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YEAR 5 GLOSSARY Active Verbs: Active verbs make it clear what the subject of the sentence is doing or did. There must be verb agreement between the subject and the action e.g. Jack flipped the pancake. Ken and Dan build the house. Adverbs: Adverbs are words that give extra information about the events described in a sentence. A lot of adverbs give us information about how things happen e.g. quickly, sadly, carefully but some adverbs tell us where e.g. here, outside or when e.g. today, tomorrow, always. Adjectival Phrase: An adjectival phrase is a word group with an adjective at its head e.g. “The beautiful house” and “The house that is beautiful” mean the same thing, but the former has an adjective, whereas the latter has an adjectival phrase. Another example is, “the angry dog” and “the dog that is acting very angry.” The latter phrase uses the phrase “that is acting very angry” to modify the subject, which is the noun “dog.” Thus, the latter example has an adjectival phrase. Apostrophe for Contraction: A contraction apostrophe joins two words together. The apostrophe goes in place of the missing letters e,g, I am = I’m, We are = We’re, They have = they’ve Commas to Separate Clauses: Commas can be used to separate main clauses from subordinate clauses in a complex sentence. When the subordination comes first, you use a comma to separate the clauses e.g. Even though it was raining, we went to the beach. Once I’d eaten my ice-cream, I went home. Complex Sentences: Complex sentences are made up of at least two parts, or clauses. One part is the main clause. The main clause makes sense by itself. The other part is the subordinate clause. The subordinate clause gives extra information. It does not make sense if you read it without the main clause. e.g. Screaming wildly (subordinate), she jumped into the pool (main). I love the summer (main) because we have a long holiday (subordinate). Conditional Verbs: Conditional verbs are used to express an action or an idea that is dependent on a condition, on something that is only imagined e.g. If I had won the lottery, I would be rich now. Conditional verbs are used to indicate that an action or state of being is dependent on the occurrence of a condition. Connectives and Conjunctions: Connectives are words or phrases that help to link together ideas. Some connectives link together ideas within a sentence and these are called conjunctions. Connectives start a sentence. e.g. Next, Eventually, Suddenly, Meanwhile Conjunctions link ideas together within a sentence e.g unless, although, as, when, since, because. Determiners: A determiner is a word that modifies a noun or a noun phrase. The categories of determiners include the following: articles (a, an, and the) possessive nouns (for example, John’s, wife’s in “my wife’s,” and doctor’s in “the doctor’s”) possessive pronouns (such as her and our) indefinite pronouns (like each, either, all, and fewer) demonstrative pronouns (this, that, these, those, and such) numbers (five, “a hundred,” and so on) Direct and Reported Speech: There are two ways of writing down what someone says: directed or reported speech. Directed Speech – when you write down exactly what the person said using speech marks to show the beginning and end of the spoken words e.g. “I have no one to help me,” said Mrs Smith Reported Speech – when you write what has been said but you do not use the exact words spoken – instead you report it in your own words e.g. Mrs Smith said she didn’t have anyone to help her. Double Negative: A negative statement containing 2 negative elements e.g. ‘he didn’t say nothing’ Imperative Verbs: Imperative verbs are also known as Bossy verbs because they tell you what to do. We put imperative verbs at the beginning of a sentence, which automatically changes them into commands or actions that must be done. We can leave out a lot of the normal language of a sentence so we get to the point a lot quicker. The commands are usually very short sentences and are acted upon immediately e.g. Get, Put, Carry, Help Interrogative Verbs: Interrogative verbs indicate a state of questioning e.g."Will you leave me alone now?" One marker of the interrogative is that frequently the speaker inverts the subject-verb order by placing the helping verb first, before the subject: "Will you leave me alone?" instead of "You will leave me alone." Frequently the interrogative verb appears with requests for a course of action or requests for information. Inverted Commas (Speech Marks): Inverted commas are punctuation marks used in pairs to set off a quotation or a piece of dialogue. Main and Subordinate Clause: A main clause makes sense by itself. It can form a complete sentence standing alone, having a subject and a verb e.g. The man was happy. A subordinate clause gives extra information. It does not make sense if you read it without the main clause e.g. when the football was on. The subordination of the main clause may come at different places in the sentence to create varied, interesting sentences e.g. The man became angry (main) when no one let him in (subordinate) OR Screaming wildly (subordinate) she ran from the house (main). Modal Verbs: A verb that indicates a degree of possibility in writing e.g. might, should, will, must, or , could, may Noun Phrase: A noun phrase works like a noun but is a group of words that work together and contain a noun e.g. The girl. A noun phrase can be expanded to make an expanded noun phrase e.g. The tall girl, the yellow butterfly etc. Paragraph: A paragraph is a self-contained unit of writing dealing with a particular point or idea. A paragraph consists of one or more sentences. It is used to organize longer prose. Parentheses: Parentheses is used to include information that you want to include but de-emphasise or that wouldn't normally fit into the flow of your text but you want to include nonetheless. This may include the use of brackets, commas or dashes. e.g. Thirty-five years after his death, Robert Frost (we remember him at Kennedy's inauguration) remains America's favourite poet. Passive Verbs: Passive verbs make it clear what the subject of the sentence is having done to it. The subject and object of the sentence swap over. There must be verb agreement between the subject and the action e.g. The pancake was flipped by Jack. The house was built by Ken and Dan. Phrases and Clauses: Longer sentences are made up of phrases and clauses. A clause is a group of words that includes a verb – it usually tells you about an event A phrase is a group of words that does not contain a verb – it gives extra information about an event in a sentence. A simple sentence can be made more interesting by adding phrases. E.g. Once there lived a wise man. Once, in a far and distant land, there lived a wise man with three daughters. Possessive Apostrophe: A possessive apostrophe shows something belongs to something/ someone. To show possession, you add an apostrophe and an ‘s’ to the owner or the owner’s name e.g. the boy’s computer. If something belongs to a group of people or things that ends in an ‘s’ then just add an apostrophe e.g. the neighbours’ new car. If the group does not end in an ‘s’ then add an apostrophe and an ‘s’ e.g. The children’s new hula hoops Possessive Pronoun: Certain pronouns called possessive pronouns show ownership. Some are used alone; some describe a noun. Used alone: mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, whose Modify noun: my, your, his, her, its, our, their, whose Precise Noun: A precise noun is a word that we use to give the reader a much clearer picture e.g. The man ran out of the building could become The firefighter ran out of the tower block Prepositions: A preposition links nouns, pronouns and phrases to other words in a sentence. The word or phrase that the preposition introduces is called the object of the preposition. A preposition usually indicates the temporal, spatial or logical relationship of its object to the rest of the sentence as in the following examples: The book is on the table. The book is beneath the table. The book is leaning against the table. The book is beside the table. She held the book over the table. She read the book during class. In each of the preceding sentences, a preposition locates the noun "book" in space or in time. The most common prepositions are: "about," "above," "across," "after," "against," "along," "among," "around," "at," "before," "behind," "below," "beneath," "beside," "between," "beyond," "but," "by," "despite," "down," "during," "except," "for," "from," "in," "inside," "into," "like," "near," "of," "off," "on," "onto," "out," "outside," "over," "past," "since," "through," "throughout," "till," "to," "toward," "under," "underneath," "until," "up," "upon," "with," "within," and "without." Prepositional Phrases: A prepositional phrase is made up of the preposition, its object and any associated adjectives or adverbs. A prepositional phrase can function as a noun, an adjective, or an adverb. There can be prepositions or prepositional phrases of where something happened e.g. on, off, over, under, through, by, into, behind There can be prepositions or prepositional phrases of when something happened e.g. on Saturday, at midnight, during the night, before breakfast Prepositional phrases that tell us when something happened can be moved to different places in the sentence e.g. The game was over by half time or By half time the game was over. Pronouns: Pronouns are words we use in place of nouns. Words like I, she, him and it are all examples of pronouns. Pronouns are useful because they stop you from repeating the same words over and over again e.g. Jack tried to carry Jack’s bag but Jack’s bag was too heavy for Jack would be written as Jack tried to carry his bag but it was too heavy for him. Relative Clause: A clause introduced by a relative pronoun e.g. ‘who visits frequently’ is a relative clause in the sentence ‘John, who visits frequently, is ill.’ We use relative clauses to give additional information about something without starting another sentence. By combining sentences with a relative clause, your text becomes more fluent and you can avoid repeating certain words. A relative clause is one connected to a main clause by a word such as which, that, whom, whose, when, where, or who: I first saw her in Paris, where I lived in the early nineties. [main clause] [relative clause] She wants to be with who is best suited to take Thomas, care of her. [main clause] [relative clause] I was wearing the dress [main clause] that I bought to wear to Jo's party. [relative clause] Relative Pronoun: relative pronoun use example who subject or object pronoun for people I told you about the woman who lives next door. which subject or object pronoun for animals and Do you see the cat which is lying things on the roof? which referring to a whole sentence He couldn’t read which surprised me. whose possession for people animals and things Do you know the boy whose mother is a nurse? whom object pronoun for people, especially in non- I was invited by the professor defining relative clauses (in defining relative whom I met at the conference. clauses we colloquially prefer who) that subject or object pronoun for people, animals I don’t like the table that stands in and things in defining relative clauses (who the kitchen. or which are also possible)