friday hour 3: prepositional phrases pretty participles practicing participial & prepositional...

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Friday • Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles • Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases • Making simple sentences.

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Page 1: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

Friday

• Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases

• Pretty Participles

• Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases

• Making simple sentences.

Page 2: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

Phrase: a group of related words that acts as a single part of

speech (eg. noun, adjective) and lacks both a subject and a

predicate. Because it lacks a subject and a predicate it cannot

act as a sentence.

Page 3: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

There are five types of phrases: 1. Prepositional phrases, which begin with a preposition

and include the object of the preposition. 2. Participial phrases, which begin with the participle and

include the object of the participle or other words that are connected to the noun by the participle.

3. Gerund phrases, which begin with the gerund and include the object of the gerund or other words that are acting as the complete subject or complete object.

4. Infinitive phrases, which begin with an infinitive and include the object of the infinitive or other words that are acting as part of the phrase.

5. Appositive phrases, which are nouns or pronouns desctibing another noun or pronoun in the sentence.

Page 4: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

Prepositions

• A preposition is a word that links a noun or pronoun following it to another word in the sentence.about behind around against across as

outside down except but by on over of

before beyond during despite for onto at

• A noun or pronoun always follows a preposition.

Page 5: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

• A prepositional phrase is a preposition and its object (remember, objects are always nouns or pronouns).on the wing in the door

near the violently swaying oak trees

on account of his nearly-depleted bank account

Page 6: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

Prepositions behave as adjectives, adverbs, and once in

a great while as nouns.• The painting in the next room slid down

the wall.

• The painting is in the next room.

• The painting went into the next room.

• In the next room is where the painting hangs.

Page 7: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

PREPOSITIONAL PHRASESinclude the preposition and the object of the preposition as well

as any modifiers related to either.the preposition is bold and the prepositional phrase is underlined

• The flying saucer appeared above the lake before it disappeared into space. – ABOVE is not an adverb because it has an object to complete its

meaning; therefore, ABOVE is a preposition and the entire phrase is an adverb phrase.

• Crystal could hear her sister snoring across the room. – Objects usually answer the question what. Therefore, we can ask across

what? to determine the object of the preposition.

• Christine discovered a pile of books hidden under the staircase. – UNDER is not an adverb because it alone does not answer where about

the verb.

Page 8: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

• You should consider reading the notes before class. – BEFORE is not an adverb because it alone does not answer where

about the verb.

• You should consider reading the notes before you come to class.– BEFORE is not a preposition because is not followed by an object that it

links to the clause. It is followed by another clause that is subordinate in meaning to the independent clause; therefore, it is a subordinate conjunction.

• Alix walked down the ramp to the beach.– DOWN is not an adverb because it alone does not answer where about

the verb.

• Alix fell down.– DOWN is an adverb answering where about the verb. There is no

object, so it cannot be a preposition.

Page 9: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

More Prepositions and Phrases• The manager with the pink slips terrorized

the employees.• The price of the promotion was much too

steep.• Something in the corner of the desk was

moving.• She lost her head at the retro drive-in.• The salesperson skimmed over the product's

real cost.• The boss was thrilled at their attitude.• The rock climbers arrived late at night.• Ms. Werner bribed the students with candy.

Page 10: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

A participle is a verb form that functions as an adjective.

Participles aren’t preceded by a helping verb.

• The sputtering car jerked down the road. (participle)

• The car was sputtering down the road. (verb)

Page 11: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

Present Participles end in –ing (jumping, burning, speaking).

• The howling children disturbed the neighbors.

• Fred Flintstone gave Barney Rubble a crumbling rock.

• Swimming slowly, I didn’t notice the shark on my tail.

Page 12: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

Past Participles usually end in –ed, -t, or –en (jumped, burnt, spoken).

• The frozen candy bar broke her $900 braces.

• Annoyed, Ms. Werner waited for the students to be quiet.

• Confused by the noise, the mouse hid its face.

Page 13: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

Writing with Participles

Use participles and participial phrases to create concise and interesting sentences. You can combine to simple sentences to make a more interesting complex sentence.

• 2 Sentences: Ms. Werner gave the students a pointed glare. She waited for them to be quiet.

• 1 Sentence: Waiting for them to be quiet, Ms. Werner gave the students a pointed glare.

Page 14: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

The participial phrase includes the participle and the object of the participle or any words modified by or related to the

participle. Participial phrases act as adjectives

• The car sliding out of control toward the building is going to hit the window. – SLIDING modifies the CAR. The verb is IS GOING.

• Cameron spotted his brother throwing rocks at the passing cars. – THROWING is not a verb in this sentence. It describes the brother.

Without an auxiliary verb, it cannot function as a verb.

• The astronaut chosen to ride the space shuttle to Mars is afraid of heights. – CHOSEN describes the ASTRONAUT.

Page 15: Friday Hour 3: Prepositional Phrases Pretty Participles Practicing Participial & Prepositional Phrases Making simple sentences

Even more participial phrases

• Running down the street, Alicia tripped and fell. – RUNNING certainly indicates something the subject is doing, but

the verbs for the subject are TRIPPED and FELL.

• Penned in by other runners, Steve was unable to make a break for the finish line.– STEVE is the subject. WAS is the verb. PENNED describes

STEVE.

• Mark returned the damaged package to the manufacturer.– DAMAGED describes PACKAGE.

• Alex fell down the broken staircase.– BROKEN describes STAIRCASE.