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Grammar, Punctuation and Usage

Grammar, Punctuation and Usage. How Do We Use Them?. The Apostrophe. Apostrophes show possession Miss Peister’s class Simon’s car They can also be used for contractions It is becomes it’s Cannot becomes can’t Do not becomes don’t. The Comma. Commas can be used for lists

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Grammar, Punctuation and Usage

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  1. Grammar, Punctuation and Usage How Do We Use Them?

  2. The Apostrophe • Apostrophes show possession • Miss Peister’s class • Simon’s car • They can also be used for contractions • It is becomes it’s • Cannot becomes can’t • Do not becomes don’t

  3. The Comma • Commas can be used for lists • I have three cats, four dogs, and a fish. • I need tomatoes, carrots, and ice cream at the grocery store. • Commas separate lists of adjectives • He was tall, dark and handsome. • That car was fast, shiny, red and expensive. • Commas also help separate conjunctions • They connect two independent clauses with a conjunction • He hit the bell well, but he ran towards third base!

  4. The Comma • Commas offset introductory elements • These two clauses are exchangeable • Running towards third base, he suddenly realized how silly he looked • Commas surround parts of sentences that are not essential • This part of the sentence can be removed without altering the meaning of the sentence • The commas surround additional information • Nicholas, who was also a great ball player, enjoyed playing video games. • Lisa, though she didn’t want to, went to the store anyway.

  5. Quotation Marks • When someone is speaking, we need to surround what they are saying with quotation marks • This eliminates confusion about who is saying what! • For example • Sheila said, “I like him a lot.” • “I don’t think so,” replied John. “He is too cool for you!”

  6. Now It’s Your Turn!

  7. The Master of Punctuation • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bpIbdZhrzA

  8. Nouns • Nouns are the most basic part of speech • They include any person, place, thing, or idea • Dog, cat, Ontario, France, Mrs. Gardiner, or thought

  9. Verbs • These are action words • Jump, sleep, die, stand up, watch, etc. • They give our nouns excitement!

  10. Sentence Structure • Our most basic sentences can be made with only nouns and verbs • Lucy sleeps. • A common, English sentence is generally structured as follows: • Subject Verb Object • I chased the dog.

  11. Pronouns • A pronoun can replace a noun • This makes a sentence less repetitive • The most common form is the personal pronoun • Personal pronouns can also be names • Shelly • Derek • Miss Peister

  12. Pronouns • Pronouns can also be possessive! • Mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours and theirs • Remember: if something is possessive, it means that something owns another thing • His ball • My cat • Her cellphone • Remember: its, when it is showing possession, DOES NOT need an apostrophe

  13. Adjectives • Adjectives are used to make ordinary objects cool! • You can use a lot of cool words to describe an object • They make life more exciting! • Instead of that car you could say that shiny, new, sleek sports car!

  14. Prepositions • A preposition links nouns, pronouns and other phrases in a sentence • Usually it is the “place” of something… • The book SITS on the counter • …but it can also be the state of being • The children jumped into the water WITHOUT fear • Common prepositions include above, through, inside and behind

  15. Prepositions • Think of prepositions as the locators of nouns in time and place • He sat IN FRONT OF the desk • He went OUTSIDE to play • He is the noun; that noun is currently located outside • Fun fact: when trying to define a prepositional word such as in or on, you usually use your hands!

  16. Conjunctions • Conjunctions are joiners; they connect, or conjoin, parts of sentences • Stacey wants to play for Swan Hills, but she has troubles meeting the grade requirements • Most often, conjunctions come in the form of coordinating conjunctions • Coordinating conjunctions combine two independent clauses • The first clause is written, followed by a comma, then the second clause is written following the comma AND the conjunction

  17. Conjunctions • An example of a coordinating junction • I spent my summer studying Social Studies, but there is a lot of information to remember! • Josh ate all of his lunch, yet he was still hungry. • Note the use of the comma and the word but • The most common conjunctions include • And, but, or, yet, for, nor and so

  18. Conjunctions • Conjunctions can be remembered with the following acronym: • F- for • A- and • N- nor • B- but • O- or • Y- yet • S- so

  19. Adverbs • Adverbs modify, or change, nouns and verbs • He drove slowly --- How did he drive? • They also tell us how, when, where, why or under what conditions something is happening • He drove a car very fast --- How fast was his car? • Remember: how is the something happening, when and where is it happening, and why is it happening? • She moved quite slowly down the aisle --- How slowly did she move?

  20. Adverbs • The most important thing to remember when dealing with adverbs is to ask a question: • How is the (noun) happening? • How well was the (verb) completed? • How (adjective) is the (noun)? • Ex: My teacher (noun) is reallytall (adjective).

  21. Interjections • Boo! Pow! Gotcha! Wow! Cool! • Interjections exclaim protest, command or excitement • Stop! Don’t! Wait! • Sometimes, they are sound words; sometimes they seem like shouting • Oh no! I shouldn’t have done that! • Oh no would be the interjection • They can stand alone or they can be in a sentence

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