Ap eng iii bellwork

32
AP ENG III BELLWORK 1

description

Ap eng iii bellwork. Bellwork : Day 3. Prepare to set up your ENG III notebook. Label your notebook dividers as follows: 1. General Information / Journal Writing 2. Learning Target Logs 3. Grammar 4. Vocabulary 5. Reading 6. Writing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Ap eng iii bellwork

Page 1: Ap  eng iii bellwork

1

AP ENG IIIBELLWORK

Page 2: Ap  eng iii bellwork

2

Bellwork: Day 3

Prepare to set up your ENG III notebook.Label your notebook dividers as follows:

1. General Information / Journal Writing2. Learning Target Logs3. Grammar4. Vocabulary 5. Reading 6. Writing

If you only have five tabbed dividers make a label for

all of the above but General Information.

Page 3: Ap  eng iii bellwork

3

AP Bellwork Day 4

COPY EACH OF THE FOLLOWING SENTENCES. PROOFREAD THE SENTENCE AND WRITE IT CORRECTLY.

1. I worked this weekend for a entire day just getting ready for this week.

2. I ain’t sure all the work was worth it.3. I had to wash clothes, cook meals, shop for

groceries, and etc.4. I did everything accept enjoy myself.5. Sadly, the affect is that I am extremely tired.

Page 4: Ap  eng iii bellwork

4

AP Bellwork 09/19/11

Pick up the handout entitled “Glossary of Usage Terms Week Four” from the bookcase by the door. Please read and be ready to discuss.

Page 5: Ap  eng iii bellwork

5

AP Bellwork 09/26/11

Study five minutes for Vocabulary Quiz 5.

Page 6: Ap  eng iii bellwork

6

AP Bellwork 09/27/11

Prepare for The Crucible final essay. Have paper, moments sheet, book and writing utensil on your desk and be ready to begin writing.

Page 7: Ap  eng iii bellwork

7

AP Bellwork 09/28/11Copy the following rules about commas and place them in the Grammar section of your notebook.

COMMASCommas are necessary for clear

expression of ideas.Rule 1: Use commas to separate

items in a series.(A) If all items in a series are joined by and or or (nor), you should not use commas to separate them.(B) Independent clauses in a series are usually separated by semicolons. Short independent clauses, however, may be separated by commas.

Page 8: Ap  eng iii bellwork

8

AP Bellwork 09/28/11

Rule 1: Use commas to separate items in a series.

WORDS IN A SERIESThe counselor distributed baseballs, bats,

volleyballs, tennis rackets, and bandages to the campers. [nouns]

The dog growled, snarled, and leaped at the intruder. [verbs]

Page 9: Ap  eng iii bellwork

9

AP Bellwork 09/28/11

Rule 1: Use commas to separate items in a series.

PHRASES IN A SERIESWe have a government of the people, by

the people, and for the people.

SUBORDINATE CLAUSES IN A SERIESI know I will pass the test if I take good

notes, if I study hard, and if I get a good night’s sleep.

Page 10: Ap  eng iii bellwork

10

AP Bellwork 09/28/11

NOTE: When the last two items in a series are joined by and, you may omit the comma before the and if the comma is not necessary to make the meaning clear.

CLEAR The entertainers sang, danced and juggled.

UNCLEAR John, Sue and Many went fishing. [Not clear with comma omitted. Is John part of the series, or is he being addressed?]

CLEAR John, Sue and Mary went fishing.

Page 11: Ap  eng iii bellwork

11

AP Bellwork 09/28/11

(A)If all items in a series are joined by and or or (nor), you should not use commas to separate them.

EXAMPLESWe ran and walked and even limped to

the finish line.

A volunteer addresses envelopes or answers phones or files correspondence.

Page 12: Ap  eng iii bellwork

12

AP Bellwork 09/28/11(B) Independent clauses in a series are

usually separated by semicolons. Short independent clauses, however, may be separated by commas.

EXAMPLESFor physical fitness we swam twenty-five

laps in the pool; we jogged four miles around the lake; and we exercised with workout equipment in Pam’s basement.

For physical fitness we swam, we jogged, and we exercised.

Page 13: Ap  eng iii bellwork

13

AP Bellwork 09/29/11Copy the following rules about commas and place them in the Grammar section of your notebook.

COMMASRule 2: Use commas to separate two

or more adjectives preceding a noun.

EXAMPLE The accident was a frightening, horrible sight.

Page 14: Ap  eng iii bellwork

14

AP Bellwork 09/29/11

When the last adjective bore the noun is thought of as part of the noun, the comma before the adjective is omitted.

EXAMPLE The new elementary school will be completed in 2016.

Page 15: Ap  eng iii bellwork

15

AP Bellwork 09/29/11To determine whether it is right to

put commas between two adjectives in a series of adjectives modifying a noun, substitute the word and for the doubtful comma. If the and sounds wrong, then you don’t need a comma.

PROBLEMI cautiously raised my broken right hand in response. [Comma before right?]

USE AND I cautiously raised my broken and right hand in response. [Obviously wrong!]

SOLUTION I cautiously raised my broken right hand in response. [No comma.]

Page 16: Ap  eng iii bellwork

16

AP Bellwork 09/30/11

Please pick up the handout entitled, “Commas Exercise One” from the bookcase. Complete on your own.

Page 17: Ap  eng iii bellwork

17

AP Bellwork 10/03/11 Copy the following rule(s) about commas and place them in the Grammar section of your notebook.

Rule 3: Use a comma before and, but, or, nor, for, so and yet when they join independent clauses.

EXAMPLES: Patrick brought the hot dogs and buns, and Cindy brought the potato salad.

We were there on time, but Jeff and Maria arrived late.

Page 18: Ap  eng iii bellwork

18

AP Bellwork 10/03/11

NOTE: Independent clauses joined by and, but, or, or nor need not be separated by a comma when they are very short. If the clauses are joined by the conjunctions yet, so, or for, they must be separated by a comma.

EXAMPLES The poodle tensed and the German shepherd

growled.[Clauses are too short to require

commas.]We sprayed with insecticide,

yet the bugs still found us.[Clauses are short but are separated by

the conjunction yet. Therefore, a comma is required.]

Page 19: Ap  eng iii bellwork

19

AP Bellwork 10/04/11 Pick up the handout from the

bookcase and complete. Fold in half, upon completion.

Page 20: Ap  eng iii bellwork

20

AP Bellwork 10/05/11 Copy the following rule(s) about commas and place them in the Grammar section of your notebook. Rule 4: Use commas to set off

nonessential clauses and nonessential participial phrases.

NONESSENTIAL CLAUSE:A subordinate clause (dependent clause that does not

express a complete thought and cannot stand by itself) that is not essential to the meaning of the sentence.

NONESSENTIAL PARTICIPIAL PHRASE:A PARTICIPLE is a verb form that can be used as an

adjective. PRESENT PARTICIPLES consist of the plain form of the verb plus –ing.PAST PARTICIPLE consist of the plain verb form of the verb plus –d or –ed. A few are formed irregularly.

A PARTICIPIAL PHRASE consists of a participial and its related words, such as modifiers and complements, all of which act together as an adjective.

Page 21: Ap  eng iii bellwork

21

AP Bellwork 10/05/11Nonessential clauses serve only to add

some extra information or to explain something further; they could be omitted without altering the fundamental meaning of the sentence.

An essential clause , on the other hand, is one that cannot be omitted without changing the meaning of the sentence.

NONESSENTIAL Peter Lincoln, who works with my father, bought a new Corvette yesterday.

Since you know without the clause who it was that bought a new Corvette yesterday, the clause is not necessary to identify Peter Lincoln; it merely adds information about him. It is a nonessential clauses and should be set off by commas.

NOTE: Most adjective clauses that modify PROPER nouns are nonessential and require commas.

Page 22: Ap  eng iii bellwork

22

AP Bellwork 10/05/11ESSENTIAL All the books that are damaged go in

these boxes. The clause that are damaged is essential because it tells

which books go in the boxes. Omitting the clause would change the meaning of the sentence into something absurd. Since the clause is an integral, or essential, part of the sentence , it is not set off by commas.

NOTE: Adjective clauses introduced by that are almost always essential.

EXAMPLES The friend whom I invited to the beach could not come. [essential]

Kelly, whom I invited to the beach, could not come.

[nonessential]The U.S. President who enjoyed turkey hash

on waffles for breakfast was Andrew Jackson. [essential]

Andrew Jackson, who was a U.S. President, enjoyed turkey hash on waffles for breakfast. [nonessential]

The meal that I like the best is spaghetti. [ essential]

Spaghetti, which I like best, is our meal tonight.

[nonessential]

Page 23: Ap  eng iii bellwork

23

AP Bellwork 10/05/11At times the writer of a sentence is the only one who

knows whether a clause is nonessential (commas) or essential (no commas). To make the meaning clear, the writer will either use commas to enclose the clause of abstain from their issue.

NONESSENTIAL My sister, who attends Duke University, sent me a college sweatshirt.

[The clause is not needed to identify this sister. Since it is nonessential, it requires commas.]

ESSENTIAL My sister who attends Duke University sent me a college sweatshirt.

[The writer knows he or she has more than one sister. The clause is necessary to tell which sister he or she is talking about. It should not be set off by

commas.]

Page 24: Ap  eng iii bellwork

24

AP Bellwork 10/05/11The same principles govern participial phrases. Recall the

two kinds of participles: present participles ending in –ing and past participles usually ending in –ed. When a participial phrase is nonessential, the phrase is set off by commas. When it is essential, no commas are used.

NONESSENTIAL Esther, running at a slow and leisurely pace, easily finished the marathon.

ESSENTIAL The woman running at a slow, leisurely pace easily finished the marathon.

NONESSENTIAL Vicky’s silk-screen, wrapped carefully inside a cardboard box, arrived today.

ESSENTIAL The silk-screen wrapped carefully inside a cardboard box was not

damaged.

Page 25: Ap  eng iii bellwork

25

AP Bellwork 10/06/11Pick up the handout entitled

“Commas: Exercise 3” from the bookcase. Complete on your own. Fold your paper in half, upon completion.

Page 26: Ap  eng iii bellwork

26

AP Bellwork 10/07/11Study five minutes for

Vocabulary test.

Page 27: Ap  eng iii bellwork

27

AP Bellwork 10/10/11

Pickup handout from bookcase and complete. Fold your paper in half when finished and wait QUIETYLY at your seat (that means you Dustin) for instructions.

Commas Exercise 2x

Page 28: Ap  eng iii bellwork

28

AP Bellwork 10/11/11 Copy the following rule(s) about commas and place them in the Grammar section of your notebook. Rule 5: Use comma after certain

introductory elements.

(1) Use a comma after words such as well, yes, no and why when they begin a sentence. Exclamations like wow, good grief, and gee whiz, if not followed by an exclamation point, must also be set off by commas.

(2) Use a comma after an introductory participial phrase.(3) Use a comma after a succession of introductory

prepositional phrases.(4) Use a comma after an introductory adverb clause.

Page 29: Ap  eng iii bellwork

29

AP Bellwork 10/11/11Rule 5: Use comma after certain

introductory elements.

(1) Use a comma after words such as well, yes, no and why when they begin a sentence. Exclamations like wow, good grief, and gee whiz, if not followed by an exclamation point, must also be set off by commas.

EXAMPLESNo, I haven’t taken the exam yet.Why, I thought you left yesterday!Wow, look at those wheels!

Page 30: Ap  eng iii bellwork

30

AP Bellwork 10/11/11Rule 5: Use comma after certain

introductory elements.

(2) Use a comma after an introductory participial phrase.

EXAMPLESCalling for a timeout, the referee began waving her arms.

Exhausted after three hours of continuous swimming, Diana emerged from the water.

Page 31: Ap  eng iii bellwork

31

AP Bellwork 10/11/11Rule 5: Use comma after certain

introductory elements.

(3) Use a comma after a succession of introductory participial phrases.

EXAMPLESBy the light of the silvery moon in autumn, we went on an old-fashioned hayride.

[Three prepositional phrases precede the comma.]

NOTE: A single introductory prepositional phrase does not usually require a comma unless the comma is necessary to make the meaning of the sentence clear.

EXAMPLESBy noon we had hiked four miles.In our bank, checks are sorted

automatically.[The comma is needed so that the

reader does not read “our bank checks.”]

Page 32: Ap  eng iii bellwork

32

AP Bellwork 10/12/11 Pickup handout from bookcase

and complete. Fold your paper in half when finished and wait QUIETYLY at your seat (that still means you Dustin) for instructions.

Commas Exercise 4

Be ready for a quiz over all the comma rules so far next Monday!!!