Sentence Structure
Parts of Speech
Punctuation
Potpourri
100

This sentence is a correctly written complete sentence.

A. Watching television on a Friday night.

B. Reading books is my favorite activity.

What is Sentence B.

100

This the part-of-speech term for a person, place, thing, or idea.

What is a noun?

100

This is the name of this punctuation mark: 

;

What is a semicolon?

100
This is the author of To Kill a Mockingbird.

Who is Harper Lee?

200

This sentence is a run-on sentence.

A. I'm looking for a store it has to sell hiking boots.

B. When I finally find the store I'm looking for. 

What is Sentence A.

BONUS (+50 points): Correct the sentence.

200

This the part-of-speech term for an action or state of being.

What is a verb?

200

This is the correct placement of commas in the sentence below:

Jen made brownies and whipped cream for her niece's birthday but then she found out her niece hates chocolate.

What is a comma after "birthday"?

Jen made brownies and whipped cream for her niece's birthday, but then she found out her niece hates chocolate.

200

This is the plural possessive form of the world child.

What is children's?

300

This is one way to fix this run-on sentence.

Friar Lawrence went to Juliet's tomb he found Romeo dead.

What is...

Friar Lawrence went to Juliet's tomb where he found Romeo dead.

Friar Lawrence went to Juliet's tomb, [but/and] he found Romeo dead.

Friar Lawrence went to Juliet's tomb; he found Romeo dead.

When Friar Lawrence went to Juliet's tomb, he found Romeo dead.

300
This is the part of speech that shows the relationship between a noun and another word or phrase. It shows a location in space or time. 

What is a preposition?

300

This is what you do when you are quoting something that is already in quotes in the original text. 

Ex: How would you quote this in a paragraph?

"Bye Mom," she called. "I'll be back at six o'clock!"

What is change double quotes to single quotes and put double quotes around the whole passage?

Ex:

"'Bye Mom,' she called. 'I'll be back at six o'clock!'"

300

This is the structure of a formal essay (the names for the three parts), in order. 

What is introduction, body paragraphs, and conclusion?

400

This is the definition of an independent clause.

What is a clause that can stand on its own because it has both a subject and predicate OR the equivalent to a simple sentence, but one that has been combined with other clauses?

400

These are the seven coordinating conjunctions in the English language. 

HINT: There is an acronym/memory aid for remembering them.

What are for, and, nor, but, or, yet, and so?

(FANBOYS)

*Partial credit = 57 points per correct conjunction.

400

This is the correct way to punctuate and cite the quote below:

Quote: I'm mad at you!

Page: 45

What is: 

"I'm mad at you!" (45).

400

This is the full definition of an interjection AND one example.

What is a part of speech that shows excitement or emotion and is not part of (separated from) the main sentence?

Examples: Ouch! Wow! Holy-Moly! Geez. ...

500

This a sentence that properly uses a dependent clause. (Write your own.)

What is... [check individual sentences].
500
These are three examples each of transitive verbs and intransitive verbs.

What are... [judge individual lists]. 

500

These are three of places where a comma is used.

What are (any of the three listed below):

1. To separate items in a list.

2. In dates after the day.

3. In place names between the city & state or city & country.

4. Between two independent clauses that are linked by a coordinating conjunction.

5. Between a dependent clause with a subordinating conjunction and the following independent clause.

5. Between a prepositional phrase and the remainder of a sentence.

6. Separating non-essential phrases from the rest of the sentence (such as appositives or interjections)

7. Between a piece of quoted dialogue and the rest of the sentence. 

500

This character said 

"Here's to my love! O true apothecary! / Thy drugs are quick. Thus with a kiss I die." 

in this act scene.

(**Must have all three for full points!)

Who is Romeo in Act V, scene iii. 
M
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