1 / 15

E:60 // The Ballad of Bushwacker

E:60 // The Ballad of Bushwacker. Sentence Fluency & Comma Rules. Simple Sentences. S + V {Phrases can modify: Prepositional, Present/Past Participle or Infinitive}. “He is seven-years-old.” Subject = He Verb = is

amelie
Download Presentation

E:60 // The Ballad of Bushwacker

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. E:60 // The Ballad of Bushwacker Sentence Fluency & Comma Rules

  2. Simple Sentences S + V {Phrases can modify: Prepositional, Present/Past Participle or Infinitive} • “He is seven-years-old.” • Subject = He • Verb = is • “Before any of that stuff, the story of the very first rivalry started here.” • Subject = the story {of the very first rivalry = PP} • Verb = started • Prepositional Phrase = Before any of that stuff

  3. Complex Sentences S + V + {dep. clause = sub. conj. or relative pronoun} • “It’s an ego that is well-deserved.” • Subject = It • Verb = is • Dependent Clause = that is well-deserved {essential} • “So when he was two, Bushwacker shipped off to Texas to learn some manners…” • Subject = Bushwacker • Verb = shipped off • Dependent Clause = when he was two

  4. Compound Sentences S + V, [coord. conj. = FANBOYS] S + V • “There’s not a cowboy that can’t be throwed, and there’s not a bull that can’t be rode.” • Subject # 1 = There • Verb # 1 = is • Coordinating Conjunction = and • Subject # 2 = there • Verb # 2 = is

  5. Paragraph 1 Questions • Do you see anything unique about this paragraph? • What comma rules are present? • How many dependent clauses are present? • How many prepositional phrases? • How many simple, complex and compound sentences?

  6. Paragraph 1 Answers • DEPENDENT CLAUSES – 1 • “Before there was Yankee versus Red Sox” • PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES – 8 • “Before Michigan-Ohio or Ali versus Frazier” • “before David & Goliath or Athens versus Sparta” • “before anyof that stuff” • “in caves” • “by torchlight” • “the story of the very first rivalry started here.” • “The story of the humans versus this.” • SIMPLE – 2 • COMPLEX – 0 • COMPOUND – 0

  7. Sentence Fluency What do the previous fragments do at the beginning of this E:60 presentation? Explain. • They speed up reading. • They act similar to reading items in a series, creating a catalog of information. • The reader creates an expectation for what will come next. • Fragments CAN work in the context of your story IF they are used appropriately. • They should be used when wanting to put emphasis on the material.

  8. Paragraph 2 Questions • How many simple, complex and compound sentences are in this paragraph? • What is the role of the hyphens in the last sentence?

  9. Paragraph 2 Answers • SIMPLE – 7 • COMPLEX – 0 • COMPOUND – 1 • Why would the author use many simple sentences in this paragraph? • What effect does it have on the reader? • HINT: Think about the children’s stories we’ve read!

  10. Hyphen = The “em” Dash • Named after its width (the size of an m) • May replace commas, semicolons, colons, and parentheses • Indicates added emphasis, an interruption, or an abrupt change of thought • Used primarily in INFORMAL writing • EX: “He’s an artist – delicate ribbons of slobber streaming from his muzzle – a modern-day bovine Baryshnikov.” • Commas would also work here {appositive} • Attention is made to the slobber ribbons

  11. Semi-Colon • Separates two COMPLETE thoughts • Most similar to a period, NOT a comma • Second thought is a continuation (or related) to the first thought • Do NOT capitalize second statement • EX: “Choose a lackluster bull; get a lackluster score.” • How could you write this as a compound sentence? • How could you write this as a complex sentence?

  12. “Choose a lackluster bull; get a lackluster score.” • COMPOUND SENTENCE • Choose a lackluster bull, and get a lackluster score. • COMPLEX SENTENCE • When you choose a lackluster bull, you will get a lackluster score. • If you choose a lackluster bull, you will get a lackluster score. • WHICH SOUNDS THE BEST TO YOU? WHY?

  13. Colon • Shows the reader that what follows proves, explains, defines, describes, or lists elements of what preceded it • If you list items in a series after the colon, do not capitalize the first word (unless it’s a proper noun) • If you have an independent clause after the colon, capitalize the first word • EX: “He is forever locked in the present, and right now, all he knows is this: He is Bushwacker, and he is here.”

  14. Complete Text • Scan the text. • Which types of sentences do you think appear most? • What effect does this have on the reader? • What makes this great writing? Why are you engaged (hopefully, you are engaged)?

  15. Engaging: • Simple sentences make the text move quickly. • Narrator’s voice is engaging. • Text makes connections to famous people or teams. • Text makes a connection to the beginning of time: man vs. animal. • Videography is engaging. • Text makes a connection to the characters, specifically with JB Mauney and his desire to defeat the undefeated – we can relate.

More Related