Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words....

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Sentence Sentence Workshop Workshop

Transcript of Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words....

Page 1: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Sentence Sentence WorkshopWorkshop

Page 2: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

What is a sentence?

Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Page 3: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

What is a sentence?

Official Definition:A group of words with a subject and

predicate that conveys an independent statement, question,

request, or command

Write this down!

Page 4: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Many definitions:

Subject + Predicate = Sentence

Subject: Noun, noun phrase, or pronoun with other words like articles and adjectives

Predicate: Verb with other words that describe the subject or the verb

Page 5: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Noun

A noun = person, place, thing or idea

Common nouns = words that name things in a general sense: car, dog, person, building, state, music, book, etc.

Proper nouns = the specific name of things: Mercedes, Fido, Empire State Building, Delaware, The Face on the Milk Carton, etc.

Page 6: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Noun Practice

Proper nouns stand out, while common nouns blend in with the crowd.

If you were at a concert and Eminem walked out into the crowd of 40,000 people, you would notice him instantly.

Page 7: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Common to Proper Noun Practice

Rewrite the sentences replacing the vague, general nouns with specific proper nouns.

1. At the arena, I cheered for the winning team.

2. Meg got jeans, running shoes and a CD for her birthday.

Page 8: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

VerbAn action word or a word that conveys a state of

being like “is”Action verbs = words that express what a

person, animal, force of nature, or thing can do: sneeze, wink, slam, whine, whimper, play, etc.

Helping/linking verbs = words that help action verbs or verbs that make connections or links between words in the sentence: is, be, am, are, was, were, been, has, have, had, do, does, did, can, could, etc.

Page 9: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Identifying Verb Practice:

My family took a journey to Canada, a friendly nation full of kind people and giant plastic animals. We wanted to see the world’s largest turkey. We found it in Slipwaddle, Ontario. It was noon when we arrived. The sun seared my skin, cooked my hair, and melted my tennis shoes.

Page 10: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Answers:

My family took a journey to Canada, a friendly nation full of kind people and giant plastic animals. We wanted to see the world’s largest turkey. We found it in Slipwaddle, Ontario. It was noon when we arrived. The sun seared my skin, cooked my hair, and melted my tennis shoes.

Page 11: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Subject/Predicate Identification

Circle subjects and underline predicates:

1. Three pelicans flew over the beach.

2. The children build a sandcastle.

3. Ben played chess with Alex.

4. Everyone in the stadium watched the game.

5. The microwave beeped.

Page 12: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Subject/Predicate Practice

1. Three pelicans flew over the beach.

2. The children build a sandcastle.

3. Ben played chess with Alex.

4. Everyone in the stadium watched the game.

5. The microwave beeped.

Page 13: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Sentence Fragment

It’s NOT a sentence.It’s NOT a complete thought.It’s what many of you gave me when I

asked for complete sentences on the playlist assignment!

Ex: Chose “Never Gonna Give You Up” because it talks about never giving up.

What’s missing from this sentence?

Page 14: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Sentence Fragment

Ex: Chose “Never Gonna Give You Up” because it talks about never giving up.

Q: What’s missing from this sentence?

A: A subject, a noun that does the “choosing.”

Write this sentence fragment as a complete sentence.

Page 15: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Sentence Fragment Fix

My group chose “Never Gonna Give You Up” because it talks about never giving up.

Note: We have a subject and a predicate. We have a noun and an action. This sentence expresses a complete thought. You have changed a sentence fragment into a sentence.

Page 16: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Dependent Clause

A group of words that has a subject and a verb but cannot stand alone as a sentence.

This is another type of sentence fragment!

Ex: Because she thought she was smarter than the others.

What word makes this depend on something else to be a complete sentence?

Page 17: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Dependent Clause Practice

Ex: Because she thought she was smarter than the others.

What word makes this depend on something else to be a complete sentence?

Because she thought she was smarter than the others.

How could you correct this to make it a complete sentence?

Page 18: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Dependent Clause Correction

1. Take off the word that makes it dependent: She thought she was smarter than the others.

That would work if you didn’t want to explain more.

2. Because she thought she was smarter than the others, she wanted to be the group leader.

That correction gives more explanation and is usually the better way to correct a dependent clause.

Page 19: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Identifying Sentence Fragments

Place an S for sentence or an F for a sentence fragment/dependent clause.

1. If your parents think today’s fashions are weird.2. They should see the clothes people wore in the

Middle Ages.3. Liked clothes that were half one color and half

another.4. People often heavy leather belts decorated with

metal and jewels.5. Edges of clothing into shapes called dagges.

Page 20: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

6. Sleeves with streamers that were two or three feet long.

7. Shoes had long toes that were padded to retain their shape.

8. Tights of velvet or silk.

9. When clothes were edged and lined in fur.

10. Layers very common in medieval clothing.

11. Was a way of displaying wealth.

12. The more clothes a person could afford to wear, the wealthier that person was.

Page 21: Sentence Workshop. What is a sentence? Write down a definition for “sentence” in your own words. You have one minute!

Sentence Workshop Wrap-Up

Complete Sentence = subject + predicate

Complete Sentence = noun + verb

Complete Sentence = Not a fragment

Complete Sentence = Not a dependent clause