Grammar Test—commas, coordinate & subordinate conj.
What do past tense regular verb usually end in?
-ed
What ending do past participle regular verbs take on?
-ed
What do present (singular/one) tense verbs usually end in?
-s
How are independent clauses joined in a compound sentence?
1. Comma + coordinate conjunction (FANBOYS) 2. Semicolon 3. Semicolon + adverbial conjunction (therefore, however, moreover, and nevertheless) followed by a comma
And shows?
Addition
Moreover shows?
Addition
Common Subordinating Conjunctions?
Although, after, because, when, unless, until, if, since, unless, though
The comma goes where in a conjunction?
Before the conjunction
For shows?
Cause
Or shows?
Choice
What do Coordinating Conjunctions do?
Combine two sentences together to make one sentence. They work together to form a good sentence
Nevertheless shows?
Contrast
Yet shows?
Contrast
But shows?
Contrast or contradiction
However shows?
Contrast or contradiction
Commas after introductory element example
Days afterward, I still suffered from the effects of the flu
So shows?
Effect
FANBOYS (coordinate conjunctions)
For, and, nor, but, or, yet, so
Subordinate Conjunction Sentence Example
Herbert performed his irresponsible experiment, because he was curious (because he was curious is the dependent clause)
Coordinate Conjunction Sentence Example
I do not eat buttons, for they are not food
Pronouns
I, you, she/he/it; we, you, they (among others, such as relative pronouns)
Coordinate conjunctions require both sides to be?
Independent sentences (a complete thought in written form)
What do Subordinating Conjunctions do?
Make clauses dependent?
Nor shows?
Negative choice
Do words like "yesterday," "today," and "tomorrow" change or affect the tense of a verb?
No; the tense is unique to the verbs, tense comes from the verb in the sentence (no other word or words), and tense comes in a variety of forms
What do past tense irregular verb usually end in?
Nothing; examples: be, go think, think, have, taken run, see
What does a complex sentence contain?
ONE independent clause and one or MORE dependent clauses
Comma splices
Often need coordinating conjunctions or to be changed to a semicolon
Therefore shows?
Result
Adverbial conjunction sentence example
She won the gold in gymnastics; therefore, her long hours in the gym were rewarded
What do most dependent clauses begin with?
Subordinate conjunctions (although, because, since, even though, until, and after) or relative pronouns (who, which, and that)
What are some adverbial conjunctions?
Therefore, however, moreover, and nevertheless
What's special about future tense verbs?
They're two words (two word tense); ex: will be, shall go, will think, shall see, etc
A compound sentence contains?
Two or more independent clauses
A compound-complex sentence contains?
Two or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses
Commas after dependent clause example
When the game was over, all of us were elated and rushed onto the field
What are appositives?
Words and phrases that describe or re-name. Example: Victoria, my fiancee, and Debi, my old girlfriend of mine who lives near us, get along well
Pronoun reference
all pronouns have words (antecedents) they refer to or rename; the pronoun must agree with the noun it renames (in gender--male or female; and number--singular or plural)
Quotation marks ("quotes")
are for exact words quoted; or for shorter works: songs, poems, essays, etc
Apostrophes (')
are for forming possessives or contractions (don't confuse the two)
Subordinating conjunctions
for example: although, when, unless, until; make clauses dependent (the clauses cannot stand along and act like fragments)
Italics
for longer works: names of books, plays, paintings, sculpture, and so on (don't underline)
Verbs
have tense and express action or being
Point of view
in sentences, do not jump from "I" to "you" or to "she" or "he" or "they" without some transitional words or sentences to ensure clarity (like pronoun antecedents or transitions)
Sentence fragments
incomplete sentences that need subjects, verbs, and or other fixes to stand along
Adjectives
modify nouns
Adverbs
modify verbs (sometimes adverbs or adjectives-- often end with -ly)
Commas splices
often need coordinating conjunctions or to be change to semicolons
Nouns
people, places, and things
Parallel structure (parallelism)
same form for similar items or pars of a sentence
Fused sentences
sentences that need punctuation (comma, semicolons) or other help
Subject/Verb Agreement
subject and verbs must agree; singular subjects take singular verbs, plural subjects take plural verbs. Getting this wrong suggests subject/verb problems
Passive voice
the subject here is actually the direct object of an active voice sentence that may or may not be given; passive voice often leaves out details or description that makes a better, fuller picture
Active voice
the subject performs an action and a direct object receives the action; often, and Indirect object follows a preposition later in the sentence; active voice is descriptive and detailed
Prepositions
to, from, around, through (and words that signify location and/or position)
Coordinating conjunctions
used to connect sentences (via commas and FANBOYS)
Linking verbs
verbs that take the place of am, is, are, was, were (the present and past forms of BE); these imply or suggest similar meaning without overusing BE
Transitions
words or phrases that help make connections between sentences or ideas; these may be words like however, therefore, or on the other hand (these are not all the possibilities) - Note: subordinating conjunctions are not usually considered "transitions." They may sometimes act in similar ways, but transitions do not make independent clauses dependent; they state or imply shifts in time or place, or bring an element of contrast or change to the sentence