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701 701 Date: Name: ENGLISH 701 OBJECTIVES 1. To Understand the Meaning of Being Merciful 2. To Understand and Apply Spelling Concepts: a. Latin Roots: oct, vis, ped, scrib, ject b. I before E Rule 3. To Understand and Form Sentences 4. To Understand and Use Verbs In this unit, you will learn about the character quality of being merciful. Being merciful means showing kindness when dealing with others. It means being compassionate and humane. Directions: Think of a merciful person you know or know of. Write two characteristics that you think make this person merciful. 1. 2. Chapter 1: Spelling Introduction to Spelling Rules Did you know that many of our English words come from Latin, Greek, and Anglo Saxon words? You may never speak these languages, but you use words that come from them all the time. In your spelling lessons, you will learn the meaning of a selection of Latin, Greek, and Anglo-Saxon roots. You will be amazed at how many English words are based on these roots and how you will be able to define words you have never seen before based on recognizing the roots they come from. Learning roots is not just an exercise developed by teachers to frustrate students! If you do your best and learn these roots, you will improve your vocabulary exponentially. Also, in your spelling lessons, you will study some basic spelling rules (and the exceptions to these rules!) These rules will also help you to be able to spell words you know as well as new ones. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 1 Section 1: Spelling List The following words will be your spelling words for this unit. These words illustrate the spelling rules covered in this chapter. You will be reminded to study your words in Chapters 2 and 3 to prepare you for the test at the end of the unit. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. octagon octet octopus octave visage vision advisor visor peddler pedestal 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. pedestrian pedaler prescribe scribe scribble inscribe projection interject injection conjecture 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. neighbor eighteen perceive belief relieve conscience counterfeit sieve yielded leisure Section 2: Spelling Rules Rule 1: The following roots of words come from Latin. You need to learn the meaning of the root because it at least partly determines the meaning of the whole word. a. oct – eight Latin is not dead – it is alive b. vis – see and well in the English c. ped – foot language. d. scrib – write e. ject – throw Directions: Write each spelling word under the correct heading. oct vis ped 1. _______________ 5. _______________ 9. _______________ 2. _______________ 6. _______________ 10. ______________ 3. _______________ 7. _______________ 11. ______________ 4. _______________ 8. _______________ 12. ______________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 2 scrib ject 13. _______________ 17. _______________ 14. _______________ 18. _______________ 15. _______________ 19. _______________ 16. _______________ 20. _______________ Rule 2: “I before E except after C, or when sounding like A as in neighbor or weigh.” This rule applies to many words, but it is just as critical to learn the exceptions as it is to learn the rule itself. The rule will serve as a guide for spelling words you do not know. Remember, the ie digraph usually has the /e/ sound, but there are exceptions to this as well. Directions: Write each word under the correct heading. I before e except after c 1. ________________ 5. _______________ 2. ________________ 3. ________________ 4. ________________ or when sounding like /a/ Exceptions 6. _______________ 8. _______________ 7. _______________ 9. _______________ 10._______________ Score Sections 1 and 2. Teacher’s initials: _______________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 3 Section 3: Searching for Meaning Directions: Look up each spelling word. Remember to put the definition in your own words, and be sure you understand the definition. Notice how the meaning of the roots influences the meanings of the words. 1. octagon 2. octet 3. octopus 4. octave 5. visage 6. vision 7. advisor 8. visor 9. peddler 10. pedestal 11. pedestrian 12. pedaler 13. prescribe 14. scribe 15. scribble 16. inscribe 17. projection 18. interject 19. injection 20. conjecture Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 4 21. neighbor 22. eighteen 23. perceive 24. belief 25. relieve 26. conscience 27. counterfeit 28. sieve 29. yielded 30. leisure Directions: Look up and record the origins of the word mercy. (Hint: use your dictionary to find this.) I believe in the equality of man; and I believe that religious duties consist in doing justice, loving mercy, and endeavoring to make our fellow-creatures happy. --Thomas Paine Score Section 3 now. Teacher’s initials: ________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 5 CHAPTER 1 REVIEW Directions: Write the meanings of the roots. 1. oct 2. vis 3. ped 4. scrib 5. ject Directions: Use each spelling word in a sentence. 1. octagon 2. octet 3. octopus 4. octave 5. visage 6. vision 7. advisor 8. visor 9. peddler 10. pedestal Teacher’s Initials: Being merciful means not being quick to judge the hearts of others. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 6 Directions: Write the correct spelling word for each meaning. 11. guesswork; a statement of opinion ____________________ 12. something that is injected ____________________ 13. to sense or understand ____________________ 14. a conviction; something accepted as true ____________________ 15. to alleviate ____________________ 16. a writer or copyist ____________________ 17. a person traveling on foot ____________________ 18. to mark or engrave ____________________ 19. free time; rest ____________________ 20. imitation; false ____________________ Directions: Insert the correct spelling word in each sentence. 21. The _______________ produced power with his bicycle. 22. To make the jelly, we put the cherries through a _______________. 23. The garden _______________ 15 bushels of corn. 24. Our new _______________ just moved in next door. 25. My brother will turn _______________ next July. 26. Sam’s doctor will _______________ his medication. 27. Children must learn not to _______________ on the wall. 28. Alice would like to _______________ her opinion into the discussion. 29. Let your _______________ be your guide. 30. There is a _______________ of land out into the water. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 7 Directions: Read the following situation and write a paragraph about how Kegan’s mother could help by being merciful toward her daughter. Kegan has had the same best friend for five years. They have gone everywhere together and shared all their feelings, problems, and secrets. Kegan’s friend has just moved away, and Kegan is feeling lonely and sad. She feels abandoned by her friend and alone at school. ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ Directions: Write a definition for merciful in your own words. What does it mean to you? ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ Score Chapter 1 Review now. Teacher’s initials: _______________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 8 Chapter 2: Understanding Sentences Sentences are the foundation of all writing. Therefore, it is essential to understand the different types of sentences, how they are formed, and how to avoid errors in writing them. A sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought. Section 1: Classifying Sentences When classification is done according to purpose, there are four types of sentences. A declarative sentence makes a statement. It ends in a period. Walter hit the ball. Trey caught the ball. An interrogative sentence asks a question. It ends with a question mark. How many hot dogs are you going to eat? How many hot dogs do you have? An imperative sentence gives a command or makes a request. It can end in a period or, if the statement indicates excitement, an exclamation point. Please hang up your coat. Get off of my foot! An exclamatory sentence makes a statement and indicates strong feeling or excitement. It ends with an exclamation point. Your painting is absolutely beautiful! We must leave right now! Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 9 Directions: Identify each sentence as declarative (dec), interrogative, (int), imperative (imp), or exclamatory (exc). 1. How many years have you lived in Fresno? _______________ 2. I just love black forest cake! _______________ 3. Teresa’s job is to build the sets. _______________ 4. Mr. Ralph is my favorite teacher. _______________ 5. Come down before you fall! _______________ 6. Do you know how to get downtown from here? _______________ 7. Please close the door behind you. _______________ 8. I still have fourteen problems to do! _______________ 9. How many problems do you have to do? _______________ 10. We will be back in fifteen minutes. _______________ Directions: Insert the proper punctuation mark for each sentence. 1. (imp) Make sure you do not oversleep _____ 2. (exc) Jean has thirteen cats _____ 3. (int) How can we finish this project on time _____ 4. (dec) I think we are finished _____ 5. (exc) My guests will be here at 3:00 _____ 6. (imp) Please help me carry the bags _____ 7. (dec) My parents are going out tonight _____ 8. (int) How do you play this game _____ 9. (imp) Shut the window before the rain comes in _____ 10. (exc) That movie was wonderful _____ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 10 Directions: Write an example of each type of sentence. 1. ________________________________________________________________ 2. ________________________________________________________________ 3. ________________________________________________________________ 4. ________________________________________________________________ Score Section 1 now. Teacher’s initials: _____________ Section 2: Subjects and Predicates Every sentence must have a subject and a predicate. The subject of the sentence is what the sentence is about. The simple subject is the subject with no modifiers. It will be a noun or pronoun. It will not be the object of a preposition. The complete subject is the simple subject and its modifiers. The group of students studied in the library. The simple subject of this sentence is group. The complete subject of this sentence is the group of students. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 11 The predicate of the sentence is the part that indicates the action of the subject or says something about the subject. The simple predicate is just the verb. The complete predicate is the verb and its modifiers. The simple predicate of the sentence above is studied. The complete predicate of the sentence above is studied in the library. To find the simple subject and predicate of a sentence, first look for the verb (the simple predicate.) Then ask who or what performed the action of the verb. The answer to that question will be the subject of the sentence. The airplane landed at 5:00. First, find the verb. The verb is landed. Then, ask yourself “What landed?” The answer is airplane, and airplane is the subject of the sentence. On our street, there lived a large family. The order of words in this sentence is different. Do not let this change confuse you! o Find the verb. The verb is lived. o There (or here) will never be the subject of the sentence. o The subject will not be the object of a preposition. o Ask yourself, “Who lived?” The answer is family, and family is the subject of the sentence. In an imperative sentence, the subject is understood to be you. (You) Go downstairs for the party. (You) Please set the table. The subject and/or predicate of a sentence can be compound. That is, there may be more than one subject and/or verb in a sentence, and the compound parts are connected with a conjunction (and, or, nor, or but.) John and Philip hiked the Lincoln Trail. -Compound Subject John hiked the trail and skied in Colorado. -Compound Predicate Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 12 If a sentence is missing a part, it is not a complete sentence. It is then called a sentence fragment. A fragment does not express a complete thought. The house on the corner are growing fast These sentence parts do not express a complete thought. They are fragments of sentences. Directions: Identify each item as a sentence or a fragment. 1. The house on the corner is for sale. _______________ 2. Our first cousin _______________ 3. played the violin in the orchestra and a quartet _______________ 4. Mrs. Sullivan is coming home tomorrow. _______________ 5. Andrew will come with her. _______________ Directions: Make each fragment into a sentence. 1. after the sun goes down ___________________________________________________________________ 2. the newlyweds ___________________________________________________________________ 3. the college professor ___________________________________________________________________ 4. skimmed the novel ___________________________________________________________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 13 Directions: Draw a line between the complete subject and the complete predicate in each sentence. Circle and mark the simple subject (ss) and the simple predicate (sp). Look for compound subjects and predicates. 1. Amy is on her way to Chicago. 2. The boys participate in the experiment. 3. Lauren makes great chocolate chip cookies and bakes wonderful pies! 4. The teachers assigned homework for tomorrow. 5. The car and the mower are in the garage. 6. Please take your sister home. 7. Tamara and I love those songs! 8. Jocelyn has three new dresses. 9. Albert’s piano teacher retired last year. 10. Stella goes to the pool and swims every day. Score Section 2 now. Teacher’s initials: ______________ Being merciful does not mean being uninterested in justice, but it does mean being able to put yourself in someone else’s shoes and trying to understand them and their situation. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 14 Section 3: Diagramming Subjects and Predicates A diagram is a picture of a sentence. Learning to diagram will help you understand sentence structure more clearly because you can see it. To diagram the subject and predicate of a sentence, draw a horizontal line, and divide it with a vertical line. The predicate is written to the right of the vertical line, and the subject is written to the left, regardless of the order of the words in the sentence itself. Ross climbed the hill Ross climbed To diagram a compound subject or verb, follow this model. Susan and Jill watched the movie. Susan and watched Jill Travis cooked dinner and washed the dishes. cooked Travis and washed Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 15 Susan and Jill watched the movie and ate popcorn. Susan watched and and Jill ate Directions: On your own paper, diagram the simple subject and predicate in each sentence. Do not be confused by the order of the sentence parts. 1. James built the house of cards. 2. Terrence and Samuel played in the tournament. 3. There is my pastor. 4. Jon and Harold saw the bear and ran away. 5. I want some of that dessert! Section 4: Phrases and Clauses Sentences often contain phrases and clauses. It is important to understand the difference. They are not complete sentences; by themselves, they would be fragments. A phrase is a group of words that does not contain a subject and a verb. in the store after the wedding A clause has a subject and a verb. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 16 1. An independent clause can stand alone as a sentence. Susie took the medicine. 2. A dependent clause has a subject and a verb but does not express a complete thought and cannot stand alone. The team that is in first place will go to the tournament. If they go to the tournament, they could win a trophy. Directions: Identify the words in bold as phrases, independent clauses, or dependent clauses. 1. The man in the suit is Carol’s grandfather. ___________________ 2. The building that has the elevator is closed. ___________________ 3. After we go to the game, we will eat. ___________________ 4. Shelley came home today. ___________________ 5. After the game, we will eat. ___________________ 6. The truck with the trailer turned over. ___________________ 7. Before you see Drew, wash your face. ___________________ Score Sections 3 and 4 now. Teacher’s initials: ___________ Kindness is loving people more than they deserve. –Joseph Joubert Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 17 Section 5: Sentence Structure When classified according to structure, a sentence may be of four possible types: simple, compound, complex, or compound-complex. A simple sentence contains one independent clause and no dependent clauses. Emily sat in the bleachers. This sentence has one independent clause. A compound sentence contains two or more independent clauses and no dependent clauses. Emily sat in the bleachers, and Tom sat in the car. Both parts of this sentence are independent clauses that can stand alone as sentences. The two parts are joined with a conjunction or a semicolon. A run-on sentence occurs when two sentences are written incorrectly as one sentence. JoAnn did not want to eat, she was sleepy. Two sentences cannot be joined with a comma only. This sentence could be corrected in the following ways. 1. JoAnn did not want to eat because (as, for, since) she was sleepy. 2. JoAnn did not want to eat; she was sleepy. 3. JoAnn did not want to eat. She was sleepy. A complex sentence contains one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses. After she went to the concession stand, Emily sat in the bleachers. The clause after she went to the concession stand is a dependent clause, and Emily sat in the bleachers is an independent clause. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 18 A compound-complex sentence contains two or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses. After she went to the concession stand, Emily sat in the bleachers, and Tom sat in the car. This sentence has it all! It has a dependent clause, after she went to the concession stand, and two independent clauses, Emily sat in the bleachers, and Tom sat in the car. Directions: Identify each sentence as simple (s), complex (c), compound (cd), or compound-complex (cd-c). 1. Teresa is the leader of the dance troupe. ____________________ 2. Teresa is the leader, and I am a dancer. ____________________ 3. After she performs, Teresa takes a bow. ____________________ 4. After she performs, Teresa takes a bow, and the curtain closes. ____________________ 5. Before the performance, the dancers warm up. ____________________ 6. If they have time, the dancers sign autographs. ____________________ Directions: Correct the following run-on sentences. 1. Steve is on his way, we should meet him. ___________________________________________________________________ 2. Albert had gone to school he was sick. ___________________________________________________________________ 3. Sara has three guinea pigs, she wants to sell one of them. ___________________________________________________________________ Score Section 5 now. Teacher’s initials: _______ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 19 CHAPTER 2 REVIEW Directions: Define each of the four classes of sentences. 1. declarative ________________________________________________ 2. interrogative ________________________________________________ 3. imperative ________________________________________________ 4. exclamatory ________________________________________________ Directions: Identify each sentence as declarative (dec), interrogative, (int), imperative (imp), or exclamatory (exc). 5. How does she write so well? ____________________ 6. Please go back to the classroom. ____________________ 7. I need some help here! ____________________ 8. April is my best friend. ____________________ 9. Get me out of here! ____________________ 10. Would you like some cake? ____________________ Directions: Divide each sentence between the subject and predicate. Mark the simple subject (ss) and the simple predicate (sp.) Diagram the simple subject and predicate of each sentence. 11. Mark drew on the patio. 12. Steve has my radio in his car. 13. The family in the picture lives in Honduras. 14. She brought us a cake! 15. We trapped a grasshopper. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 20 Directions: Write an example of each type of sentence. 16. simple ___________________________________________________ 17. compound ___________________________________________________ 18. complex ___________________________________________________ 19. compound-complex________________________________________________ Directions: Fill in the blanks. 20. An ____________________ clause can stand alone as a sentence. 21. A ____________________ is a group of words that does not have both a subject and a verb. 22. A ___________________ occurs when two sentences are incorrectly written as one sentence. Directions: Read the following situation. Write about how you would be merciful. Your good friend was supposed to go to the movies with you but at the last minute went with a new friend instead. She was flattered that the new person, who is very popular, would ask her to go somewhere. You were left at home with nothing to do. Now your friend realizes this action was unkind and has asked you to forgive and forget. ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ A merciful person does not seek revenge. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 21 Chapter 3: Verbs The English language is organized into parts of speech, all of which have different uses in the building of a sentence. Verbs are principle building blocks in a sentence and have several functions. Section 1: Action Verbs Many verbs are action verbs, meaning they show the action taken in the sentence. The car raced down the track. Her family traveled to Hawaii. Shawn dreams of a new guitar. The girls remained at the theater. An action verb can indicate physical action, as in words like: talk, play, work, strum, jiggle. The eight parts of speech are: Noun Verb Pronoun Adverb Adjective Preposition Conjunction Interjection An action verb can indicate mental action, as in words like: dream, think, ponder, hope, imagine. Directions: Underline the verb in each sentence. Remember to look for the action word. 1. Ellen jumped rope for forty minutes. 2. Our class hiked to the top of the hill. 3. She thinks about college every day. 4. Joey hopes for a good grade. 5. I read the whole book yesterday. Nature has no mercy at all. Nature says, “I’m going to snow. If you have on a bikini and no snowshoes, that’s tough. I am going to snow anyway.” --Maya Angelou Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 22 An action verb can be singular or compound. If there is more than one verb, they are connected by and, or, nor, or but. Mom went to the store but bought no food. Alex’s grandmother blew out the candles and cut the cake. ** Compound verbs are especially useful in combining short sentences into one longer, more interesting sentence. Consider: Judy unlocked the door. She entered the house. She turned on the lights. OR Judy unlocked the door, entered the house, and turned on the lights. ** The second way makes for a more interesting and readable sentence due to making the verbs compound. Directions: Make the verbs in the following sentences compound, making one new sentence each time. 1. Thomas saw his uncle. He gave him a hug. He unloaded his suitcase. ___________________________________________________________________ 2. The group arrived at the terminal. They found the car. They headed for the hotel. ___________________________________________________________________ 3. Stephen loves broccoli. He dislikes carrots. ___________________________________________________________________ Score Section 1 now. Teacher’s initials: ________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 23 Section 2: State of Being and Linking Verbs Some verbs simply show that something exists. The book is on the table. The letter was in the file cabinet. The state of being verbs are: am, is, are, was were be, being, been Linking verbs connect the subject of the sentence with a word in the predicate. They are used when the word in the predicate describes or identifies the subject. Mrs. Peterson is the teacher. Sam was our pet goat. The stew tastes wonderful. You seem upset. State of beng verbs can be used as linking verbs. Other linking verbs are: grow, seem, smell, feel, become, appear, taste, sound, look, remain, stay. If you do not already know the being verbs and linking verbs, memorize the lists now. It is easy to confuse linking verbs with action verbs. Some linking verbs can also be used as action verbs. The difference is apparent from the way the verb is used in the sentence. Gene grew impatient. The garden grew all summer. Grew links the subject with its description. Grew indicates action taken by the subject. Pat feels sick. Mom feels her forehead. Feels links the subject with its description. Feels indicates an action. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 24 Directions: Underline the verb in each sentence. Identify the verb as being or linking. 1. The dance is in the gymnasium. ____________________ 2. My father is on a trip. ____________________ 3. Sal’s aunt is my professor. ____________________ 4. The kitchen smelled wonderful. ____________________ 5. The students became accountants. ____________________ 6. The idea sounds good to me. ____________________ 7. Her parents were outside. ____________________ 8. Jerry seems excited about school. ____________________ 9. I am in the kitchen. ____________________ Directions: Underline the verb in each sentence. Identify the verb as linking or action. 1. Mario seems angry. ____________________ 2. Amanda looks out the window. ____________________ 3. Susan looks ill. ____________________ 4. You grew two inches! ____________________ 5. The dinner grew cold. ____________________ 6. Please feel this fabric. ____________________ 7. Angela feels better today. ____________________ 8. Stanley appeared on the doorstep. ____________________ Score Section 2 now. Teacher’s initials: _______________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 25 Section 3: Helping Verbs and Verb Phrases A helping verb does just what it claims: it helps the main verb. Learn the following helping verbs. Some of them should be familiar from the lesson on being verbs. am are be been Helping Verbs do does did is was being were may might must have has had shall should would will can could A verb phrase consists of a helping verb and the main verb. Sometimes the words of a verb phrase are found together, and sometimes, they are separated by other words. Sam has been waiting a long time. Joan did not receive the letter. Should we wait for you? Directions: Underline the verb phrase in each sentence. Watch for other words that separate the words of the phrase. 1. We should have gone home already. 2. Did you have carrots for dinner? 3. There have been many visitors at our church. 4. I must have some help tonight. 5. Jeanine might teach that class next semester. Score Section 3 now. Teacher’s initials: _____________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 26 Section 4: Principal Parts of Verbs Every verb has four principle parts: the present, the past, the present participle, and the past participle. The infinitive of the verb is the verb with the word to in front of it (to learn). The present form is simply the present tense of the verb and indicates present or current action. I learn Spanish. My brother learns French. The past form is the past tense of the verb, indicating something that already took place. It ends in –d, –ed, or –t. I learned Spanish. My brother learned French. The present participle is formed by adding –ing to the present form. It needs a helping verb. It can indicate present or past action. I have been learning Spanish. My brother was learning French. The past participle is made by taking the past form and adding a helping verb. I have learned Spanish. My brother had learned French. Directions: Write the principal parts of these verbs. (Notice the sample.) Verb Present Past 1. tease tease teased Present Participle teasing Past Participle teased 2. show 3. stop 4. help 5. try Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 27 Section 5: Irregular Verbs In English, many verbs form the past and past participle in an irregular way. We learn these verbs naturally from conversations we hear from an early age, but it is important to study them in case there are some that are unfamiliar. Following is a list of some of the more common irregular verbs. Memorize them. Present Past Present Participle Past Participle begin began beginning begun bite bit biting bitten blow blew blowing blown break broke breaking broken bring brought bringing brought build built building built come came coming come do did doing done eat ate eating eaten get got getting gotten leave left leaving left ride rode riding ridden rise rose rising risen see saw seeing seen shake shook shaking shaken sing sang singing sung speak spoke speaking spoken wear wore wearing worn write wrote writing written Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 28 Directions: Fill in the chart with the correct verb forms. Present Past Present Participle Past Participle begin blow bring build come do eat get leave ride see sing speak write wear Score Sections 4 and 5 now. Teacher’s initials: __________ CHAPTER 3 REVIEW Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 29 Directions: Underline the verb in each sentence. Identify it as action, linking, or being. 1. Homer wrote The Iliad. ____________________ 2. Samantha is my best friend. ____________________ 3. Joey was in the warehouse. ____________________ 4. Trevor saw the skunk first. ____________________ 5. That fabric feels rough. ____________________ Directions: On your own paper, practice writing the state of being verbs, linking verbs, and helping verbs. Study any that you do not already know. Directions: Underline the verb phrase in each sentence. Watch for words that separate the words of the phrase. 1. How much money do you need? 2. Jack must have gone to the store. 3. They should stay in school. 4. Grandmother is coming over tomorrow. 5. Tammi will have been away for two days when you call her. Directions: Underline the correct form of the verb in each sentence. 1. I have (went, gone) to that church before. 2. Sherry was (gone, goed) by the time we arrived. 3. Patrick (blew, blowed) up the balloons for the party. 4. Frank and Jesse have (written, wrote) their papers. 5. The earth (shaked, shook) during the earthquake. Directions: Name the four principal parts of a verb. Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 30 1. _________________________ 2. _________________________ 3. _________________________ 4. _________________________ Directions: On your own paper, write your spelling words and their meanings. Study any you do not know already. Directions: Write four characteristics of a merciful person. 1._________________________________________________________________ 2. ________________________________________________________________ 3. ________________________________________________________________ 4. ________________________________________________________________ Score Chapter 3 Review now. Teacher’s initials: ______________ Happy are the merciful, for they will receive mercy. M. Hanna Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 31 UNIT 6 REVIEW Directions: Use each spelling word in a sentence. (1 point each) 1. octagon ______________________________________________________ 2. octet ______________________________________________________ 3. octopus ______________________________________________________ 4. octave ______________________________________________________ 5. visage ______________________________________________________ 6. vision ______________________________________________________ 7. advisor ______________________________________________________ 8. visor ______________________________________________________ 9. peddler ______________________________________________________ 10. pedestal ______________________________________________________ 11. pedestrian_____________________________________________________ 12. pedaler ______________________________________________________ 13. prescribe______________________________________________________ 14. scribe ______________________________________________________ 15. scribble ______________________________________________________ 16. inscribe ______________________________________________________ 17. projection______________________________________________________ 18. interjection____________________________________________________ 19. injection ______________________________________________________ 20. conjecture____________________________________________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 32 21. neighbor _____________________________________________________ 22. eighteen _____________________________________________________ 23. perceive _____________________________________________________ 24. belief _____________________________________________________ 25. relieve _____________________________________________________ 26. conscience___________________________________________________ 27. counterfeit____________________________________________________ 28. sieve _____________________________________________________ 29. yielded _____________________________________________________ 30. leisure _____________________________________________________ Directions: Write the definitions for the roots you have learned in this unit. (1 point each) 31. oct ____________________ 32. vis ____________________ 33. ped ____________________ 34. scrib ____________________ 35. ject ____________________ Directions: Identify the four types of sentences and their functions. (1 point each) 36. _______________________________________________________________ 37. _______________________________________________________________ 38. _______________________________________________________________ 39. _______________________________________________________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 33 Directions: Divide each sentence between the subject and predicate. Mark the simple subject and the simple predicate. Diagram the simple subject and simple predicate. (4 points each sentence) 40. Mark went to Senegal. 41. Here is my paper. 42. On the hill was a huge tree. 43. Julia studied her German. Directions: Fill in the blanks with these words: helping, linking, action, being. (1 point each) 44. An ____________________ verb shows the action of the sentence. 45. A ____________________ verb shows existence. 46. A ____________________ verb connects the subject and the predicate. 47. A ____________________ verb goes with a verb that cannot stand alone. Directions: Underline the verb phrase in each sentence. (1 point each) 48. She has taken her final exam. 49. Do you have my Science notebook? 50. The coaches are having a meeting. 51. I must have lost my keys. 52. The team has won three games in a row. Directions: Identify the four principal parts of verbs. (1 point each) 53. _________________________ 54. _________________________ 55. _________________________ 56. _________________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 34 Directions: Write the principal parts of each verb. (1 point each part) Present Past Present Participle Past Participle 57. break 58. bring 59. eat 60. leave 61. wear 62. do 63. begin 64. blow Directions: Think of someone to whom you could or should show mercy. Write about how you will do it. How do you think you will feel? (8 points) ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ Score Unit 6 Review now. Teacher’s initials: ____________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 35 Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 36 ENGLISH 701 TEST Student: Date: Score: Directions: Define the roots learned in this unit. (1 point each) 1. oct ____________________ 2. vis ____________________ 3. ped ____________________ 4. scrib ____________________ 5. ject ____________________ Directions: Write each spelling word as it is dictated to you. (1 point each) 6. ____________________ 16. ____________________ 7. ____________________ 17. ____________________ 8. ____________________ 18. ____________________ 9. ____________________ 19. ____________________ 10. ___________________ 20. ____________________ 11. ___________________ 12. ___________________ 13. ___________________ 14. ___________________ 15. ___________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 37 Directions: Write a short meaning or synonym for each spelling word. (2 points each) 21. counterfeit ____________________ 22. visage ____________________ 23. scribe ____________________ 24. advisor ____________________ 25. relieve ____________________ Directions: Use each spelling word in a sentence. (2 points each) 26. octave ___________________________________________________ 27. peddler ___________________________________________________ 28. scribble ___________________________________________________ 29. belief ___________________________________________________ 30. conscience ___________________________________________________ Directions: Define each of the four classes of sentences. (2 points each) 31. declarative ________________________________________________ 32. interrogative ________________________________________________ 33. imperative ________________________________________________ 34. exclamatory ________________________________________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 38 Directions: Identify each sentence as declarative (dec), interrogative, (int), imperative (imp), or exclamatory (exc). (1 point each) 35. Please pass the potatoes. ____________________ 36. I can’t wait for the field trip! ____________________ 37. Will you wait for us to finish? ____________________ 38. I will finish this test soon. ____________________ Directions: Divide each sentence between the subject and predicate. Mark the simple subject (ss) and the simple predicate (sp.) (3 points each sentence) 39. She is beautiful. 40. Our team lost the game yesterday. 41. They went home already. 42. Al took the bus to school. Directions: Fill in the blanks with the words: Phrase or Clause. (1 point each) 43. A ____________________ is a group of words that does not have a subject and a verb. 44. A ____________________ is a group of words that has a subject and a verb. 45. A ____________________ can be dependent or independent. Directions: Write examples of the following. (3 points each) 46. sentence with action verb ___________________________________________________________________ 47. sentence with being verb ___________________________________________________________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 39 Directions: Write the principal parts of each verb. (1 point each part) Present Past Present Participle Past Participle 48. break 49. bring 50. eat 51. wear 52. blow 53. do Directions: Compare how you feel about yourself when you have a merciful attitude toward others versus when you are not merciful. (4 points) ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ Copyright 2002 Starline Press, Inc. www.starlinepress.com English 701 unit test S.5.21.11.IIE.P.21. 5. 11 40