Identify the grammatical term for a word that describes a noun and give two examples from this sentence: "The eager student read the long article.
Adjective. Examples: "eager" and "long."
Define a compound sentence and write a simple example that uses the coordinating conjunction "but."
A compound sentence contains two or more independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction or semicolon. Example: "She wanted to leave early, but she stayed to help."
List two standard uses of commas in compound sentences.
1) Use a comma before a coordinating conjunction joining two independent clauses (e.g., "I wanted to go, but it started raining."). 2) Use commas to set off nonrestrictive (nonessential) modifiers or appositives (e.g., "My sister, a doctor, arrived.").
State when to use a semicolon between independent clauses.
Use a semicolon between two closely related independent clauses when no coordinating conjunction is used. Example: "She loves grammar; he prefers literature."
Define a double negative and rewrite this sentence to correct it: "I don't need no help."
A double negative uses two negatives and can create a nonstandard or unintended meaning. Corrected: "I don't need any help." or "I need no help."
Name the function of an appositive and rewrite this phrase to include an appositive for "the poet": "Emily Dickinson wrote quietly."
An appositive renames or identifies a noun beside it giving more information and is often set off by commas if nonrestrictive. Example rewrite: "Emily Dickinson, the poet, wrote quietly."
Define a complex sentence and identify the subordinate clause in: "Although the bell rang, he continued speaking.
A complex sentence contains one independent clause and at least one dependent (subordinate) clause. Subordinate clause: "Although the bell rang." Independent clause: "he continued speaking."
Correctly place commas in this sentence: "My sister who lives in Seattle is visiting us next week.
."Answer: "My sister, who lives in Seattle, is visiting us next week." (Nonrestrictive clause set off by commas.)
Fix punctuation: "She brought three items a pen, a notebook and a calculator" by inserting the correct mark and explain why.
"She brought three items: a pen, a notebook, and a calculator."
Explain why sentence fragments are problematic and correct the fragment: "Because she wanted to arrive early."
Fragments are incomplete sentences lacking a main clause; they leave ideas unfinished. Correction: "Because she wanted to arrive early, she left the house at 6:00 a.m." or remove subordinating word: "She wanted to arrive early."
Explain the purpose of adding -ing to a verb or adjective
changes word tense- past present future
What makes a sentence compound-complex? Compose one original compound-complex sentence and underline (or list) its independent and dependent clauses.
A compound-complex sentence has at least two independent clauses and at least one dependent clause. Example: "Although she was tired, she finished the paper, and she submitted it before midnight."
Dependent clause: "Although she was tired."
Independent clauses: "she finished the paper" and "she submitted it before midnight."
Explain the comma rule for this clause and punctuate: "After the meeting we went to dinner."
"After the meeting, we went to dinner."
Explain the difference in use between a colon and a semicolon; give an example sentence for each.
A colon introduces lists, quotations, or explanations that follow an independent clause. Example (colon): "Remember to bring one thing: your ID." A semicolon links closely related independent clauses or separates complex list items. Example (semicolon): "The meeting ran late; everyone stayed until it finished."
Identify the error in subject-verb agreement and correct it: "Each of the students have completed their assignment."
"Each of the students has completed his or her assignment." (Or "Each of the students has completed their assignment." — singular "each" takes a singular verb.)
Identify and label all parts of speech in the clause: "because she had already finished her draft."
because — subordinating conjunction
she — pronoun (subject)
had — auxiliary (helping) verb
already — adverb
finished — main verb (past participle in perfect aspect)
draft — noun
Convert these two sentences into a single compound-complex sentence: "She studies grammar. He prefers literature. Although she studies, she also tutors on weekends."
"She studies grammar, and he prefers literature, although she also tutors on weekends."
Independent clauses: "She studies grammar" and "he prefers literature."
Dependent clause: "although she also tutors on weekends."
Identify and fix comma splices in this passage (rewrite): "I finished the book, I started another. It was late, I could not sleep."
"I finished the book, and I started another. It was late; I could not sleep." (Replaces comma splice with coordinating conjunction and semicolon.)
Use a semicolon and a conjunctive adverb correctly to join these clauses: "The experiment failed. The team learned valuable information.
"The experiment failed; however, the team learned valuable information." (Semicolon before conjunctive adverb; comma after.)
Spot the misplaced modifier and rewrite the sentence to fix it: "Running to catch the bus, the rain drenched Maria."
(Make this sentence sound more fluid.)
"Running to catch the bus, Maria was drenched by the rain."
"While running to catch the bus, Maria was drenched by the rain."
What can we use to connect clauses together?
, CC
;
Analyze this sentence for sentence type and clause structure: "While the critics argued, the playwright revised the script, and the director prepared the set."
Compound-complex.
Dependent clause: "While the critics argued."
Independent clauses: "the playwright revised the script" and "the director prepared the set."
How many things are needed to use commas within a sentence clause?
more than 2
3
Compose a sentence that uses both a colon and a semicolon correctly (and label their functions)
"Three students led the workshop: Maria, who organized the schedule; Jamal, who prepared materials; and Li, who led the discussion."
Label: Colon introduces the list of leaders. Semicolons separate list items because items contain commas.
Diagnose all errors (grammar and punctuation) in this sentence, then provide a corrected version and brief explanation:
"Neither the teacher nor the students was ready, they had forgot their notes and it ruined the lesson."
Subject-verb agreement: with "neither...nor", verb agrees with nearer subject ("students") → use plural "were."
Comma splice between independent clauses → replace with semicolon or period.
Incorrect past participle "had forgot" → correct is "had forgotten."Corrected version (one option): "Neither the teacher nor the students were ready; they had forgotten their notes, and it ruined the lesson."
Brief explanation: Verb agrees with nearer subject (students), fix comma splice, and use correct past participle "forgotten."