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Unit 9 Modifying Noun Phrases. Adjectives and Participles. Focus 1: Overview of Word order in Noun Phrases. What’s a noun phrase? A determiner and a noun, plus its modifiers. So then what’s a determiner? What’s a modifier?.
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Unit 9Modifying Noun Phrases Adjectives and Participles
Focus 1: Overview of Word order in Noun Phrases • What’s a noun phrase? • A determiner and a noun, plus its modifiers. • So then what’s a determiner? • What’s a modifier? Determiners can be articles (a, an, the), demonstratives (this, that, these, those), possessives (my, your…), quantifiers (some, many…) Modifiers include adjectives, participles, nouns, prepositional phrases, participle phrases and relative clauses
Focus 2-Order of Descriptive Adjectives • Put these words in the right order to make the sentence correct: • broken, dish, an, ceramic, ugly, white • Car, a, little, funny, metal • rubber, blue, a, ball, pretty, new 1. An ugly broken white ceramic dish. 2. A funny little metal car. 3. A pretty new blue rubber ball.
Focus 3-Particple modifiers • Participles can be used like descriptive adjectives to describe nouns too. Just add –ing for present participle and –ed for past participle but don’t forget about irregulars!
Focus 4-Meaning of Participles • That movie was boring. We were bored. • It was an interesting novel, but I wasn’t interested in the story. • We we’re excited to see the movie. I hope the movie is exciting! • What is the difference between these sentences? • We use present participles (verb +ing) to describe the agent, or the doer in the sentence. We use the past participle to describe receivers.
Adding information to Participles • Often when we add a noun or an adverb to a participle we use hyphens. • Some foot-tapping music (noun+present participle) • A fast-moving train (adverb+present participle) • Adjective-noun + past participle combinations describe physical characteristics • A blue-eyed baby • A short-legged dog • We don’t always use hyphens, especially with –ly adverbs • A deeply depressed individual • A manmade lake
Focus 6-Modifiers that Follow Noun Phrases • Participial phrases can be used to modify a noun phrase and can come before or after the noun and changes the meaning. • It comes after the noun to give more information about the particular noun we are talking about. • The man speaking to John told him some shocking information. • It comes before the noun if it has already been identified and the participle describes more about it. • Speaking to the man, John found out some shocking information.