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English 9 Mr. Rinka - Lesson #17

English 9 Mr. Rinka - Lesson #17. Subject Complements Predicate Nominatives Predicate Adjectives William Shakespeare Globe Theater. Subject Complements. What are Subject Complements ? What is a Predicate Nominative ? What is a Predicate Adjective ?. William Shakespeare.

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English 9 Mr. Rinka - Lesson #17

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  1. English 9Mr. Rinka - Lesson #17 Subject Complements Predicate Nominatives Predicate Adjectives William Shakespeare Globe Theater

  2. Subject Complements What are Subject Complements? What is aPredicate Nominative? What is a Predicate Adjective?

  3. William Shakespeare Who was William Shakespeare? What is the Globe Theater? Why is Shakespeare Important?

  4. Subject Complements A Subject Complement follows a linking verb and describes or identifies the subject. A Subject Complement can be a noun, a pronoun or an adjective.

  5. Linking Verbs &Subject Complements Linking Verbs link a noun or a pronoun (subject of a sentence) to another noun, pronoun, or adjective called the Subject Complement.

  6. Linking Verbs & Subject Complements The girl is a singer. (singer = subject complement) I am a teacher. (teacher = subject complement)

  7. Linking Verbs & Subject Complements The cake tastes good. (good = subject complement) Heisthe one. (one = subject complement)

  8. Predicate Nominative A Subject Complement that is either a noun or a pronoun is called the Predicate Nominative. The girl is a singer. (singer = Subject Complement = Predicate Nominative)

  9. Predicate Nominative I am a teacher. (teacher = Subject Complement = Predicate Nominative) Heisthe one. (one = Subject Complement = Predicate Nominative)

  10. Predicate Adjective A Subject Complement that is an adjective is called the Predicate Adjective. That boy isvery smart. (smart = Subject Complement = Predicate Adjective)

  11. Predicate Adjective The cake tastes good. (good = Subject Complement = Predicate Adjective) Bill was happy to see me. (happy = Subject Complement = Predicate Adjective)

  12. Find the Subject Complement - Label Predicate Nominative or Predicate Adjective The girls were excellent musicians. Some students looked worried about the test. The music for the show sounds beautiful.

  13. Find the Subject Complement - Label Predicate Nominative (PN) or Predicate Adjective (PA) The girls were excellent musicians (PN). Some students lookedworried(PA) about the test. The music for the show soundsbeautiful(PA).

  14. Find the Subject Complement - Label Predicate Nominative (PN) or Predicate Adjective (PA) Most people are good citizens. His attitude seemed extremely good. The garbage smelled bad. Mom is a fantasticlawyer.

  15. Find the Subject Complement - Label Predicate Nominative (PN) or Predicate Adjective (PA) Most people are good citizens (PN). His attitude seemed extremely good (PA). The garbage smelledbad (PA). Mom is a fantastic lawyer (PN).

  16. Objects and Complements Remember: Subject Complements (Predicate Nouns and Adjectives) follow Linking Verbs. Direct and Indirect Objects follow Action Verbs (Transitive Verbs).

  17. Objects & Complements http://www.quia.com/pop/188364.html http://www.quia.com/rr/138011.html

  18. William Shakespeare Who was William Shakespeare? What are Some of His Best Works? Why is Shakespeare Important?

  19. William Shakespeare http://www.enotes.com/william-shakespeare/shakespeare-biography

  20. William Shakespeare Born in April 23, 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon River (100 miles NW of London) to John and Mary (Arden). He most likely attended King’s New Grammar school and finished school at 15. He probably worked for his father the years he stayed in Stratford-upon-Avon.

  21. William Shakespeare He married Anne Hathaway in 1582 when he was 18, and she was 26. He and Anne had 3 children: Susanna born in 1583 and twins Hamnet and Judith born in 1585. His son Hamnet died in 1596. Around 1589, Shakespeare started his career in London as an actor and playwright.

  22. William Shakespeare By 1592 he had a reputation writing and acting for Pembroke’s Men and Stranger’s Men which later became Chamberlain’s Men, where Shakespeare spent the rest of his career. Theaters closed because of the plague from 1592-1594, and Shakespeare wrote book-length narrative poetry and sonnets.

  23. William Shakespeare In 1599 Shakespeare became a partner in the new Globe theater, and his successes continued. When Queen Elizabeth died in 1603, the Chamberlain’s Men became the King’s men in honor of King James.

  24. William Shakespeare Shakespeare worked successfully for 20 years in London where he invested in real estate, and opened a second theater called the Blackfriars Gatehouse. Shakespeare retired around 1611 and returned to Stratford-upon-Avon where he died at age 52 on April 23, 1616.

  25. The Globe Theaterhttp://www.bardweb.net/globe.html

  26. The Globe Theaterhttp://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivia/globe/globe.htm Circular 3 stories tall open air theater Seating capacity of 3,000 people Co-owner was William Shakespeare Built in 1599 to compete with Rose Playhouse

  27. The Globe Theaterhttp://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivia/globe/globe.htm Located near Thames River in Southwark Attracted commoners and royalty as well Commoners on the ground – groundlings Royalty and nobility in balconies & galleries

  28. The Globe Theaterhttp://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivia/globe/globe.htm A flag was flown to announce the play Above entrance “Totus mundus agit histrionem” “All the world’s a stage” 5 Foot stage in the middle against a side Groundlings stood in all weather

  29. The Globe Theaterhttp://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivia/globe/globe.htm Groundlings paid one-penny to stand It cost two pennies to sit in galleries No lighting, no backdrops, no props Actors shouted and over-dramatized

  30. The Globe Theaterhttp://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivia/globe/globe.htm Plays started at 2 PM and lasted 2-3 hours Julius Caesar was first play; 15 male actors 1613 Globe burned during Henry VIII Rebuilt on other side of Thames in 1614 All theaters closed by Puritans in 1644

  31. William Shakespeare’ Best Works http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~anthony/Shake.html A Midsummer Night's Dream, about 1595 The Merchant of Venice, 1596 or 1597 The Tragedy of Richard II, 1595 Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, 1600 or 1601 Othello, 1603 King Lear, 1594

  32. William Shakespeare’ Best Works http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~anthony/Shake.html The First Part of King Henry IV, 1597 The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, probably 1599 Macbeth, 1606 Romeo and Juliet, between 1591 and 1596

  33. Why is Shakespeare Important?http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/William_Shakespeare.aspx Shakespeare is important because of the stories he tells, the characters he creates, and his use of language. 

  34. Shakespeare’s Stories Extremely interesting. Very entertaining Depict real life issues (especially histories and tragedies).

  35. Shakespeare’s Characters Very complex and interesting Possess real human qualities Are usually a combination of good and bad

  36. Shakespeare’s Language Very entertaining Quite sophisticated The earliest form of modern English.

  37. Objects & Complements http://www.quia.com/pop/188364.html http://www.quia.com/rr/138011.html

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