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Phrases, Independent Clauses, and Dependent Clauses

Phrases, Independent Clauses, and Dependent Clauses. Adapted from My Dog Bites the English Teacher , by Marian Anders. First, we learned how to find the subject of a sentence and the verb. Finding Verbs Review: The Time Change Method.

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Phrases, Independent Clauses, and Dependent Clauses

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  1. Phrases, Independent Clauses, and Dependent Clauses Adapted from My Dog Bites the English Teacher, by Marian Anders

  2. First, we learned how to find the subject of a sentence and the verb.

  3. Finding Verbs Review:The Time Change Method • Change the time of the sentence by saying yesterday, every day, and tomorrow at the beginning of the sentence. When you change the time of the sentence, the verb will change automatically. • Listen for the word or words that change when you change the time. The word is the verb.

  4. Finding Verbs Review:The Time Change Method Find the verb in this sentence: Steve ate the pizza. • Yesterday Steve ATE a pizza. (past) • Every day Steve EATS a pizza. (present) • Tomorrow Steve WILL EAT a pizza. (future) • The verb in the sentence is: • ate

  5. Finding Verbs withThe Time Change Method • When you change the time to find the verb, use all three time words—yesterday, today, and tomorrow; the verb will change with two of them.

  6. When you analyze a sentence, always find the verb first. Then you can find the subject by asking yourself, “Who or what performed the verb?” Example: Janisa baked a peach pie. TomorrowJanisaWILL BAKE a peach pie. Every day JanisaBAKES a peach pie. The verb is baked. Now, to find the subject, ask yourself, “Who or what baked a peach pie?” The answer, of course, is Janisa. Were you tempted to choose pie as the subject? Ask yourself, “Did the pie bake anything?” No, Janisa baked it, so the subject is Janisa. Finding Subjects Review

  7. Next, we will learn two essential grammar facts: • The difference between a clause and a phrase • The difference between an independent clause and a dependent clause

  8. Phrases, dependent clauses, and independent clauses are the building blocks that we use to make sentences. • When you understand the difference between them, you will have the foundation for everything that comes next.

  9. Clauses and Phrases • A clauseis a group of words that has a subject and a verb. • CLAUSE = SUBJECT + VERB • Aphrase is a group of words that doesn’t have a subject and a verb. • PHRASE SUBJECT & VERB

  10. We put clauses andphrasestogether to make sentences of different lengths. • A very short sentence has just one clause. • A complicated sentence could have several clauses and several phrases.

  11. To determine whether a group of words is a clause or a phrase, just look for a verb and a subject: The world’s smallest dog is a Chihuahua • Remember, look for a verb by changing the time of the sentence: • YesterdayThe world’s smallest dog WAS a Chihuahua • TomorrowThe world’s smallest dog WILL BE a Chihuahua

  12. Now look for a subject. The world’s smallest dog is a Chihuahua Ask yourself, “Who or what is a Chihuahua?” Which word would you choose? Dog. Underline the subject: The world’s smallest dogis a Chihuahua This group of words is a clause because it hasa subject and a verb.

  13. Now try this one: Lives in Wisconsin Look for a verbby changing the time: YesterdayLIVED in Wisconsin. TomorrowWILL LIVE in Wisconsin. Highlight the verb: Lives in Wisconsin

  14. Now look for a subject. “Who or what lives in Wisconsin?” It doesn’t say. This group of words doesn’t have a subject, so it is not a clause; it’s a phrase.

  15. Here’s one more example: Only four inches tall at the shoulders Look for a verb by changing the time: YesterdayOnly four inches tall at the shoulders Every day Only four inches tall at the shoulders Tomorrow Only four inches tall at the shoulders Nothing changed. This group of words does not have a verb. It’s a phrase. We don’t need to bother looking for a subject. Aclauseneeds a subject and a verb. If a group of words doesn’t have a verb, it must be a phrase.

  16. Now it’s time to practice finding PHRASES AND CLAUSES!

  17. PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES

  18. PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES • Any group of words that doesn’t have a subject and a verb is a phrase. • Traditional grammar has names for different kinds of phrases, but for correct writing and punctuation, a phrase is a phrase, and that’s all that matters right now. • However, it is useful to know prepositional phrases.

  19. A preposition links nouns, adjectives, and phrases to other words in a sentence. Essentially, a preposition describes a relationship between other words in a sentence. To find a preposition, try this strategy: A preposition is aword that tells what a catcan do with a chair.

  20. A cat can be in the chair underthe chair besidethe chair nearthe chair bythe chair withthe chair

  21. A cat can jump over the chair onthe chair intothe chair offthe chair fromthe chair

  22. A cat can run around the chair to the chair throughthe legs of the chair Monkey Bar Kitty A cat can be so still that it looks like part ofthe chair Camo Kitty

  23. Other prepositions include about, along, at, beyond,beneath, between, for, like and more. A prepositional phrase is a group of words that starts with a preposition and then has a couple more words to complete the idea.

  24. The subject or verb of a sentence will almost never be inside a prepositional phrase. • So if you have a long sentence, you could first put parentheses around all the prepositional phrases. • Then just look at the words left over to find the subject and verb. • The cat ran around the chair and jumped into mylap. • Thecat ran (around the chair) and jumped(intomy lap).

  25. The mouse peeked out of his hole, darted across the floor, and disappeared under the couch. The mouse peeked (out of his hole), darted (across the floor), and disappeared (under the couch). The man sat on the grass under a shady tree in Central Park on a beautiful day in mid-July listening to his Ipod. The man sat (on the grass) (under a shady tree) (in Central Park) (on a beautiful day) (in mid-July) listening (to his Ipod). • The subject or verb of a sentence will almost never be inside a prepositional phrase. • So if you have a long sentence, you could first put parentheses around all the prepositional phrases. • Then just look at the words left over to find the subject and verb.

  26. The mouse peeked out of his hole, darted across the floor, and disappeared under the couch. The mouse peeked (out of his hole), darted (across the floor), and disappeared (under the couch). The man sat on the grass under a shady tree in Central Park on a beautiful day in mid-July listening to his Ipod. The man sat (on the grass) (under a shady tree) (in Central Park) (on a beautiful day) (in mid-July) listening (to his Ipod). • The subject or verb of a sentence will almost never be inside a prepositional phrase. • So if you have a long sentence, you could first put parentheses around all the prepositional phrases. • Then just look at the words left over to find the subject and verb.

  27. LET’S PRACTICE IDENTIFYING PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES.

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