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Unit 8:<Contracting long sentences> Kevin Chen Verbals Verbals are forms made from verbs but used for other purposes. Verbals can be the modifiers come in a variety of forms—single words, group of words (phrases), even clauses. I. Gerunds A gerund, in the form that always ends in –ing, is a verbal used as a noun. Like a noun, a gerund can be a subject, an object of a preposition, or a complement. Gerunds-Examples Pitching against left-handed batters is his specialty. Stretching exercises are helpful before distance running. Being a member of a successful New York basketball team is a mixed blessing. He was going to blame for breaking the window. I appreciated your taking time to help me. His gentle act, giving Annie his coat, plainly showed his generosity. II. Participles A participial modifier is a verb form used as a single word of as part of a phrase. Participles have three forms: Present <ending in -ing> Past <ending in -d or -ed> Irregular <so irregular that you will have to check the dictionary> Participles-Example The car approaching ( = which approached)the intersection slowed down. The prices listed ( = which are listed) on the manu do not include dessert. Participles Phrase A participle phrase at the beginning of a sentence must refer to the grammatical subject of the independent clause. The subject must be the idea or person you describe in the modifying phrase, not some other person or word. Participles Phrase The dangling participles usually result in illogical statements, like the following: Walking on the street, the spotlight followed the singer. 【the subject “spotlight walked” is illogical】 Overgrown with moss, the gardener cleaned his seed flats for spring planting. 【the subject “gardener was overgrown with moss” is illogical】 Participles Correct Examples Expecting a spectacular display, the crowd eagerly awaited the fireworks. Inspired by the magnificent view, he was able to finish his novel. Printed in Old English and bound in real leather, the new edition of Beowulf was too expansive for the family to buy. III. Infinitives An infinitive usually has a simple form of the verb preceded by to. An infinitive can function as a noun, an adjective, or an adverb. Infinitives-Example He wanted to know the secret. He has many books to read this week. The troop moved fast to escape the enemy. To be a biologist has been his dream. Position The position of the words in a sentence is the principal means of showing their relationship. Confusion and ambiguity result when words are badly placed. The place of the modifier or whether to have a comma or not, can make the sentence mean differently. Sometimes, the modifier seems so normal that it sounds clear without a comma, but at other times you must have a comma to keep the reader from misinterpreting your sentence. Position As a whole people tend to be happy. 【A clause, not a complete sentence】 As a whole, people tend to be happy. 【A complete sentence with “people” as the subject】 To begin with some ideas are difficult. 【The subject is “To begin…”】 To begin with, some ideas are difficult. 【The subject is “some ideas”】 Position Inside the child was noisy. Inside, the child was noisy. Below the traffic liked like a necklace of ants. Below, the traffic liked like a necklace of ants. Suffixes signifying attachment —verbals as adjectives in the form of –ing and –ed gerund or present participle —ing past participle —ed Single-word adjectives The single-word adjectives formed by verbals is usually used in modifying nouns or pronouns. These single-word adjectives can come before or after the nouns they modify. Single-word adjectives She was a highly motivated employee. I had so much of my old heart left. About mountain climbing, he is an experienced man. About climbing the mountain, he is an experienced man. This self-inflating bias may be even stronger when it comes to moral judgment. Single-word adjectives In life, an inflated sense of personal virtue can also be a minefield. There is something in the unselfish and self-sacrificing love of a brute. Some of the most critically acclaimed films of the year were not honored at the Academy Awards ceremony. The person who just boarded our bus is a nationally known scientist. Hyphenated Adjectives The five-year-old boy was injured. The injured man is twenty-five years old. I hope you can come up with an easy-to-remember rule to help me know when to use the hyphen. The four-year-old ran to the bramble-covered fence rail, where she charmed a tough, too-tall-totango hombre. Appositional forms Appositive phrases are used to clarify a noun’s meaning within a sentence. Usually we use commas to distinguish the appositives from the clauses. Appositional forms-Example Animal Farm charts the progress of an idealistic movement of liberation towards a totalitarian dictatorship headed by a despotic tyrant; Nineteen Eighty-Four describes what it’s like to live entirely within such a system. Its hero, Winston, has only fragmentary memories of what life was like before the present dreadful regime set in: he’s an orphan, a child of the collectivity. The government of Airstrip One, Winston’s ‘country’, is brutal (Margaret Atwood’s “Orwell and Me”). Appositional forms-Example In Beneath the Wheel (1906), the only Hesse book I’ve read that has a hopelessly unhappy ending, he shows himself as an abused schoolboy who gets drunk and drowns (Kurt Vonnegut, “Why They Read Hesse”). END ~~BYE~~