usually an –ed form) You had walked, they had danced The infinitive (to) walk, (to) dance Progressive or perfect? (Y2 and 3) Still going or done and dusted? Present progressive: I am dancing in my bedroom Past progressive: I was dancing in my bedroom Present perfect: She has danced for many years Past perfect: She had danced for many years Active and passive (Y6) • Active = clear and direct – subject does the verb • Passive = more distant = subject has something done to them e.g Active: The Chancellor raised income tax. Passive: Income tax was raised (by the Chancellor) Subjunctive (Y6) • Rarely used, almost always in formal context e.g – if I were to become queen for a day, I would If he were more sensible.... I insist that he be Name it! Can you find the nouns? The tower had no obvious purpose of any kind. For a while it was a curiosity, and the people would stare at it as it creaked this way and that. When the wind blew hard it made a mournful moaning that was comical at first but soon became tiresome ....they are not as simple as first appears!! Noun phrase (Y2 onwards) You know you have a noun phrase when you can replace it with a pronoun (he, she, it, they) The tall man from across the road who grows pears is ill. He is ill. Building noun towers Determiner Adjectives Noun Preposition al phrase Who/which /that ing or ed clause A, the any, this, that, my, our, your, those Cool, cold, hot, strange, red, thin, bright Dog, car, house, sea, eagle, marble, bus Across the road, on the fridge, under the chair, beside the sea Who is hungry, that is sinking, which is heavy, stunned by the sun Consequences activity Nouns • Proper – Harbury, Labour, Emily • Abstract – bravery, idealism, childhood, friendship • Collective- pride of lions, clutter of spiders, bloat of hippos • Concrete – contestant, piglet, survivor Pronouns • Possessive – those that show ownership • (mine, ours, yours, his, hers, its, theirs) Y4 • Relative (Y5) – relate back to something already mentioned (who which, that, whom, whose) The boy, who was crying, ran down the lane Q: What five letter word becomes shorter when you add two letters to it? Adverbs (Y2) Category Question Example Time When They were first worn by Queen Victoria We came yesterday Place Where We waited below They got everywhere Manner How The Queen likes to dress smartly. Reason Why No one can see them anyway Therefore, I decided to take the shorter route Degree How much She keeps her Christmas message very short They... are rather baggy. It was only just sorted out. Adverbials – a string of words that performs the same function as an adverb (Y4) • Prepositional phrases These adverbials begin with a preposition - he found the truants at home - her hat is completely over the top Noun phrases These adverbials have a noun as their head: - Jane telephoned me last night - Tomorrow morning, we’ll go to the park Positions of adverbials • Before, after or in the middle 1. Chatting on the telephone, he crossed the road 2. I danced, swaying rhythmically with the music 3. I thought that, even though I haven’t tried it myself, you might like it. Common trickiness I or me? Rule: take the other person out of the sentence and it should still make sense e.g: My friend and I/me ran home. I ran home or me ran home? Apostrophes for omission and possession (Y2!) • Omission – where they replace letters that are missing don’t, isn’t, couldn’t, mustn’t • Possession – to show that it belongs to a singular (in Y2) person: the girl’s toothbrush Year 4 – plural possession: the boys’ presentation Clauses A clause always contains a verb phrase A clause with only one verb phrase is a simple sentence. Sentences with more than one clause is a multiple claused sentence Conjunctions – co-ordinating and subordinating • Where there is more than one clause, they are often joined by a conjunction • Most common conjunctions – and, but and or Sophie closed her eyes and lay quite still (The BFG) Away he went and nobody saw him again until the evening. (Naughty Nigel) CONJUNCTION: WORD OR GROUP OF WORDS WHO FUNCTION IS TO BE CONNECTORS Finite subordinate clauses A subordinate clause is one that is dependent upon, or less important than, the main clause in the sentence. Usually, you can remove it from the sentence without altering the main clause When because if as unless that since although after until whenever where why how while even though as long as in order that as soon as so that as though Examples • When the BFG had consumed his seventy-second fried egg, Mr Tibbs sidled up to the queen. • The nine pilots in their helicopters suddenly realised they were being left behind. Sentence types Y2 Sentence type Example Function Statement The Iron Man came to the top of the cliff. Conveys information Question How far had he walked? Seeks answers Command Hush. Gives an instruction Exclamation An Iron Man! A Giant! Expresses strong emotion. Hyphens and dashes • Dashes are longer, hyphens are within words And today’s finalist is - Harry! Mammals – see page 59 Hyphens The cute-looking child smiled endlessly The police received a tip-off about the burglary Semi-colons 1. Listen carefully: the green team, led by Fred, should stand by the door; the blue team, led by Jo, should stand by the windows; the red team should stand by the window and choose their leader, and my yellow team should stand by my desk. 2. Some people prefer tea; some people prefer coffee. 3. The rain poured; the wind howled; lightning lit up the sky. How are they used? Why shouldn’t you run in a campsite? Because it’s past tents. Ideas taken from: ‘essential primary grammar’, Debra Myhill, Susan Jones, Annabel Watson & Helen Lines ‘Jumpstart Grammar’, Pie Corbett and Julia Strong