english 4 – History – Flashcards

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http://www.chompchomp.com/terms.htm
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!!!
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Simple Meaning away, away from to, toward against out, forth, away into, within between bad, abnormal, inadequate before across
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Prefixes: a, ab- as- contra- e- in- inter- mal- pre- trans-
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Simple Meaning capable of, able to process, act of doing to act or possess of, related to, connected with act or process one who performs one who relates to or resembles one who does a specific thing
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Suffixes: -able, -ible -al, -ial -ate -ary -ion -ive -ian -or, -er
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Based only on its prefix and root, the word atheist most closely means which of the following? ~someone who believes there is no god If neuro refers to the nerves or nervous system, an inflammation of the nerves would be called which of the following? ~neuritis If bellum means "war," when were antebellum houses built? ~after the war Based only on its prefix and root, the word eulogy most closely means which of the following? ~a speech you give at someone's funeral If you had beauty in abundance, you would be called _____. ~beautiful If you were full of courage, you would be called _____. ~courageous The prince refused to commit regicide against his father. What does the root reg or rex mean? ~king
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Word form questions
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Sample Words atypical, amoral perfect, permission, pertain antibody, antisocial anterior, antecedent, antebellum eulogy, euphonious, eugenic ex-president, exhume, excise inhumane, indispensable, inadmissible multicolored, multiform, multimillionaire
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Prefixes Word Elements Meanings a- not, outside of per- through, thoroughly anti- against ante- before eu- good ex- out of, formerly in- not multi- many
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Sample Words anthropology, misanthropy, philanthropic biology, biographical, autobiography scissors, incisive, homicide incorporate, corpse, corpuscle cosmic, cosmonaut, cosmological anthropology, biological, dermatology logic, dialogue, prologue theology, polytheism, atheism
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Roots Word Elements Meanings anthropo man bio life cide, cis to kill or cut corps body cosmos world, world system log to study, the science of logos word, reason, study theo god or gods
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Sample Words tonsillitis, appendicitis, sinusitis plentiful, graceful, resentful socialism, humanism, communism Marxist, isolationist, optimist weariness, loneliness, kindliness contemptuous, advantageous, dubious
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Suffixes Word Elements Meanings -itis inflammation -ful have in abundance -ism doctrine or belief in -ist one who believes -ness quality or condition of -ous possessing, full of
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Example monarch astronomy captive recognize hypodermic monogamy generation gestation agnostic autograph projection median strip metric system admonish immortality renaissance neurologist antonym pathology impel complicate dispose import compress psychology interrogate script sociology psychosomatic stature
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Roots Word Element Meaning arch ruler, beginning astro star cap to take, seize cogn to know derm skin gam marriage gen race or kind gest to bear gnos to know graph to write ject to throw media middle metro to measure mon to warn mort death nasci to be born neuron nerves nym name path sickness, feeling pel, plus to drive pli, plic to fold pon, pos to put, place port to carry press to push psych mind, behavior rog to ask scrib to write socio society soma body sta, sti to stand
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Example automobile bicycle commit contrary detain distend homogenize hyperactive hypodermic intermural isometrics monologue object nonacid permit polyglot project refer unnatural submit
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Prefixes Word Element Meaning auto- self bi- two com- with con- against de- down, away dis- apart, not homo- same hyper- above, very hypo- under, below inter- between iso- equal, similar mono- one o-, ob- against, away from non- not per- through, thoroughly poly- many pro- in favor of, before re-, retro- back, again un- not sub- under, below
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Example importance applicant colonize ownership conductive objectify
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Suffixes Word Element Meaning -ance, -ence condition -ant, -ent one who acts or believes -ize to make similar to -ship status, function -ive tends toward an indicated action -ity quality
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voc, vok=to call ven=to come vers, vert=to turn ten, tain, tend=to hold mit, mis=send cogon=to know cap=to take, seize sta, sti=to stand pli, plic=to fold duc=to lead nym=name The suffixes -able and -ible mean "able to." ~true Spectator comes from the Latin specs meaning _____. ~to look Biography comes from two Latin words: bio meaning "*life*" and graph meaning "to *write*." What does the suffix -logy in the word astrology mean? ~study of
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...more
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true
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T/F: Scientific words often come from Greek or Latin.
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a composite of a larger term, created by using only the first letter of the most important words in that term EX: COBOL = COmmon Business Oriented Language (a computer term) FORTRAN = FORmula TRANslation in data processing laser = Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation radar = RAdio Detecting And Ranging RSVP = Respondez S'il Vous Plait--French for "Please respond" scuba = Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus TVA = Tennessee Valley Authority ZIP = Zone Improvement Program--for speeding the mail NOT: Mr., Mrs., Sat., Feb., Dr., Hon., and the like.
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acronym
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1. a skilled musical or theatrical performer 2. an instrument for measuring air pressure 3. a deep bass voice that extends to C below bass staff 4. percussion instruments consisting of metal bars or tubes 5. manner of preparing food 6. a concave brass plate that produces a brilliant clashing tone 7. a natural formation that resembles a dome 8. formed by solidification of molten magma 9. headwaiter, a shortened form of maitre d' hotel, literally master of the house 10. referring to a pronounced change caused by pressure, heat, and water that results in a more compact and more highly crystalline condition 11. formed by or from deposits of sediment 12. the application of a plaster-like product over wallboard in a manner that produces a different look 13. an animal having a spinal column in contradistinction to an invertebrate, an animal that does not have a spinal column
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1. artiste 2. barometer 3. basso profundo 4. bells 5. cuisine 6. cymbal 7. dome mountain 8. igneous 9. maitre d' 10. metamorphic 11. sedimentary 12. texturing 13. vertebrate
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A more polite term used to replace an objectionable one
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euphemism
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the language of a particular group, profession, or activity EX: 1. construction - footing, stem wall, monolithic pour, mud, rebar, etc.. 2. chefs - hors d'oeuvres (or dervz), bouillon, chef's salad, entree, etc.. 3. firefighting - catching a plug, turnouts, stinger, fog hog, surround and drown a fully-involved, etc.. 4. medicine - heterotropia, stethoscope, heterotropia, morbilli rubeola, halitosis, etc.. 5. geology - igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic, dome mountain, barometer, etc.. 6. biology - invertebrates --> arthropods, arachnids, crustaceans, centipedes and millipedes vertebrates --> birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, mammals 7. literature - personification, onomatopoeia, foreshadowing, plot, dramatic conflict, theme, character delineation, immediacy, atmosphere, a point of view, limited focus, unity, etc.. 8. music - soprano, mezzo soprano, contralto, alto, tenor, second tenor, baritone, bass, etc..
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jargon
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A medical term for measles is _____. ~morbilli rubeola An ophthalmo-orhinolaryngololist is _____. ~an eye, ear, nose, and throat specialist Heterotropia is _____. ~cross-eyes Which is not a class of rock? ~disturbed What is the study of weather is called? ~meteorology When we speak of inanimate objects as if they were human, what are we using? ~personification What is a type or classification of writing in literature called? ~genre What is the main character in a short story called? ~protagonist Who directs an orchestra? ~both conductor and maestro
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jargon related questions
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types: 1. classification/division - grouping a small selection of items into categories 2. causal analysis - describing cause and effect 3. process analysis - analyzing a process such as how to scramble eggs or how to play basketball 4. illustration or example - defining or clarifying a concept or type by use of examples/illustrations 5. comparison/contrast - considering similarities, differences, or both 6. extended definition - analyzing the term to be defined, its class, and various distinctive characteristics Choose how the following paragraph could be best classified: 1. Movie rental stores offer great variety that appeals to even the choosiest of patrons. Action movies fill the need for adventure and adrenaline rush. Comedies help people to laugh and just have fun. Romantic movies offer a view into what matters to just about everyone--love. *classification/division* 2. Philip stayed up too late reading an exciting novel. The next morning, he overslept and arrived late at school. He stuttered while giving his history report and dozed off in his afternoon math class. Philip went to bed early the following evening, to be sure. *causal analysis* Which of the following limited topics would be appropriate for a short paper? ~The influence of Elvis on Rock ~How Mia Hamm revolutionized soccer
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expository writing
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Choose the bolded controlling idea in the topic sentence below. ~In most American homes, family time *is replaced with TV time.* ~Chuck *is a hard-working father.* T/F: The subject of the topic sentence is called the controlling idea. ~false
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paragraph structure
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a sentence that states the main idea or subject of a paragraph
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topic sentence
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false
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T/F: A topic sentence needs to be specific.
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true
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T/F: Every sentence after the topic sentence should support it.
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the part of the topic sentence indicating what the paragraph will say about the topic
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controlling idea
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true true false
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T/F: The controlling idea is in the predicate of a topic sentence. T/F: The controlling idea should be in the main clause of the topic sentence. T/F: The subject of the topic sentence is called the controlling idea
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all sentences in a paragraph pointing towards one idea
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unity
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false; coherence
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T/F: Unity refers to sentences logically following each other in a paragraph.
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-the verb or verb phrase -the complete verb by itself is called the simple predicate -the complete predicate is the part of the sentence that says something about the subject and is made up of the verb and its complement with or without modifiers
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predicate
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controlling idea
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The predicate of the topic sentence, which indicates what will be said about the topic, is called the _____.
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true
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T/F: The place to do your organizational thinking in writing is in the outline stage.
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true
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T/F: A generality cannot prove a generality.
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1. *simple sentence* - having one subject and verb (or one main clause) EX: Jill ate the broken cookie. 2. *compound sentence* - sentence that has at least two main clauses or two simple sentences; these clauses are connected either by a comma and a coordinating conjunction--and, but, or, for, nor, yet--or by a semicolon. If any other connecting word is used, a semicolon is still required. EX: I chose a blue bicycle, *but* my brother wanted a red one. He dropped out of class early in the year; none of us knew why. 3. *complex sentence* - having a main clause and one or more subordinate clauses 4. *compound-complex sentence* - is one that has two or more main clauses and one or more dependent or subordinate clauses. EX: When I saw the dark clouds in the distance, I left the picnic quickly, and I took Stephanie home in my car.
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sentence types
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Since the expressway was built, very few tourists have visited our town. - complex sentence If it takes as long to explore the moon as it did to explore this continent, our generation will not live to see the job finished. - complex sentence Making important decisions requires time for careful thinking and courage to take action. - simple sentence When you can see both sides of an issue equally well, you find it difficult to take a stand, but some people insist that you take one side or the other. - compound-complex sentence The first milestone in lighting may have occurred when early man lit a torch from his cooking fire. - complex sentence He went up the stairs, and there he confronted the thief. - compound sentence While I was standing in the doorway, I was protected from the rain. - complex Informality is sometimes fine; however, it can be carried too far. - compound They were lovely people, the kind you might meet anywhere. - complex I love this study, and I am going to continue in it. - compound
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Identity the sentence below as either simple, compound, or complex.
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false
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T/F: A complex sentence combines two independent clauses.
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true
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T/F: A semicolon is necessary in a compound sentence if a coordinating conjunction is not used.
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true
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T/F: A simple sentence can have a compound subject.
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a single idea expressed in a logical, organized way
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coherence
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false; unity
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T/F: Coherence in writing results when all of the sentences in some way prove the controlling idea.
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true
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T/F: Transitional devices are used to produce coherence.
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-*past tense* : action completed in an earlier time period EX: burned, burnt -*past perfect tense* : action completed before a set time in the past (or before another past action) EX: burned, burnt -*present tense* : action happening now, this minute, today EX: burn, burns -*present perfect tense* : action completed during the present time (past action at any time before now) EX: burning -*future tense* : action expected to happen EX: will burn -*future perfect tense* : (seldom used) action completed before a set time in the future EX: I will/shall have chosen
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tenses
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freeze Past: froze Present Participle: freezing Past Participle: frozen tear Past: tore Present Participle: tearing Past Participle: torn kick Past: kicked Present Participle: kicking Past Participle: kicked
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Give the principle parts of the verb below.
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Using *italics*: ~Italics are used with the titles of long works. ~Foreign words not in mainstream use in the English language (these words are indicated in many dictionaries with an asterisk (*). EX: corpus juris, corrida ~names of ships, trains, aircraft, and titles of famous paintings ~Words, letters, or figures used as such and words used as words are italicized. EX: The articles are *a, an,* and *the.* - In England, a run in a stocking is called a *ladder.* - In the English language a *q* is never used without a *u* in a word. - You have four *and's* in one sentence, - My social security number has three *7's* in it. Using *quotation marks*: ~Titles of short works ~poetry, short stories, short plays, and chapter titles in books *Abbreviations* ~When writing a formal essay generally avoid abbreviations, with a few will-known exceptions: Mr., Messrs., Mrs., Mmes., Dr., and St. (for saint, not street) These titles are spelled out when they are not followed by a proper name. ~The title Honorable may be abbreviated to Hon. only if the first name or initials are used ~In an essay the names of states, countries, months, days of the week, the words Road, Park, Street, or Company are abbreviated when they are part of a name, not otherwise. Using abbreviations in an address on an envelope is acceptable. ~Avoid the use of the abbreviation for and, the ampersand (&) ~Avoid abbreviations of people's first names such as Wm., Jas., Chas., Geo., and any other first name abbreviation. Spell out such proper names. ~Acronyms may be used instead of writing out the entire title of an organization if the acronym is explained the first time it is used. GOP means Grand Old Party but refers to the Republican Party. ~After proper names, titles earned or awarded are expressed in abbreviations: Jr., Sr., Esq., and degrees such as Ph.D. (Doctor of Philosophy), M.A. (Master of Arts), M.D.(Doctor of Medicine), R.N.(Registered Nurse), D.O. (Doctor of Osteopathy), P.A. (Physician's Assistant). ~Abbreviations may be used with dates or numerals: A.D. (anno Domini or "in the year of our Lord") B.C. (before Christ) A.M. and P.M. or a.m. and p.m., No. and $. ~The following sentence situations allow for abbreviations: The manuscript was dated to 783 B.C. He was to arrive at 10:30 A.M. The detective found the gun in room No. 266. I received a check for $585.00 ~Some Latin abbreviations are used in formal writing, but one never makes a mistake by spelling out such expressions: e.g. (for example) viz. (namely) i.e. (that is) cf. (compare) etc. (and so forth) *Using Numbers* ~Numbers that can be expressed in one word (including hyphenated words) are written out unless a series of numbers is to be used, and/or if some of the numbers require two or three words. In such cases use Arabic numerals for all of the numbers EX: The house was 75 feet long and 30 feet wide; the lot upon which it sat was 205 feet wide and 80 feet deep. ~Ordinal numbers (those numbers which express position and end in -st, -rd, end, -th) may be written out or expressed in figures. However, such endings should not be added to the day of the month when the year follows. EX: Acceptable: January first; the eighteenth of June, or the 18th of June Unacceptable: January first, 1897; June 18th, 1978 ~Use figures for street numbers, pages, decimals, percentages, and for the hour of the day when used with A.M. or P.M. EX: 148 Westwood Drive; 232 Fancher Boulevard The plane leaves at 4:55 P.M. Canyon Savings pays 5 1/2 percent compounded daily. The poem may be found on page 97. The coat cost $79.95. *Capitalization* ~Capitalize proper nouns, which include names of specific people, places, regions, days of the week, historical periods, months (but not seasons), ships, organizations, and religions ~Copyrighted names of products should also be capitalized, however, in some cases a proper name has become a generic term EX: India rubber, guinea pig, osterizer, vulcanize, pasteurized ~Titles are capitalized only when used with names: EX: Captain Roberts, Nurse Renwick, Dean Joshua ~Names indicating family relationship when they are not accompanied by a *possessive* are capitalized: Mother made the pie. EXCEPTIONS: my mother, his father, etc. ~Points of the compass are capitalized when referring to a place: the Southwest, the Near East... ~Always capitalize the names of languages and of specific classes: Humanities 101, Freshman Composition II...
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mechanics
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I need to let my mother know that Mister Green is the new science teacher. ~error concerning abbreviations By 7: 20 P.M., only 7 tickets were left. ~error involving numbers John is a Doctor who does not make house calls. ~error concerning capitalization 3 days of our holiday are left to enjoy. ~error involving numbers Doctor White teaches literature 328, which is a very interesting course. ~error concerning capitalization (Literature, because it is a specific course) Sue acts on the belief that a dollar earned is a dollar spent. ~no error Dr. Thomas Jones lives on East Main Street. ~no error Find the sentence with no capitalization errors. -In high school, I'm learning English, speech, and Latin. -Edgar Allan Poe, the American poet, was adopted. -In New Hampshire, Mother starred in The Tempest. -Is your aunt a professor of German at Penn State? -We heard that Dr. Smith was the only physician to receive the Nobel Prize. -Many people go to Page, Arizona, to ride a Colorado River raft.
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Study the sentence below. Then choose the type of error that the sentence contains.
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SINGULAR NOUNS show possession with the addition of an apostrophe and s ('s). One class's attitude the baby's toy the ox's yoke the bus's emission the man's hat the sheep's wool One exception governs proper names that end in s. Although it is not incorrect to add the 's, common practice simply adds the apostrophe to such names. EX: Phyllis' coat Charles' car Mr. Jones' office PLURAL POSSESSION has two rules: -If the plural form of the noun ends in s, add the apostrophe behind the existing s. -If the plural noun does not end in s, add 's. EX: the chairmen's decision the ladies' club the deer's tails the companies' agreement the oxen's yokes the Joneses' house
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possession
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3rd person singular present tense indicative mood
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Select all that apply. The " s verb" occurs in _____.
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*comma splice* When a comma is used alone to combine two or more sentences, the error is called a comma splice -Incorrect: It rained for two hours today, the children played in the puddles till dark. -Correct: It rained for two hours today, and the children played in the puddles till dark. -Incorrect: Come to see me soon, we need to talk. -Correct: Come to see me soon; we need to talk. *fused sentence or a fusion* A second type of run-on sentence occurs when no punctuation appears between two main clauses. -Incorrect: His parents are professional people they are both doctors. -Correct: His parents are professional people; they are both doctors. -Incorrect: Put the groceries on the kitchen table then come into the living room. -Correct: Put the groceries on the kitchen table; then come into the living room.
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run on sentence types
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1. Shift in TENSE: occurs, for example, when you move from present tense to past and back to present again for no good reason. EX: Mr. Firman *invited* his friend to come over and have dinner. The maid *fixes* a big dinner for them, and when they were ready for dessert, she *brings* a cake out for Mr. Nulty because it *was* his fifty-ninth birthday... 2. Shift in PERSON: refers primarily to the use of the personal pronoun. You remember that: ~first person relates to the person speaking ~second person refers to the person being spoken to ~third person pertains to the person or persons being spoken about As applied to writing, consistency in person is the principle that once a writer begins using one person, he or she will not shift to another person. Consider the following example, taken from the paragraph example discussed earlier in the lesson. EX: Every step *you* make reminds *you your* life depends on surefootedness, not foolhardiness. Every climber must carefully check over *his and his* teammates' equipment, inspecting it for faults which might later cause it to fail. 3. Shift in NUMBER: 1. "We find that in judging *people*, we overlook most of the characteristics that draw us to *him*." 2. "Conclusions about a person by misjudging *their* facial expressions..." 3. "They judge a *person* incorrectly because they fail to see *them* as *they* really are." All three sentences above contain problems of pronoun-antecedent agreement. To summarize, a pronoun must agree in person, number, and gender with its antecedent. 4. Shift in VOICE: not as noticeable as other shifts. Most writing is done in the active voice where the subject does the acting. In the passive voice, the subject receives the action of the verb. The passive voice has two valid uses: ~When the actor is not known, he cannot very well be mentioned. If a bank has been robbed, and the robbers have not yet been apprehended, the newspaper cannot come out with an active voice statement. The best it can do is say that "The Calley National Bank on Poe and Wentworth was robbed of $75,000 at closing time yesterday." That sentence construction represents the best possible method of telling what is known. ~When the actor is not important, a statement would read like this: "The new wing on the Community Hospital has been completed." Surely the completion of the building is more important than the fact that Cominskey Brothers Contracting Company did the work. A shift from active to passive voice, then, is unwise only when it is unnecessary. A report written in the passive voice is cumbersome and lacks sparkle because all of the subjects are acted upon. The following piece of writing probably overdoes the point, but notice the deadening affect achieved by the passive voice: EX: Vows were taken at St. James Cathedral by Bonnie Eager and Jerry Wrightman. The bride's dress was made by the bride. At the reception, punch was drunk and cake was eaten while the bride and groom were greeted by their friends. The bride's bouquet was thrown by the bride and was caught by her sister. Rice and confetti were thrown by the excited crowd as the bride and groom were whisked away by a well decorated car which was driven by the best man. Tears were shed by the mother of the bride while hats were thrown into the air by the brothers of the groom. A good time was had by all.
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shifts
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shift in number shift in person shift in tense
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Select all that apply. Which kinds of shifting upset the viewpoint in an essay?
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score - noun forth - adverb upon - preposition liberty - noun that - pronoun
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What part of speech is the italicized word in the sentence below? Four *score* and seven years ago, our forefathers brought *forth* *upon* this continent a new nation conceived in *liberty* and dedicated to the proposition *that* all men are created equal.
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the correct form of a written assignment
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proper manuscript
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The main purpose of proofreading a paper is to find errors in mechanics and sentence structure.
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What is the main purpose of proofreading a paper?
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are naming words such as car, horse, school, Frank, Colorado River, safety, and love--words that we use primarily to stand for things, animals, places, people, and ideas. The tangible objects are called concrete nouns. Thought processes, ideas, or other intangible things, including hatred, sovereignty, and devotion are called abstract nouns. Nouns normally have a separate form for the singular and for the plural. They also take inflectional endings for showing ownership or possession.
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noun
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infinitive gerund noun clause
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Select all that apply. Which sentence elements can be used as nouns or noun substitutes?
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nobody
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Which of the answers is not a noun in the sentences below? We will have to learn to think for ourselves. This process will be difficult, but without it, we will be little more than puppets. Nobody wants that.
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Any word or group of words that substitutes for a noun is called either a pronoun or a noun substitute. These substituting words function in the same way a noun functions.
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pronoun
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*relative pronouns* ~who, whom, whose, which, that ~function: to introduce dependent (adjective) clauses *interrogative pronouns* ~Who?, Whom?, Whose?, Which?, What? ~function: to ask questions *demonstrative pronouns* ~this, that, these, those ~function: to point out *reflexive pronouns* ~myself, yourself, himself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves ~function: to reflect or intensify *indefinite pronouns* ~(singular) one, anyone, someone, no one, none, everyone, anybody, somebody, nobody, everybody, anything, something, nothing, everything, much, either, neither, another, (plural) many, all, others, few, several, some, most ~function: to stand for an unnamed antecedent (indicates an unspecified person or thing) *personal pronouns* ~function: to take the place of nouns naming people or things. (singular 1st, 2nd, 3rd person, plural 1st, 2nd, 3rd person) ~cases of personal pronouns include nominative, objective, 2 possessive cases
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pronoun types
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used for subjects and subject complements (also called predicate nouns)
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nominative case
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is used for direct objects, indirect objects, and objects of prepositions Which of the following is not a function of an objective pronoun? subject complement
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objective case
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1. *pronominal adjective* : a word which is both a pronoun and an adjective. Pronominal adjectives include *my, your, his, her, its, our, your, and their* These words take the place of possessive nouns like Bill's, the crowd's, Mother's, etc. and describe whatever the original possessive nouns describe. EX: John's keys are in Sally's car. His keys are in her car. Both his and her stand for possessive adjectives, in this case, the possessive words John's and Sally's. His and her also describe the nouns keys and car. 2. *independent possessives* : these words are "independent" because each can replace an entire possessive noun phrase, not just part of one. Inpendent possessives include *mine, your, his, hers, its, ours, yours, and theirs* EX: Those keys are my keys. Those keys are mine. That car over there is her car. That car over there is hers. mine replaces the possessive noun phrase my keys and takes on its function of subject complement. The same thing happens in the second example. Hers takes the place of the possessive noun phrase her car. Notice that the possessive personal pronouns have no apostrophes because their only function is to indicate possession (i.e. their form never needs to change).
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possessive case pronouns
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you - personal themselves - reflexive this - demonstrative those - demonstrative what - interrogative someone- indefinite that (introduces dependent clause) - relative we - personal myself - reflexive anybody - indefinite
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Match the pronoun to its type.
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When she came in to see a spilt soda pop on the papers she was grading, Mrs. Shore shrieked, "*Whose* drink is this?!" - interrogative When Ian proudly retrieved his Calculus 2 homework and saw that it was covered with glue and glitter, he was horrified. His mind raced as he wondered who could be guilty of this sabotage. Suddenly, he knew. It could be *nobody* else but Melissa, his two year-old sister. - indefinite When Amanda picked up Rosario's cell phone by accident, Rosario kindly said, "I think *that* is mine." - demonstrative Seth Earwig, *who* was a self-proclaimed expert, continued his career as an alligator wrestler until he was eaten one November morning. - relative
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Which type of pronoun is italicized below?
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*thy, thine, thee, and thou* continue to be used today in the literary context of Shakespeare and other important 17th and 18th century works of literature.
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archaic pronouns
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true
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T/F: A pronoun is a noun substitute.
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verb and direct object
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In an English sentence, what does a subject usually precede?
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verb
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The simple predicate is the same thing as the _____.
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are words that by their inflections (endings) show time or tense. The 6 tenses are: present, past, future, preset perfect, past perfect, future perfect (described in definition of "terms") Verbs form the tenses listed above using the four principal parts. Verbs are classified as regular or irregular by the way they form their principle parts. -Regular verbs form their past and past participle by adding *-d, -red, or -t to the present part.* -Irregular verbs have no pattern or set inflections for forming their past and past participles. Be is the most irregular form in the language and has eight forms: am, is, are, was, were, be, being, been.
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verbs
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all forms of a verb (both regular and irregular) are made from these forms 1. *present part* : is used with will and shall to form the future tenses. *Present* + will or shall = *future tense* write + will or shall = will write walk +will or shall = will walk 2. The *present participle part* is used with a "be verb" to form the progressive tense. *Present participle* + "be verb" = *progressive tense* writing + "be verb" = is writing, are writing, etc. walking + "be verb" = is walking, are writing, etc. 3. *past part* : is used by itself to form the simple past tense. 4. The past participle part is *used with the auxiliaries* "have, has, or had" to form the present perfect and past perfect tenses. The past participle is also used with a "be verb" to form the passive voice. *Past participle* + have, has, or had = *past/present perfect tense* written + have, has, or had = has/had/have written talked + have, has, or had = has/had/have talked *Past participle* +"be verb"= *past/present perfect tense* written + "be verb" = is/was/has been written played + "be verb" = is/was/has been played
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principal parts of a verb
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1. *I heard the fire siren*, and I pulled over to the side of the road. (present participial phrase) ~Hearing the fire siren, I pulled over to the side of the road. 2. The lawyer asked many questions. *He was determined to get to the truth.* (past participial phrase) ~The lawyer asked many questions, determined to get to the truth. 3. *The police inspector looked for evidence.* He examined the apartment thoroughly. (present participial phrase) ~Looking for evidence, the police inspector examined the apartment thoroughly. 4. *The boardwalk is closed for the winter.* It is a depressing sight. (past participial phrase) ~Closed for the winter, the boardwalk is a depressing sight. 5. Nate is active in sports. *He plays both football and baseball.* (present participial phrase) ~Nate is active in sports, playing both football and baseball.
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Select the sentence that has been correctly rewritten to subordinate the bolded portion. Pay attention to the instructions in parentheses to help you select your answer.
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1. Hearing his name called, Travis came running. Participle/participial phrase: Hearing his name called Noun or pronoun modified: Travis 2. Anything connected with basketball interests me. Participle/participial phrase: connected with basketball Noun or pronoun modified: Anything 3. Roasted in aluminum foil, meats remain juicy. Participle/participial phrase: Roasted in aluminum foil Noun or pronoun modified: meats 4. All people crossing into Arizona must prove they are not carrying fruits or plants. Participle/participial phrase: crossing into Arizona Noun or pronoun modified: people 5. Cradled in her mother's arms, the baby slept. Participle/participial phrase: Cradled in her mother's arms Noun or pronoun modified: baby 6. Storms, injuring crops and destroying property, pounded the California coast. Participle/participial phrase: injuring crops and destroying property Noun or pronoun modified: storms 7. The covered bridge was picturesque. Participle/participial phrase: covered Noun or pronoun modified: bridge 8. A person observing a crime should call Crime Stop. Participle/participial phrase: observing a crime Noun or pronoun modified: person 9. Seen by two women, the accident was reported immediately. Participle/participial phrase: Seen by two women Noun or pronoun modified: accident
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Select the *participle or participial phrase* in the box below. Also select the *noun or pronoun modified by the participle.*
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The tables above show that words such as will, shall, have, and the "be verbs" are used in conjunction with the principal parts to communicate tense. Some of the twenty-three auxiliaries are verbs in their own right and can be used alone as predicates. The first fourteen fall into this group: am, are, is, was, were, be, been, being (the verb to be) have, has, had (the verb to have) do, does, did (the verb to do). The other auxiliaries can be used only as auxiliaries and are called *modals*: can, could, shall, should, will, would, may, might. must. Certain auxiliaries can combine together and "stack" on the main verb to form a verb phrase. EX: Dorothy should certainly have been found by now. Notice that three auxiliaries should, have, and been work together with the main verb found to create the complete verb phrase.
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auxiliary
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one other form of the verb which indicates ongoing action. A sample conjugation for the present progressive tense in *active voice*: I am choosing, we are choosing you are choosing she is choosing, they are choosing In the *passive voice* this conjugation would be: I am being chosen, we are being chosen you are being chosen she is being chosen, they are being chosen
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progressive form
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Most verbs show action of some kind: mental, spiritual, emotional, or actual overt action. Some action verbs have a receiver of action called a direct object. 1. *transitive verbs* are verbs taking a *direct object* Thick dust *covered* the desk. ("desk" is the receiver of the action "covered") They *designated* a hitter. The clock *struck* one. I *want* candy. He *carried* the bag. Jose *thanked* Wayne. 2. *intransitive verbs* are other action verbs *do not take a direct object* Doris scowled. (Nothing in the sentence is being "scowled.") He *ran.* They *napped.* The dog *barked.* Blair *gloated.* Clarissa *winked.* Sentences containing transitive verbs are either in active or passive voice. 1. *Active voice* means that the subject is performing the action of the verb. EX: John finished his mid-term report. (John is performing the action of "finish") 2. *Passive Voice* means that the subject is receiving the action of the verb. EX: The report was finished (by John) In the examples above, notice that the passive sentence says the same thing as the active sentence. However, the direct object of the first sentence, report, has become the subject of the second sentence. In either case, report still receives the action of the verb.
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action verbs
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true false active; passive
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T/F: Transitive active and transitive passive sentences both have a receiver of the action. T/F: A sentence containing an intransitive verb has a indirect object. In the _____ voice the subject acts, but in the _____ voice, the subject receives the action.
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Experiments with chimpanzees revealed that the animals were able to imitate humans. ~type of verb: active Experiments were conducted to try to teach Chimpanzees sign language. ~type of verb: passive One chimpanzee showed signs of learning by his imitations. ~type of verb: passive No innovative communication signals were produced by the chimpanzees ~type of verb: passive Conjugate 1. "to know" in the ACTIVE VOICE using the future perfect tense. I - will have known You - will have known He/She - will have known We - will have known You (plural) - will have known They - will have known 2. "to fly" in the PASSIVE VOICE using the present perfect tense. I - have been flown You - have been flown He/She - has been flown We - have been flown You (plural) - have been flown They - have been flown
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Choose whether the main verb in the sentence below is *active or passive.*
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Three sets of verbs seem to cause problems in usage for some speakers and writers. They are: -lie and lay -sit and set -rise and raise To understand these verbs better, you need to remember that some verbs indicate action that must be received; these verbs are called transitive verbs. Others verbs do not indicate action because they are not action verbs or because they do not require a receiver. These verbs are called intransitive, not transitive. The dictionary indicates v.t. for verb transitive or v.i. for verb intransitive. Infinitive Form / Present Participle / Past Participle / Present Participle / Past Participle v.i. to lie / lie(s) / lay / lying / lain v.t. to lay / lay (s) / laid / laying / laid v.i. to sit / sit(s) / sat / sitting / sat v.t. to set / set(s) / set / setting / set v.i. to rise /rise(s) / rose / rising / risen v.t. to raise / raise(s) / raised / raising / raised The confusion with lie and lay results from the fact that the past tense of lie and the present tense of lay are the same form--lay. *Intransitive* / *Transitive*(must have direct object) Forms of lie / Forms of lay Today I lie in bed. / Today I lay the book down. Yesterday I lay there. / Yesterday I laid the book down. I have lain in bed a week. / I have laid every book in place. Forms of sit / Forms of set I sit down to eat. / I usually set that book on the shelf. We sat on the sofa. / You set it on the floor. He has sat in that chair for years. / You have set that book there for the last time. Forms of rise / Forms of raise My mother rises at dawn. / I raise my right hand when I swear to tell the truth. Yesterday, she rose later. / The boys raised their hands. The price has risen. / He has raised the flag in honor of the veterans. The key to avoiding confusion is *remembering which verb is transitive and which is intransitive. *This means that *you raise, set, or lay things to or in their proper places; however, you must lie, or sit, or rise somewhere or sometime.* EX: Mr. Gray _____ his hat in the place where Don usually ___. -Mary ___ down because her temperature had _____. -Sally ___ the food on the counter to cool while she ______ the blinds. -laid; sat -lay; risen -set; raised
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difficult verbs
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true
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T/F: The present tense of lay is the same as the past tense of lie.
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In addition to tense and voice, verbs also express one of three moods. *Indicative Mood* states an actuality or fact -We will go to see a movie this Sunday. -I'll follow you. All present tense, third person, singular, indicative verbs in the English language end in s and are called "s verbs." Notice the pattern: I go, you go, he goes; I study, you study, he studies; I build, you build, she builds; I swim, you swim, she swims *Imperative Mood* makes a request; deals with desires, wishes, or conditions that do not exist -Let's go to see a movie this weekend! -Please stop bugging me! *Subjunctive Mood* expresses a doubtful condition (contrary to fact) and is often used with an "if" clause. -If I were you, I wouldn't buy a house. -I wish I were more organized.
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mood
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I insist that all of you *arrive* on time. ~mood of verb: subjunctive *Be* on time! ~mood of verb: imperative All of the students *arrived* on time. ~mood of verb: indicative If I were you, I would take advantage of the extra time you have. ~subjunctive Use your time wisely. ~imperative He uses his time wisely. ~indicative
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Choose whether the italicized verb is *indicative, subjunctive, or imperative.*
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do not show action, but instead, link the subject with a modifier in the predicate which describes or renames the subject. These verbs are called linking verbs and the words which they link to the subject are called subject complements (also called predicate nouns/adjectives). EX: Doris is a cosmetologist. ("Is" links "Doris," the subject, to the predicate noun "cosmetologist.") Doris is very busy. ("Is" links "Doris," the subject, to the predicate adjective "busy.") common ones: become, seem, appear, remain, stay, turn, prove, grown, emerge, continue, get, smell, taste, sound, look, feel
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linking verbs
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true linking
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T/F: A sentence containing a linking verb also has a predicate noun or predicate adjective. The subjective complement comes after a(n) ______ verb.
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The cold wind blew across the prairie. ~type of verb: intransitive The snow covered the stacks of hay bales. ~type of verb: transitive The old barn timbers creaked under a weight of snow. ~type of verb: intransitive The winter scene was mysterious. ~type of verb: linking
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Choose whether the verb in the sentence below is *transitive, intransitive, or linking.*
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-are any word or groups of words that describe or qualify another word or group of words. Single word modifiers are adverbs and adjectives -Complements are completers of thought. They serve as words or groups of words that complete the sense of the verb, the subject, or the object -Possible complements include direct objects, indirect objects, subject complements (predicate nouns/adjectives), and object(ive) complements. The direct object and the subject complement are completers of the sense of the sentence. The direct object receives the action of the verb while the subject complement restates or describes the subject.
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modifiers
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describes
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A modifier is a word or group of words that ________ another word or group of words.
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adjective infinitive participle adverb
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Select all that apply. Which sentence elements can be used as modifiers?
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direct object other options: adjective adverb conjunction interjection preposition pronoun (above) verb (above)
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Which of the following is not one of the eight parts of speech?
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Adjectives modify nouns or pronouns. They are formed when you add suffixes like -al, -ish, -ive, -ly, -like, and -ous to nouns. The most common adjectives are *the articles a, an, and the.* Sometimes called determiners, these words predictably "point out" nouns. Although adjectives usually precede the nouns they modify, an adjective can be used after a linking verb as a *predicate adjective* (subject complement). He is a delightful companion. (pre-noun modifier) He is delightful. (predicate adjective) In rare instances, adjectives can modify pronouns: -Jody knew one day she would find that *special* someone in whom she could confide. -Jody knew one day she would find someone *special* in whom she could confide. In both examples, special modifies the indefinite pronoun someone even though the second example shows the adjective following the pronoun.
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adjectives
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false true
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T/F: Adjectives modify nouns, pronouns, and other adjectives. T/F: The suffixes -al, -ly, and -ous , when added to nouns, turn those nouns into adjectives.
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Adverbs modify verbs principally, but also modify adjectives and even other adverbs. All sentences do not have modifiers. They are formed when you add -ly to adjectives -No modifiers: Sadie wrote letters. -Adjective modifiers: Sadie wrote *several long* letters. -Adverb modifiers: Sadie *carefully* wrote several *extremely* long letters. Adverbs can be divided into three basic types, based on their meanings: 1. *Manner* - tells how, how much, or to what degree something is done (-ly adverbs) 2. *Place* - tells where something is done 3. *Time* - tells when something is done Adverbs can answer the questions: How? When? Where? How often? To what degree? To use these questions, simply find the main verb and then use the verb with a question word.
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adverbs
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false true true true
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T/F: All adverbs end in -ly. T/F: Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs. T/F: Adverbs ending in -ly indicate how or how much. T/F: Adverbs tell when, where, how, and why.
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are function words that do not have inflections. They show the relationship between the object of the preposition, usually a noun or pronoun, and some other word in the sentence. A prepositional phrase always begins with the preposition and ends with the object; it may have many modifiers in between. COMMON PREPOSITIONAL WORDS against, before, down, on, to, about, behind, during, over, until, above, between, except, out, up, across, beside, for, onto, unto, along, besides, from, of, upon, as, but, in, off, under, at, below, into, since, underneath, around, beneath, inside, through, with, among, by, like, throughout, within, amid, concerning, near, toward, without, after A prepositional phrase is *almost always used as a modifier*--either an *adjective phrase* modifying a noun or pronoun or an *adverb phrase* modifying a verb or an adjective. A prepositional phrase usually follows the word it modifies. ex: The tiny mouse crept (*through* the round hole) (*in* the wall). The example above contains both kinds of phrases. "Through the round hole" is an adverb phrase describing where the mouse crept. "In the wall" is an adjective phrase describing which hole the mouse crept through.
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prepositions
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a word which links words, phrases, or clauses of the same type One group of conjunctions are called the *coordinating conjunction* which includes: and, but, or, for, nor, yet, and sometimes so. These conjunctions connect words, phrases, or clauses of same type. *Subordinating conjunctions* include: after, although, when, where, while, since, because, until, and many others--are used to connect subordinate clauses to main clauses
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conjunction
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false
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T/F: A coordinating conjunction introduces a subordinate clause.
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sudden feeling. Any part of speech may be used as an interjection. Ouch! Oh! Stop! Wait! (verbs) Great! (adjective) No! (adverb) But! (conjunction) Ugh! Yow! Eek! (words representing sounds) An interjection may be a single word or a phrase. In either case, an interjection is punctuated like a sentence.
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interjection
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true
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T/F: Many of the parts of speech may be used as interjections.
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One method for classifying sentences is to label them by their four functions: 1. Declarative Sentence - indicative statement 2. Imperative Sentence - request or command 3. Exclamatory Sentence - exclamation 4. Interrogative Sentence - question
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classifying sentences
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1. *Subject-Verb pattern* Most basic sentence pattern indicating word order. EX: S-V: The drowning man was rescued (by the lifeguard). S-V: Jessie scowled at the pestering salesman. The verb in the S-V pattern is intransitive-active because there is no object. There is a prepositional phrase following the verb, but its pattern is still S-V. In the sentence, Joe ran, Joe, obviously the subject, is in the nominative case. 2. *Subject-Verb-Direct Object pattern* EX: S-V-DO: John sees Mary. expanded: My brother John sees his cousin Mary. S-V-DO variation: subject-verb-direct object-objective complement (S-V-DO-OC): We elected John president. The verb in the S-V-DO pattern is transitive-active because the sentence has a direct object. 3. *Subject-Verb-Indirect Object-Direct Object pattern* EX:S-V-IO-DO: Mr. Miller bought his wife flowers. S-V-IO-DO: (You) Give me the ticket for the show. Again, the presence of a direct object in this sentence causes the verb to be transitive-active. 4. *Subject-Linking Verb-Predicate Noun pattern* EX: S-LV-PN: Most (of my friends) have become teachers. Because there is a linking verb in this sentence, teachers is the predicate noun. 5. *Subject-Linking Verb-Predicate Adjective pattern* EX: S-LV-PA: The mountain retreat is extremely peaceful. This sentence also contains a linking verb, but it has an adjective in the predicate, peaceful 6. *Inverted Sentence pattern: expletive-verb-subject* EX: E-V-S: There are many people in the audience. E-V-S: Here is my answer to your question. Remember that here and there are never subjects in a sentence, even when they begin the sentence.
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sentence patterns
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Auxiliary-Subject-Verb EX: Does Bill know that? Are your problems produced by your own mistakes? Verb-There-Subject EX: Are there any questions? Is there a doctor in the house? Auxiliary-There-Verb-Subject EX: Can there be any peace? Could there be any hope? Direct Object-Auxiliary-Subject-Action Verb EX: What did your mother plan (for your birthday party)? Which plan (of mine) will you accept? Adverb-Auxiliary-Subject-Action Verb EX: Where are you going? Why did Marcie wear that odd shirt?
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question patterns
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Relaxing under a shady tree is very pleasant. -S-LV-PA The waterfall rushed down the steep hillside. - S-V Snow skiing is a very exciting sport. - S-LV-PN The President sent the ambassador an invitation to the meeting. - S-V-IO-DO There is good reason to be thankful. - E-V-S
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Choose the correct sentence pattern for the sentence below.
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answer the questions What? or Who(m)? after the verb -A direct object is a noun or noun substitute that comes after an action verb -a subject complement may also be a noun or noun substitute (predicate noun), or it may be an adjective (predicate adjective). Subject complements follow linking verbs.
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direct object and the subject complement
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false action after
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T/F: A subject complement cannot be a noun substitute. The direct object comes after a(n) _____ The objective complement comes ____ the direct object.
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object of the preposition
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!!!!!Which of the following is not a complement, either of the verb or the subject?
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between indirect object
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!!!!!The indirect object always comes _____ the verb and the direct object. The ________ answers the question "to or for whom?"
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direct object
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It is impossible to have an indirect object without a subject, transitive verb, and a(n) _____.
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verbal with its complement and/or any modifiers EX: *Sleeping quietly in its crib*, the baby twitched as though dreaming.(participial phrase--used as an adjective) *Sleeping at least eight hours per night* is an essential part of maintaining the body's health. (gerund phrase-- used as a noun subject). I need *to sleep for six hours without waking.* (infinitive phrase--marked by "to.")
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verbal phrase
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a verb form that ends only in -ing, is used as a noun
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gerund
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Beginning the meeting with a joke relaxed the group. ~Verbal: beginning ~Type of verbal: gerund The puppy, Charlie, wanted to play with everyone around him. ~Verbal: to play ~Type of verbal: infinitive Thinking himself to be a regular Adonis, Jonathan soon found his pride to be his Achilles heel. ~Verbal: thinking ~Type of verbal: participle Encouraged by the ovation, the conductor led the orchestra in an encore performance. ~Verbal: encouraged ~Type of verbal: participle He will not allow the table to be moved. ~Verbal: to be moved ~Type of verbal: infinitive
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Identify the verbal in the sentence below. Then select the type of verbal.
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are verb forms which are used as some other part of speech. The three verbals are participles, gerunds, and infinitives. EX: The *sleeping* baby breathed noisily. (participle--used as an adjective) *Sleeping* is an essential part of maintaining the body's health. (gerund--used as a noun) I need to *sleep* now. (infinitive--used as a noun and marked by "to")
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verbal
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true false; participle is an adjective
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T/F: The present participle form and the gerund form are identical. T/F: A participle, a gerund, or an infinitive may be used as a noun substitute.
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has a subject and predicate (verb) but cannot represent a complete thought by itself. It must therefore be attached to an independent clause to form a complex sentence such as is seen in the example below. EX: *Because horses tend to be high-strung,* they must be treated gently. "because" introduces an adverb clause and demonstrates a cause/effect relationship.
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dependent clause
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usually precedes or follows a main clause. Like single-word adverbs, adverb clauses modify verbs, but they also occasionally modify adjectives, or adverbs; like the single-word adverb, the adverb clause is movable. EX: *After* *the farmer finished harvesting the hay*, he stacked the bales in the barn. The farmer stacked the bales in the barn *after he finished harvesting the hay.* An adverb clause that comes in front of the main clause (see above) is called the introductory adverb clause; it is set off from the main clause by a comma, and it modifies the verb. The adverb clause tells much more than when, where, how, and how much. The following common subordinating conjunctions introduce adverb clauses and describe the relationship between the adverb clause and the main verb of the main clause or the entire main clause. Time: when, whenever, before, after, since, while, until, as EX: She went *before I could speak to her.* Don't talk *while you eat.* You may come *when (whenever) you are ready.* *While you're waiting*, help me in the kitchen. He called me *as I left the house.* Manner: as, as if, as though EX: They talk *as if (as though)* they have new information. Make the salad *as I have taught you.* Place: where, wherever EX: We lived *where we could see Mt. St. Helens.* I will go *wherever you say.* Result: that, so that EX: She was so early *that she helped set the table.* He moved over *so that I could see better.* Cause: because, since, as, for EX: *Since we moved here*, I've no trouble with asthma. She worked *because her father was out of a job.* Purpose: that, in order that Example: Brave men have died *that America might live.* They fought *in order that their wives and children could be free.* Condition: if, in as much as, lest, in case, much as, provided that, on condition that, unless EX: *If you've heard this story*, stop me. I'll come *provided that you'll let me help.* *If I were you*, I'd buy the house now. *Much as I'd like to help*, I can't. *Lest anyone misunderstand*, I voted for the bill. Concession: although, even though, though, even if EX: *Although it is raining*, I will go. *Even if I am late*, I'll go in and sit down. Comparison: than, as, as . . . as EX: Work is more rewarding *than pleasure (is).* Your essay is *as good as hers (is).* Some adverb clauses can be shortened or changed slightly and still be adverb clauses. EX: *If I were you* can be shortened to *were I you*; *If you had told me earlier* can be shortened to *had you told me earlier*; *When you leave* can become *once you leave.* Adverb clauses can become *elliptical clauses* by simply eliminating the subject and auxiliary or auxiliaries. Such clauses must be used with caution. EX: Adverb: Don't change the horses *while you are crossing a stream.* Elliptical: Don't change horses *while crossing a stream.* Adverb: A piano will deteriorate *if it is not played occasionally.* Elliptical: A piano will deteriorate *if not played occasionally.* Using Adverb Clauses as a Method of Subordination The following example illustrates how an adverb clause can be used to combine sentences. EX: Original sentences: Horses tend to be high-strung. Horses must be treated gently. Combined sentence: Because horses tend to be high-strung, they must be treated gently. The first sentence was reduced to a dependent clause with the addition of the subordinating conjunction. That dependent clause was then combined with the independent clause to form the sentence in the example above. Choice of subordinating conjunctions depends on the meaning relationship between the main and dependent clauses. Thus, changing the subordinating conjunction often changes the meaning of the sentence. EX: *Because horses tend to be high-strung*, they must be treated gently. *If horses tend to be high-strung*, they must be treated gently. *Although horses tend to be high-strung*, they must be treated gently.
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adverb clause
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*modifies, limits, or points out a noun or pronoun* Normally, the adjective clause will come immediately after the noun or pronoun it modifies; only a prepositional phrase can come between the clause and the word it modifies. In the examples below, the adjective clauses are italicized. EX: The man or woman *who tries* will succeed. The car *that I borrowed* is in good condition. The fellow in the green jacket is the man *to whom I spoke.* The subordinating words (in italics, above) that introduce adjective clauses and connect them to main clauses are classified in two groups: Relative Pronouns: who, whose, whom, which, that Note: who, whose, and whom are used in reference to people. Which is used in reference to animals or things. That can be used for either. Relative Adverbs: when, where, why In addition to introducing adjective clauses, relative pronouns function as noun substitutes. They function within adjective clauses as subjects, complements, or objects of prepositions. Relative adverbs function as modifiers. Relative clauses are not difficult to locate in a sentence. Relative pronouns or adverbs are obvious signals. In addition, an adjective clause can be removed from a sentence, leaving a complete main clause, as the example below shows. EX: The coat *that I am wearing* is my father's. If we remove the adjective clause, we are left with the following: EX: The coat is my father's. (complete main clause) preposition such as to, for, in, into, or of, may be needed for the proper construction of the sentence. This preposition will precede the relative pronoun and will be considered as part of the adjective clause. EX: She is the child for whom I am responsible. Some adjective clauses are expressed without the introductory word. In such cases you can supply that or which and be assured that the clause is an adjective clause. EX: The first car (that) Bob owned was a 1965 Chevy. Adjective clauses may be *restrictive* or *nonrestrictive.* A restrictive clause is a clause which is necessary to identify or limit the possibilities to the thing that is meant. A nonrestrictive clause adds additional information but is not necessary to identify the thing that is meant. A nonrestrictive clause is set off from the rest of the sentence by commas. Nonrestrictive: Dr. Ruskin, who took out Mother's appendix, is speaking at our club this Tuesday. Restrictive: The doctor who took out Mother's appendix is speaking at our club Tuesday, Dr. Ruskin is Dr. Ruskin whatever he does. Therefore, in the first sentence, we don't need to know that he removed Mother's appendix to know which doctor is speaking at the club. Since, however, the second sentence does not name the doctor to be speaking, the information in the adjective clause is necessary (or restrictive) to point out which doctor is speaking. When a group of words is necessary, or restrictive, no commas surround it; when a group of words is not necessary, or nonrestrictive, commas surround it. Restrictive: The girl who is leading the graduates down the aisle is my cousin. Nonrestrictive: My cousin, who is leading the graduates down the aisle, is the valedictorian.
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adjective clause
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false
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T/F: An adjective clause modifies an adjective, verb, or adverb.
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*is a dependent clause that functions as a noun substitute* It usually takes the place of the subject, direct object, indirect object, predicate noun, or object of the preposition. Subject: *Where I study* is my problem. Direct Object: I wonder *what she sees in him.* Predicate Noun: The fact is *that you promised to be there.* Object of the Preposition: This plan is available *to whoever registers in time.* Delayed Subject: It is fortunate *that you were in the building.* (*That you were in the building* is fortunate.) The following list includes most of the words which introduce noun clauses: that, whether, if, what (subordinating conjunctions) whoever, whomever, whatever, whichever (indefinite relative pronouns) how, when, where, why (relative adverbs) These words always stand near the beginning of the clause and signal a dependent clause; the relative pronouns and adverbs also serve some function within the clause. When that is the introductory word, it is sometimes not stated. EX: I think (that) you are mistaken.
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noun clause
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false
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T/F: Words like because, as if, and although introduce noun clauses.
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Direct object Indirect object Subject compliment
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In what ways can a noun clause operate?
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https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20091231001745AAUOpTw
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Answers to questions asking the correct noun clause and its function https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20091231001745AAUOpTw
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*is a noun or noun substitute that immediately follows another noun and gives additional information about that noun* Although an appositive gives the information another sentence might give, it does so with great economy of words. Because it does not restrict the meaning of the noun it renames, an appositive is set off by commas. Any noun can be followed by an appositive. An appositive phrase includes the appositive and its modifiers: -After a subject: Darrell, *the new superintendent*, called a meeting. -After a direct object: We drove our new car, *a Saturn.* -After a subject complement: I am Mary Trout, *your Avon lady.* -After the Object of the Preposition: They came into Denver, *the mile-high city.* Since an appositive is a noun, a noun clause or a gerund or an infinitive can be an appositive. -Noun clause as an appositive: *Your statement, that the town is dying*, is not diplomatic. -Gerund as an appositive: Sally's newest hobby, photographing birds, is bringing her great satisfaction. -Infinitive as an appositive: His idea, *to form a Norway Club*, will attract many people to this area.
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appositive
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It is my pleasure to introduce Dr. Weldon Smithson, the famous etymologist. ~the famous etymologist His mission, to climb Mt. McKinley, was yet to be accomplished. ~to climb Mt. McKinley The building, a tall, gray structure, sat abandoned near the freeway. ~a tall, gray structure She looked forward to her favorite activity, jogging on the beach, after she finished her work. ~jogging on the beach When the child reached for his great grandmother's candy dish, he remembered his mother's instructions, that he should only choose one piece. ~that he should only choose one piece
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Identify the appositive in the following sentence.
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*is a phrase consisting of a noun or pronoun followed by a participle and complements or modifiers* It is not linked to the main clause by any conjunction or relative pronoun. The nominative absolute usually results when an adverb clause is reduced from clause to phrase level. Example: Original sentence: *Because ideas proliferated abundantly*, the committee had a very successful meeting. Nominative Absolute: *Ideas proliferating abundantly*, the committee had a very successful meeting. Example: Original sentence: *Since work was scarce*, most young people went to junior college. Nominative Absolute: *Work being scarce*, most young people went to junior college. In both sentences in the example above, the main verb of the adverb clause transforms into a present participle. Also, since, in this transformation, the adverb clause loses its "clause status," the introductory words disappear.
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nominative absolute
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true
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!!!!T/F: Introductory participial phrases and adverb clauses are set off from main clauses by commas.
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false
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!!!!T/F: The two infinitive functions are adjective and noun.
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Houses should be designed *to take advantage of the sun's heat.* - infinitive phrase My most valuable coin, *one from Spain*, is worth more than $100.00. - appositive *The weather remaining turbulent*, we will postpone our canoe trip. - nominative absolute The hero falls in love with a countess *who is very beautiful.* - adjective clause *Although her personality had not changed at all*, Megan looked quite different. - adverb clause Put the sizes on the uniforms *while sorting them out.* - elliptical clause *By serving as a popcorn vendor*, Don saw many good games. - prepositional phrase with a gerund We walked along the mountain path *looking for unusual flowers.* - present participial phrase By mistake I opened a package *addressed to my sister.* - past participial phrase *Headed by a senior*, the group drew up rules for School Spirit Week. - past participial phrase The driver, *confused by the sign*, made a wrong turn. - past participial phrase We hit a snag *while rowing to shore.* - elliptical clause The play, *a three-act farce*, amused everyone. - appositive Frances has plenty of time *to devote to her painting.* - infinitive The two waiters exchanged a look *whose meaning was clear to me.* - adjective clause *Even though Darla recommended the course*, I decided not to take it. - adverb clause *Jumping across the ditch*, the fire threatened our house. - present participial phrase *The fishing having become so poor*, we packed up camp and moved to another lake. - nominative absolute *Whenever I can come* will be soon enough for the race. - noun clause
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What type of clause or phrase is italicized in the sentence below?
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1. *Establish Context* - If a sentence is fifteen words long and you are unsure about only one of them, odds are good that you can use the other fourteen to help you out. This is because the words and sentences that surround an unfamiliar word often give clues to its meaning. Therefore, always start by grasping the meaning of the sentence. If the overall gist is clear, you will begin to see how the unfamiliar word fits. (useful when you don't need a precise definition) 2. *Identify the Part of Speech* - By determining whether your unknown word functions as a noun, verb, adjective, or adverb, you move a long way toward figuring out its meaning. You can begin to see the word's relationship to other words in the sentence. 3. *Pronounce the word* - Figuring out a word's pronunciation is a big part of understanding what it might mean. Sometimes, reading the word out loud is enough to make you remember: "I've heard that word before."
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Identifying unfamiliar words
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is a process of reasoning in which reasons are given in support of a claim.
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Deduction
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some writers use this form of *deduction*, in which a conclusion may be shown to logically follow from two or more premises. The letters in the forms listed below stand for nouns which are called *terms* of the syllogism. Statements are in one of four forms: All A's are B's. (universal affirmative) No A's are B's. (universal negative) Some A's are B's. (particular affirmative) Some A's are not B's. (particular negative)
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syllogism
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is reasoning from several particular examples to establish a general principle.
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Induction
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is the name of an *inductive* form of argument which states if two or more entities are similar in one or more respects then a probability exists that they will be similar in other respects. Analogies are best used to compare a known object with an unfamiliar one so the unfamiliar object or idea can be explained. It is usually not wise to use an analogy in arguments because so few objects or ideas are the same in more than a most superficial way.
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Analogy
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stir feelings like happiness, sadness or anger in a reader. By using words or anecdotes with strong connotative meaning, the writer sways the reader's emotions. You must be aware to use this tool ethically. Many writers combine logic and emotional appeal in their writings.
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Emotional appeals
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A second propaganda technique is to convince the reader that everyone else believes that a statement is true. One frequently heard advertisement states that nine out of ten Americans use toothpaste with fluoride to protect their teeth from decay. What about that tenth American? Surely, his teeth will all be filled with cavities. The term bandwagon refers to the elaborately decorated wagon that carried the band in an old-time parade. Often these parades were associated with elections; therefore, to jump on the band wagon came to mean join the winning side. Presumably, those not on the bandwagon are losers. Since everyone wants to be a winner, being one who is not on the bandwagon may be difficult. The bandwagon technique, however, may lead a person to make a decision for the wrong reason. A decision should never be based on the fact that everyone else is doing it. A good way to counteract bandwagon pressure is to ask yourself a couple of questions. If everyone else were doing the opposite, what would I do? If no one else were around, what would I do? If your decision would be different because people around you were different, then you are probably being influenced by the pressure to conform and to jump on the bandwagon.
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Bandwagon
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A fallacy is a false idea or misleading argument. The straw man fallacy is like fighting a scarecrow filled with straw rather than a real opponent. Since ancient times, warriors, soldiers, and knights training for combat have practiced on straw men or dummies. This helps them use their weapons better; however, defeating a straw man is certainly far easier than defeating a real opponent. When a speaker or writer misrepresents his opponent's position (replaces his opponent's real argument with one that is weaker) so that he can defeat it more easily, he is setting up a straw man.
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Straw man fallacy
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means to involve or suggest by logical necessity; to say or express indirectly; to hint or suggest a speaker or writer implies something.
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Imply
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means to conclude from evidence presented; to arrive at a logical consequence; to deduce or reach a conclusion by reasoning. The listener or reader infers or makes inferences; sometimes this process is called "drawing conclusions."
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Infer
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the Dewey Decimal system
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Which of the following is the most common method for cataloguing books in elementary and high school libraries?
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the Library of Congress System
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University libraries usually use _____ to catalog books.
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1. General Works 2. Philosophy and Psychology 3. Religion 4. Social Sciences 5. Languages 6. Pure Sciences 7. Applied Sciences 8. Fine Arts and Recreation 9. Literature 10. History, Travel, Collected Biography 11. Fiction in English 12. Individual Biography
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Match the Dewey Decimal numbers to the corresponding category. 1. 000-099 2. 100- 199 3. 200-299 4. 300- 399 5. 400- 499 6. 500-599 7. 600-699 8. 700-799 9. 800-899 10. 900-999 11. F 12. B
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1. General Works 2. Philosophy, Psychology, Religion 3. History and Topography 4. America 5. Geography, Anthropology, Sports and Games 6. Social Sciences 7. Political Science 8. Law 9. Education 10. Music 11. Fine Arts 12. Language and Literature 13. Science 14. Medicine 15. Agriculture, Forestry 16. Engineering and Technology 17. Military Science 18. Naval Science 19. Bibliography
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Match the Library of Congress letters to the corresponding category. 1. A 2. B 3. C-D 4. E-F 5. G 6. H 7. J 8. K 9. L 10. M 11. N 12. P 13. Q 14. R 15. S 16. T 17. U 18. V 19. Z
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false
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T/F: Books are organized by the authors' first names.
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at least the title, the author, or the subject
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To find a book in the library, you must know ______.
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true
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T/F: The call number of a book is often based upon the Dewey Decimal or Library of Congress numbering systems.
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true
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T/F: The computer catalog provides the number of pages of a book.
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an alphabetical list of names or topics
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You will find which of the following in an index?
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true
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T/F: Rather than just giving you information, a good education should prepare you to find information.
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Larger indexes are themselves complete books or volumes. Some of these indexes list articles appearing in magazines or other publications that are issued periodically, whether weekly, monthly, or quarterly. One of the most widely used indexes is the Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature. The Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature indexes magazines written for the general reader. Whatever your subject, you will probably find something on it in the Readers' Guide. These indexes are published in monthly or semi-monthly installments and are then combined in huge volumes, listing articles for a period of one or more years. In the front of the Readers' Guide is an index to abbreviations as well as a list of all magazines referenced.
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periodical indexes
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consists of three principal parts 1. Internet - is made up of the computer equipment (including machines, wires, cables, and software) which connects millions of computers world wide. These interconnections form a net or web allowing a single computer to communicate with many other computers. 2. software programs which run on computers connected to the Internet - These programs, known as information servers, deliver information requested by computer users connected to the Internet. Servers are thus information "holding tanks." Some servers deliver information in the form of web pages while others provide menus of files to choose from. Some servers send and receive electronic mail ("e-mail") messages. Nine different types of servers, each with its own function, are widely used today. 3. Internet web browser - a software program such as Firefox or Internet Explorer which specializes in accessing and displaying information on any or all of the information servers. Browsers are useful because they make searching for information on the Internet much easier, allowing those who have little experience with computers or computer languages to access information from several servers without having to learn the "language" required to operate each server.
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The Web
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1. web page 2. information server 3. the "Web" 4. search engine 5. home page 6. browser 7. hyperlink 8. keyword 9. newsgroup 10. web site
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Match the definition to the term. 1. a block of information stored in an HTML (Hyper Text Markup Language) file on a server 2. a "holding tank" for information on the Web or software which retrieves that information 3. the wires, cables, machines, and software connecting millions of computers world-wide 4. a device which categorizes and locates web sites 5. the table of contents of a web site 6. a software package which retrieves information from any or all available Internet servers 7. a highlighted word or phrase within a web page which acts as a "bridge" to another web page or site 8. a term which aids in narrowing a web search 9. an Internet discussion group on a particular topic 10. a collection of interrelated web pages united by a home page
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false
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T/F: A browser and a search engine are the same thing.
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true
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T/F: Internet Explorer is an example of a browser.
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broad
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A search engine which uses computer software to automatically catalog web sites tends to provide very _______ searches.
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narrow
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A search engine using directories of "hand-picked" web sites as the basis of its search tends to provide ______ searches.
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By going to the library page of a college or university, many of whom have their catalogs on-line
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How is it possible to find encyclopedias and reference texts on the Internet?
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computer equipment software a browser
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Which of the following is a principle part of the World Wide Web?
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false
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T/F: Anyone with a computer has automatic access to the Internet.
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illustration-example definition cause-effect contrast-comparison classification-division process analysis
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Expository writing categories
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One of the most effective ways of proving a point is to tell a story that clearly illustrates it. The topic sentence of such a paragraph will indicate that the author is going to give one or more examples or relate an incident that proves his point. EX: Some farmers seem to be able to predict the weather. For example, Old Mr. Beamish cocks his ear to determine the count of the crickets' chirpings and knows that rain is coming. When words like for *instance, for example, and by way of illustration* are used, the illustration-example is easy to identify. Notice that the general statement in the previous paragraph is followed by a specific example.
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Illustration-example
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*is or was (the = sign), exist, be, essence, essential, true, means* Another writing pattern that is seen repeatedly is definition. Like a dictionary, a definition exposition defines terms; however, where a definition in a dictionary is usually not even a sentence in length, an extended definition in exposition can go on for pages. EX: The adjective indifferent is like a chameleon; it changes its color to fit the situation in which it is being used. It may mean "unbiased" when the reference implies partiality or impartiality. In such a case the indifferent attitude means that it simply does not matter one way or the other. The word may also mean that the case in hand calls for neither sanction nor condemnation in either observance or in neglect. This particular definition could continue for several pages because the subject, the word "indifferent," has many meanings. For complete clarification, every shade of meaning would have to be explored.
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Definition
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*reason, why, affect, effect, because, cause, result, origin, consequence, outcome* The cause-effect pattern is frequently seen in writings about events in history. The writer using this method attempts to show how one event or a series of events causes something else to come about. EX: In 1914, Prince Franz Ferdinand--the crown prince of Austria--went with his wife on a visit to Serbia. At the time, the Austrian government had great influence over Serbia. This influence caused tensions with the Russians, who were also bent on controlling Serbia. While on the trip, Ferdinand was assassinated and killed by a group of Serbian nationalists who wanted independence from Austria. His death led to the Austrian government making very strong demands on Serbia. This circumstance heightened tensions with Russia whose support lie with the Serbs. Days later the First World War began with the Germans--who controlled Austria--declaring war on Russia.
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Cause-effect
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*either, or; neither, nor; like, unlike; similar, dissimilar; similarity, difference, but, however, yet, moreover, and on the other hand* The comparison-contrast pattern is used to show likenesses (comparison) or differences (contrast) of two or more subjects. In some instances both comparison and contrast will be used within one paragraph. EX: In the fitness community, many people have trouble deciding between low-fat, low-calorie diets and high protein diets. Both are successful. When a person eats fewer calories than he burns, he will inevitably lose weight. This is the principle for the low-fat, low-calorie diet. Lower fat foods tend to have fewer calories (because fat has 9 calories per gram whereas protein and carbohydrates have 4 calories per gram), so sticking to low-fat foods helps a person cut calories. Fruits, vegetables, and whole grains are naturally low in fat. The high-protein diet, in contrast, focuses on protein as the building block for muscle. Muscle burns more calories than fat in the body and speeds up a person's metabolism, which dictates how many calories she burns. The faster a person's metabolism, the more calories burned. The low-fat, low-cal diet is a simple math solution: eat less than you burn and lose weight. The high protein diet is a bit more complex: eat to build muscle, burn more calories, and lose weight. Writing of this kind usually announces the comparison or contrast at the very beginning. Such words as but, however, yet, moreover, and on the other hand signal this method.
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Comparison-contrast
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Classification-division is probably thought of as a scientific tool rather than a literary method of writing, but it is not exclusively used in sorting out botanical or anatomical species. The phrase that will cause you to recognize this type of writing will include such words as *categories, kinds, types, genres, classes, divisions, sorts, or orders.* EX: Golfers come in three types: the duffer, the amateur, and the professional. The duffer hits the dirt farther than the ball. The amateur hits the ball further than the dirt and then spends his time looking for the ball. And the professional inspires the others to come back and try again. OR EX: Three genres studied in Introduction to Literature are short story, poetry, and drama... Topic sentences such as the two above very distinctly indicate to the knowledgeable reader that a classification-division pattern of writing is forthcoming. Although the classification is easy to identify, the division is less easily spotted because it has already occurred. Golfers is a division of sports hobbyists. Literature is a division of the arts, which includes music and traditional arts such as painting and sculpture. Under the three genres a deeper classification will occur in the definition which will divide drama, for instance, into tragedy, comedy, morality plays, and the theater of the absurd.
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Classification-division
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*must, ought to, need to, have to, should (have); frequent use of imperative sentences* The last category of exposition discussed here is process analysis. This kind of writing usually features an analysis or description of how to do something, whether that something is assembling a computer, operated a lawn mower, or otherwise completing a task. New equipment almost always includes a pamphlet which gives guidelines for use. In most every case, the pamphlet makes use of process analysis. Note that process analysis is implied in the title of the paragraph below: "How to Find the Perfect Gift." EX: The first rule of gift-buying is to keep in mind the interests of the recipient. Too often, the shopper makes the mistake of buying a friend or family member the sort of gift that the buyer would like. Just because you enjoy tennis does not mean your non-athletic sister will love a top-of-the-line tennis racket. If you want to select the perfect gift, try to think of something that the recipient would love, but would never buy for herself. Maybe your mother has always wanted to get a manicure, but would feel silly spending the money on herself. Perhaps, you could present her with a gift certificate. Maybe your father loves baseball, but isn't good at planning ahead to buy tickets. If that's the case, buy a set of tickets and offer to join him. Remember, with gift-giving, it's the thought that counts. Think about the recipient's likes and dislikes and you can't go wrong. If all else fails, you can't go wrong with a gift-certificate.
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Process analysis
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illustration/example
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Choose the type of paragraph below. The best leaders are organized, efficient, and punctual. Molly Spencer, the President of the Spanish Club is just this type of leader. She keeps all of the club's folders and rosters neatly arranged. She has organized several events to help students celebrate the Spanish language, and her fund-raisers have helped several students pay for Study Spanish Abroad programs. In addition, she's never been late to a meeting. Molly Spencer is the perfect example of a leader
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contrast/comparison
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Choose the type of paragraph below. W. Michael Blumenthal, a corporate CEO, talks about the mistakes he made in hiring: "In choosing people for top positions, you have to make sure they have a clear sense of what is right and wrong, a willingness to be truthful, the courage to say what they think and to do what they think is right, even if the politics militate against that. This is the quality that should really be at the top. I was too often impressed by the intelligence and substantive knowledge of an individual and did not always pay enough attention to the question of how honest and courageous and good a person the individual really was."
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Drowning is the fourth most frequent cause of accidental deathin the summer. DOES Most people can learn to swim in ten short lessons. DOES NOT The majority of water-accident victims require mouth-to-mouth breathing. DOES NOT Heat exhaustion comes from overdoing in hot weather. DOES Dress in light-colored clothing to prevent heat strokes. DOES NOT An empty, tightly closed gallon jug will support a tired swimmer. DOES NOT Half of the summer deaths will occur on the highway. DOES First aid is to prevent accidents as well as assist in rescue. DOES NOT Bees, hornets, wasps, and yellow jackets sting more people in the summertime. DOES Outdoor and on-the-road eating increases the number of vacationing people stricken by food poisoning. DOES
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Click on the box to choose whether each sentence restates the key idea expressed in the key sentence. Key Idea: When hot weather arrives and the nation takes to the outdoors, mishaps multiply.
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Planning ahead helps people to avoid problems. DOES Difficult times disappear if people prepare for them. DOES NOT Planting and harvesting in summer provide food for the winter. DOES Poor planning is a result of laziness. DOES NOT Disasters sometimes happen even if people plan for them. DOES NOT Some crises can be avoided if they are anticipated. DOES Disasters often teach people to plan ahead. DOES NOT Planning ahead often brings about suffering. DOES NOT
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Click on the box to choose whether each sentence restates the key idea expressed in the key sentence. Key Idea: Foresight often prevents disaster.
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People like to have their own way. DOES NOT Animals are required to adjust their living patterns to their environment. DOES People often find it necessary to make adjustments in their lives because others won't. DOES We should treat others like we would want to be treated. DOES NOT Some people refuse to change. DOES NOT Others' refusal to change for us may mean that we must change for them. DOES Others' failure to change provides the basis for our own refusal to change. DOES NOT Sometimes we need to stay the same, even when others change. DOES NOT Insisting that others adjust to us will prevent us from having to adjust to others. DOES NOT If we don't agree with others, we should act as though we do. DOES NOT
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Click on the box to choose whether each sentence restates the key idea expressed in the key sentence. Key idea: It is sometimes necessary to adjust yourself to those who fail to adjust to you.
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- Closest definition to what a language or its purpose is *is a systematic means of communication using sounds or conventional symbols.* Which of these are defining characteristics of language? Select all that apply. ~arbitrary ~systematic Which of the following explains why language can be called arbitrary? Select all that apply. ~Words do not inherently resemble the objects that they represent. ~The word chair does not resemble the object it represents. ~Words are meaningful only because of meanings given to them by their users. ~People determine what signs, or words, are used to represent things in language. Animal sounds and signals are not considered language because: _____. ~their smells and calls are not systematic; they are not defined by constructed rules Which of the following best describes the relationship between a linguist and language? ~Linguists study language as a system. Which of the following sentences are true? Select all that apply. ~It is not necessary for a linguist to be bilingual or multilingual. ~Linguists can study the rules and principles for making a language systematic without actually speaking the language.
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Language
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-the rules that make language systematic Grammar includes: ~syntax : the rules for placing words together to form complete thoughts ~morphology : the rules for forming words ~semantics : word meanings Early English grammar was based on _______ ~Latin Traditional grammars are considered to be primarily ________. ~prescriptive (including English) T/F: Traditional grammars are still completely based on the Latin model. ~false T/F: Latin grammar is an acceptable model for English grammar. ~false Which of the following is included in grammar? ~syntax
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Grammar
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*primarily concerned with morphology and syntax.* The first English grammars were based on Latin models because, at the time they were written, Latin was considered the ideal language. Scholars attempted to find English equivalents for Latin parts of speech. The attempt was not always successful; the two languages, though distantly related, are not similar in structure. Latin relied upon *inflections* (change in the form of a word to indicate case, gender, number, or tense) to indicate the relationships of words. English relies primarily upon word order rather than the use of inflections.The attempts of early linguists to "improve" English, combined with the zeal of later English teachers, and a confusion of the distinction between grammar and usage, led to the use of the term *prescriptive grammar*("grammar" refers to a set of rules for the use of a language, or to a description of the grammatical structures of a language) to refer to traditional grammars. Traditional grammars usually begin with the definition of a sentence, then go on to describe the individual parts of speech. The classifications— 1. *noun* - person, place, or thing 2. *verb* - used to make a statement, ask a question, or give a command 3. *adjective* - modifies a noun or noun substitute 4. *adverb* - modifies a word or word group other than a noun or pronoun 5. *preposition* - shows relationship of noun or pronoun to rest of the sentence 6. *conjunction* - a word which links words, phrases, or clauses of the same type 7. *pronoun* - noun substitute 8. *interjection* - sudden feeling —are based more on definition than usage. Categories occasionally overlap. EX: the word her in the phrase, her history book, is both a pronoun and an adjective. Traditional grammars also define phrases and clauses, outline relationships between words and functions of speech parts, and attempt to account for the uses and the placement of various constructions such as verbals or prepositional phrases. Although traditional grammars have been successful in training many people to speak and write correctly, they have some weaknesses. The chief problem with traditional grammars is their detail. Exceptions are at least as numerous as rules. Although traditional grammars are valuable and effective in many respects, they tend to view English from the outside. They describe existing sentences, rather than explain the inevitable formation of every possible English sentence. Although we use the term traditional, today's grammar is not strictly traditional. It has been modified somewhat to incorporate a few of the better ideas contained in other types of grammars, without changing the basic principles. This modified approach to traditional grammar might be called *functionalist, because it emphasizes usage and allows for some variation in accepted usage.* Through the functional approach, the parts of speech are important indicators of word relationships. A student not only must learn a definition and recognize a noun, he must also be able to actually use the noun correctly. Functional grammar then reinforces learned concepts through practice. This type of grammar utilizes the terminology and structure of traditional grammar while emphasizing function. comparison of the grammatical structure of English and of Latin shows that Latin is inappropriate as a model for English: *Latin nouns and pronouns have 5 cases*-- 1. *ablative* - the case in Latin that expresses separation from, position, motion from, or means by which something is done. Usually translated from, with, in, or by 2. *accusative* - the case in Latin and other inflected languages that is used for direct objects; corresponds with objective case in English 3. *dative* - in Latin and other inflected languages, the case used for indirect objects 4. *genitive* - a case showing possession, source, or origin. Called possessive case in English. 5. *nominative* Whereas *English has 3*-- 1. nominative 2. objective 3. possessive English nouns have the same form in the nominative and objective cases. Only the personal pronouns and the relative pronoun who employ different forms in the two cases. The following chart shows the cases of the personal pronouns in their singular and plural forms. (chart labeled Personal Pronoun Chart) Third person pronouns, the most complex of the group, have twelve forms. Third person pronouns cannot, however, be considered typical English words. The pronoun I has eight forms. The relative pronoun who has three forms: who, whom, and whose. A common noun, for example the word wolf, has four forms. Singular Plural wolf, wolves wolf's, wolves' Compare the forms of lupus, the Latin word for wolf. Masculine Feminine Singular, Plural / Singular, Plural Nominative: lupus, lupi / lupa, lupae Genitive: lupi, luporum / lupae, luparum Dative: lupo, lupis / lupae, lupis Accusative: lupam, lupas / lupam, lupas Ablative: lupa, lupis / lupa, lupis If a Roman had wanted to say, "The hide of the wolf is very thick," he would have chosen a different form of lupus than he would have used had he wished to say, "Give the wolf a piece of meat." Wolf used as the subject or as the direct object had still other forms. When a Roman recited, "lupus, lupi, lupo, lupam, lupa," he was saying, in effect, "wolf, of the wolf, to the wolf, wolf (objective), from the wolf." The ablative and accusative cases, however, were used with various other prepositions. The grammatical meaning that English achieves through word order was accomplished in Latin by means of inflection, giving a single word as many as twenty forms.
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Traditional grammars
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I visited Mexico *once.* - adverb Alexandra stomped out of the classroom *with* her entourage. - preposition Stephen *girded* his sword upon his armor. - verb Please take a *quart* of these dry oats. - noun *"Hey!"* Jacques yelled out the window, "That's my car!" - interjection The *fluorescent* lights made my headache throb painfully. - adjective
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Determine the part of speech for the italicized word in the sentence below. (adjective, adverb, verb, preposition, interjection...)
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fallacies ~ *logical fallacy* : false idea or mistaken belief arrived at through faulty reasoning ~ *normative fallacy* : a mistaken belief or false idea that violates the norm or standard it is supposed to uphold *morpheme* : the smallest meaningful part of a word, whether a complete word, a prefix or suffix, or an inflection *morphology* : the branch of grammar that deals with the forms of words and their formation, as by inflection or derivation *paradigm* : a pattern or example. In grammar, a word of a particular class shown with all its inflections (form changes) EX: good better best Positive Comparative Superlative *phoneme* : the smallest significant speech sound in a language; a unit that serves to distinguish similar utterances from one another, as pan from pen *structural linguistics* : the study of language to determine and describe structural patterns and their interrelationships *syntax* : the branch of grammar dealing with the arrangement of words and phrase in a sentence *semantics* : the scientific study of word meanings; word is derived from the Greek word *semantikos*, which means *signification.* Semantics deals especially with the historical development of word meanings and changes that occur in the meaning of particular words. Definitions of semantics will vary according to the area of semantics being defined. The three main areas of semantics are defined according to function. early name for semantics - *semasiology & significs* Gained recognition by 1925, and like other descriptive grammars, emphasizes spoken language over written language. Unlike traditional grammar, its analysis of language begins with word forms and works back toward meaning. The emphasis is placed on grammatical meaning rather than on semantic meaning or total meaning. Structural grammarians attempt to form generalizations about English rather than to formulate specific rules. Traditional grammar is primarily concerned with morphology and syntax. Structural grammar also is concerned with the study of sounds in a language, particularly the effects of sound upon meaning. Emphasis is placed upon *phonemes*, stress, pitch, and juncture (pauses between or within words that can distinguish one word or phrase from another). Structural grammar includes in its analysis of *morphemes* such patterns as the plurals and the possessives of nouns, the past tense and the past participles of verbs, the -s inflection of the third person singular present tense, the present participles, the forms of adjectives and pronouns, and the methods used to indicate the subjunctive mood. Because of the emphasis on spoken English, structural grammar also includes distinctions of meaning produced by accenting a particular syllable (sub'ject vs. sub ject') or by the addition of word-forming affixes (friend and befriend). In place of the traditional eight parts of speech, it recognizes twelve classes of words. Four of these classes—nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs—retain the traditional names. The definitions, however, depend upon form, function, and position. Nouns, for example, are considered as words that can be inflected in the plural and in the genitive "possessive" and that can be used in the sentence positions of subject and object. The other eight classes of words are called *function words,* which have little or no lexical meaning. Function words have eight classes: 1. *auxiliaries* - are also known as 'helping verbs'. list: be (am, are, is, was, were, being), can, could, do (did, does, doing), have (had, has, having), may, might, must, shall, should, will, would 2. *prepositions* 3. *determiners* - include articles and other words of similar use, words such as this and those. 4. *conjunctions* 5. *pronouns* 6. *interrogatives* - include words used to introduce questions with forms of to be or to do, including when, where, why, and who. 7. *intensives* - include words used as adverbs to emphasize the word that is modified. The most common intensifier is very. 8. *unnamed class* - consists of "empty words" such as not and there. T/F: Structural grammar became popular fifty years before transformational grammar. ~false T/F: Structural grammar has now gained acceptance as an improvement over traditional grammar. ~false T/F: Traditional grammar, based on the principles of structural linguistics, has no real use. ~false
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Structural grammar (or structural linguistics)
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*Charles C. Fries* (one of 1st advocates) *Edward Sapir* *Leonard Bloomfield* -claimed that great gaps existed between traditional grammatical rules and English as it is actually spoken. -They attempted to expose three types of fallacies in traditionalists' thinking -Structural linguists assume that the grammar of a language consists of the linguistic facts of that language and little else. -Consequently, a structuralist does not label particular usages as "correct" or "incorrect." For example, structural linguists would consider sentences such as "I didn't do nothing" and "I ain't got none" as fully functional and legitimate English sentences on the basis that they are used, understood, and accepted in a number of communities, even though such sentences are not standard English grammar The position of the structural linguists can be summarized in the following principles: 1. Grammar constitutes a set of patterns common to a given community. 2. Each language or dialect has its own patterns. 3. Analysis and description of a language must conform to scientific theory in simplicity, in consistency, in completeness, and in adaptability to change.
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Structural linguists
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1. *Semantic Fallacies* - structural linguists believe that semantic fallacies exist in the traditional definitions of the parts of speech. The traditional definition of a noun, for example, is "a person, place, or thing." According to the structural linguists, this definition does not fit words, such as fire, happiness, or charity, which represent activities, states, and abstractions rather than concrete entities. Traditional grammarians, however, do utilize the concepts concrete and abstract in describing nouns; they also recognize the standard dictionary definition of thing to mean (1) any object or substance; (2) whatever is done or to be done—act, deed, event, happening, (3) whatever is spoken or thought—idea, opinion; and so on. 2. *Logical Fallacies* - The structuralists claim that logical fallacies exist in the traditional description of actual English sentences. A single sentence, for example, might contain both past and present tenses. They perceive logical violations in the handling of future tense in English because the future tense differs grammatically from the past and the present tenses. 3. *Normative Fallacies* - structural linguists use this to refer to the traditional grammarian's habit of setting up prescriptive norms for usage. The confusing and little-followed rules for the use of shall and will in first person future tense, the traditional grammarian's objection to split infinitives, and the rule against ending a sentence with a preposition all seem to the structuralists to be unrealistic quibbles. Winston Churchill wittily alluded to the third prescription when he made the classic remark, "This is a situation up with which I will not put!" What is NOT a fallacy found by structural linguists in traditional grammar? ~morphology fallacy
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Structuralists' belief of 3 types of fallacies in traditionalists' thinking
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Do you think that it will *rain?* - verb I do *not* know what to say. - empty word *Rain* began to fall. - noun They ate lunch *under* a pine tree. - preposition *May* I go to the library? - auxiliary *There* are no easy answers. - empty word *What* do you think you're doing? - interrogative She was *late* in arriving at the party. - adjective The principal is *extremely* busy. - intensive
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Identify the bold word according to its class in structural linguistics.
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how *structural linguists* define word classes. Syntax refers to the relationships among words. Morphology refers to the relationship of one part of a word to another part of a word. Compare these sentences: *Yesterday* was Monday. *Yesterday's* class was interesting. She came *yesterday.* Yesterday is classed as a morphemic noun in all three sentences because the word is able to take inflections marking plural, possessive, or both—characteristic of nouns. Syntactically, however, yesterday is not the same. In sentence one, yesterday is a syntactic noun. In sentence two, it is classed as a syntactic adjective. In sentence three, the word yesterday tells when and is, therefore, considered a syntactic adverb. The difference, then, according to structural linguists, is between a word's form and its function in a sentence. another example sentence: I want to hear *today's* news *today*, not tomorrow! Today is classed as a morphemic noun in both instances. Based on the function of each, today's is a syntactic adjective, and today is a syntactic adverb.
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syntax and morphology
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A word can be a morphemic noun in a sentence if the word is able to take inflections marking plural, possessive, or both characteristic of nouns. It can also function as a syntactic adverb when the word describes an adjective, verb, or other adverb or word group and explains the place, time, circumstance, matter, cause, degree, etc.
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Explain how a word can be a morphemic noun and a syntactic adverb in the same sentence.
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false
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T/F: Syntax and morphology refer to the same discipline in linguistics.
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appeared in the 1950s, and although they did not agree totally with one another, they all agreed that traditional grammar did not explain all facets of English. At about the same time that the structuralists appeared, another group of linguists proposed what they called generative grammar, or transformational grammar.
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Structural grammars
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(or *transformational* grammar) a grammatical system in which sentence structures are derived by transforming basic kernel sentences. *Noam Chomsky", originator of transformational grammar, and one of the first advocates of generative grammar; whose book, Syntactic Structures, appeared in 1957 (the same year transformational grammar first appeared.) He regarded irregularities in speech performance as similar to personal mistakes in *multiplication* that did not change the rules. objective was to find "rules" that, if followed, would generate *all* possible grammatical sentences in language. The rules were not to be directives, but rather explicit statements of the knowledge that a community must have to communicate successfully. He assumed that all members of a group would know the same rules. Anyone who did not know those rules or who knew another set of rules was not quite a "member of the community." Chomsky and those who worked with him were primarily interested in the *competence* of individual speakers. Chomsky believed that traditional grammar, although it gave a full account of exceptions and irregularities, only made available to the student a few examples of regular constructions and expected him to understand and to use the numerous exceptions. *Structural linguists, according to Chomsky, go too deeply into structure and limit themselves to inventories of systems of elements, but provide little insight into the way in which a person forms and interprets sentences.* He attempted through transformational grammar to analyze the processes of sentence formation and sentence interpretation that a speaker or listener must master in order to be competent. Chomsky's grammar has three parts: 1. *phrase structure rules* (PSR) that analyze the underlying structure of *kernel sentences* (consists of a noun phrase and a verb phrase, both in their simplest form. EX: John hit the ball. John = noun phrase (NP) composed of a noun. Hit the ball = verb phrase (VP) composed of a transitive verb (VT) plus a noun phrase (Det. + noun). 2. *transformation*al rules that show how more complicated sentences can be generated from the kernel sentence (any variation from the kernel sentence pattern EX: the restatement of John hit the ball ---> Did John hit the ball? This type of analysis makes possible an orderly and regular manipulation of sentence elements and avoids the confusion that sometimes results from definitions based on meaning. Traditional grammar says that the active voice indicates that the subject does the acting. Transformational grammar, however, advocates use of "Slattery took a hard right to the jaw," to show that exceptions to this rule exist. Although an active voice verb is used in the sentence, the subject, Slattery, receives the action of the verb, took.) 3. morphophonemic rules that convert abstract forms into pronounceable utterances The most basic phrase structure rule (PSR) is: S ---> NP + VP. S stands for sentence, ---> means either consists of or rewrite as, NP means noun phrase, VP means verb phrase. In phrase structure rules, the term appearing to the left of the arrow is always rewritten or restated as the information that appears to the right of the arrow. The phrase structure rule stated above, when translated from symbols into ordinary English, reads as follows: *A sentence can be rewritten as a noun phrase plus a verb phrase.* Notice that (NP) and (VP) are subcategories of (S). Each of the categories NP and VP can also appear to the right of the arrow and be rewritten as a grouping of subcategories. S ---> NP + VP. NP ---> (DET) N VP ---> V (NP) The first of the two rules above can be restated as follows: A noun phrase (NP) consists of an optional determiner (DET) and a noun (N). The second rule reads: A verb phrase (VP) consists of a verb (V) and an optional noun phrase (NP). Any terms to the right of the arrow that cannot be rewritten are called terminal nodes. In the example above, both N and V are terminal nodes. The three rules shown above can be combined to form a group of phrase structure rules that represent all English sentences containing those categories or constituents. Another set of rules can be added which generates specific words or lexical categories. Thus, the phrase structure rules for a sentence such as John hit the ball appear as follows. S ---> NP + VP. NP ---> (DET) N VP ---> V (NP) DET ---> the N ---> John, ball V ---> hit *Transformations that can convert a kernel sentence into a more complicated sentence* include: -the creation of negatives from positives -passives from actives -questions from statements -as well as adding, deleting, or rearranging the elements of the kernel sentence. -The transformational rules make possible generation, or creation, of every conceivable grammatical sentence. To summarize-- the 3 kinds of rules in generative transformational grammar are *transformational, morphophonemic, and phrase structure*
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Generative grammar
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1. a transform 2. prescriptive 3. lateralization 4. morphology 5. kernel sentence 6. paradigm 7. Noam Chomsky 8. interrogative 9. fallacy 10. case
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Match the description to the term. 1. variation of a kernel sentence 2. lays down rules, dictates 3. division into halves 4. study of word forms 5. simplest form of a sentence 6. word forms in characteristic sequence 7. developed transformational grammar 8. a class of words in structural linguistics 9. false idea or mistaken belief 10. a form of a noun or pronoun
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The pink pig clapped *wildly.* - adverb In his new lime green Mustang, Brad sped *down* the street into the police radar trap. - preposition "*He* stood me up on Friday night!" Tanith screamed hysterically. - pronoun The purple flamingo flapped outrageously as the blue alligator closed in for the *attack.* - noun The immaculately *dressed* woman tripped and fell down all of the stairs in the entry way. - adjective While their parents were quietly talking, Lilly shrieked "*Mine!*" as she grabbed the toy from Ollie. - interjection
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Determine the part of speech for the bold word in the sentence below.
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John ate the cake
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In the sentence John ate the cake, the noun phrase is ______. In the sentence John ate the cake, the verb phrase is ________.
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*semantics* - the scientific study of word meanings; word is derived from the Greek word *semantikos*, which means *signification.* Semantics deals especially with the historical development of word meanings and changes that occur in the meaning of particular words. Definitions of semantics will vary according to the area of semantics being defined. The three main areas of semantics are defined according to function. ~*general semantics* : goes beyond the meanings of words to examine the influence of words and their meanings on human behavior ~*linguistic semantics* : deals with the meanings of words as they occur in the language structure. Words are analyzed as to what they mean in a given context and what they add to the context. In linguistic semantics, all of the meanings of words are studied in relation to the grammatical structures in which they occur. ~*philosophical semantics* : sometimes called symbolic logic. Deals with theories of meaning. Looks at signs and symbols, tries to form these into a symbolic language, and then tries to analyze the relationship between signs and symbols and their meaning *connotation* : suggested meaning of a word; differs from lexical meaning Modern semantics began to develop in the early twentieth century. These early studies dealt with such things as the history of words, ambiguity in language, changes in word meanings, classifications of words, and figures of speech. Linguists, phonologists, scientists, and philosophers all began to be interested in semantic studies. Gradually scholars in several fields became interested in word-meaning studies and their applications. Anthropologists, psychologists, folklorists, and educators all began to use and to investigate semantic theories. Further interest was spurred by the new theories of grammar in the 1920s and 1930s. Gradually, certain areas of semantics became recognized as part of the linguistic system of study, which included all study and theories of language. During this time, *Alfred Korzybski developed his theory, or system, of general semantics.* *S.I. Hayakawa*, one of America's early leading semanticists, *advanced the study of general semantics.* *General semantics deals with the inadequacy of language to express what is left. Because of this function, general semantics is not considered part of language studies or linguistic semantics.* Other applications of semantics were developed. *I.A. Richards and C.K. Ogden*, for example, *used semantics in their study of stylistics and literary criticism.* They began to examine the relationship between ordinary language & literary language. They also examined metaphors and the feelings evoked by metaphor in a particular context. Today, semantics are used in many ways. The meanings of words used in advertising, in cartoons, in the media, and in politics are being investigated. These investigations are providing new insights into the power of words and into the manipulation of words in context.
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Semantics
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I.A. Richards C.K. Ogden Alfred Korzybski
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Which of the following studied semantics?
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false false false
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T/F: I.A. Richards developed the theory of general semantics. T/F: S.I. Hayakawa founded generative grammar. T/F: Ogden was a philosophical semanticist.
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true
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T/F: Linguistic semantics studies word meanings as they occur in grammatical structures.
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includes all the parts of a sentence or paragraph that surrounds a word or phrase and that can shed some light on the meaning of the word or phrase. The context often sets the meaning of a word. If, for example, the word breakfast were an unfamiliar word, a person could determine that it meant to break a fast, but he could not determine exactly when or how this fast was broken. If, however, the word breakfast were seen in context, the meaning would become clear. EX: For this morning's breakfast, he ate toast, cereal, and eggs. From the context, the person could tell two things about the meaning of breakfast: that breakfast is eaten in the morning, and that toast, cereal, and eggs are sometimes eaten for breakfast. EX: Let us have breakfast at noon. In this context, the ordinary meaning of breakfast as a morning meal is obscured, because breakfast is identified with a later time of day. Be aware that context is essential to clear understanding of what is heard, spoken, read, or written. *Political speeches, news reports, and advertising claims often present material out of context so that one point or another can be proved.* Context is also important to understanding verbal jokes, sometimes called "word play." Phrases such as "you're pulling my leg," "her eyes popped out of her head," "opened a can of worms," or "climbing the walls," all mean something other than their lexical meaning. The words that precede or follow these phrases explain their meaning.
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context
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words surrounding another word
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Which of the following best defines context?
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false
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T/F: Context always clouds the meaning.
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true
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T/F: Politicians and news reporters can change meaning by quoting things out of context.
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you don't need a precise definition
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Using context to figure out the meaning of an unfamiliar word is useful when _____.
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*the way in which words are used in speech and writing*, also gives the semanticist insights into meaning. Everyone confronts several levels of English usage daily. Everyone uses different levels themselves. A student, for example, uses one form of English when he speaks to his family, another form when he speaks to his friends, and still another when he speaks to his teachers. He reads still another form of English usage in his textbooks. These levels of usage all have their own grammatical variance but are all derived from a basic grammar that makes up the structure of the language. Each level has words whose meanings change. These levels are given various names, but generally can be listed as: 1. *intimate level* : level of usage used with very close friends and family. On this level, the grammatical structure of statements is often significantly altered from its more basic form. Little context is needed. The relationship between word and meaning on the intimate level is almost like a code. This is the level on which all babies begin to communicate. A single sound or word communicates meaning to the parents. 2. *casual level* : is used among friends who are at a football game, a pep rally, or just having fun. Slang is often used. The meaning of words and phrases is understood by the group, but may not always be understood by an outsider. 3. *conference level* : is employed when making an appointment or when conducting business. Neither person knows the other very well. The grammatical structure is more complete, and words are carefully chosen so that the meaning will be clear to both. 4. *formal or official usage* : appears when talking to teachers, officials, employers, lawyers, and other adults who are in higher positions. The grammatical structure contains few deletions or alterations, and words are selected to convey the meaning clearly. 5. *frozen usage* : deals only with written material. This material is printed and, therefore, frozen into a form that cannot be changed. Frozen usage is usually very general, because the audience is both large and unknown. Meaning has to be clear so that the material is understood. No clarifications of meaning can be given by the writer. This level of usage most often refers to textbooks and to more formal written material. T/F: Class discussion demonstrates frozen usage. ~false T/F: Frozen and formal levels of speech are identical. ~false
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usage
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area that interests semanticists because advertisers play with the meaning of words for their own purpose. Advertising is designed to persuade the public to purchase a product or a service. Advertisers hire psychologists and independent research groups to study people's buying habits, their reaction to the color on packages, to the shape of boxes, and to impulse items. Advertisements appeal to such basic needs as hunger, thirst, pride, and ego. Some people have an inner drive to wear the latest styles, the more extreme the better, or to drive the latest vehicle, whatever it is. Many young people have an almost overwhelming desire to do, wear, or eat what their peers are doing, wearing, or eating. Curiosity is one of the human tendencies that advertising people exploit. "Try it, you'll love it!" "A brand new taste treat!" "Your neighbors will be green with envy when they see you riding a new mower!" This last one appeals to two facets of human nature: curiosity and ego. Dictionary definitions are inadequate in conveying the meaning of advertising slogans. Everyone knows what a Band-Aid is, even though he may not limit its use to the brand that owns the trademarked name. You may hear someone refer to a temporary or incomplete solution to a problem as a "band-aid approach." One further element of advertising language that interests semanticists is the subtle meaning imparted by words that qualify the overall meaning. All advertisers would like consumers to believe that the products sold are the best, the most perfect. No product, however, is absolutely perfect or foolproof; and the law forbids claims in advertising that cannot be proved. Advertisers, therefore, must insert words that qualify the superlatives. Because of this legal restraint, phrases such as "leaves your dishes virtually spotless" qualify the meaning of spotless at the same time that they give the impression that the product is perfect. Other words, such as nearly and almost, are often used to the same end. Words such as virtually change the meaning of the statement, but are often overlooked by consumers because they are not emphasized. Semanticists are concerned with advertising because advertising often changes the ______. ~meaning of words Advertising _____ changes the usage of a word. ~sometimes "Do the Dew" means that you should _____. ~drink a particular soft drink Many catchy phrases and some new words come into American English by way of _____. ~advertising
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advertising
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observatory; calendar
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Stonehenge may have served as a(n) ______ or ______, to calculate seasons and eclipses accurately.
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false; early Britons
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T/F: The Picts constructed Stonehenge, a primitive building of planking, using the first bronze hinges.
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wool; bronze (and also tin)
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Based on the previous text, early British products included _____ and _____.
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a group of Celts called Picts
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What was the tribe who painted themselves blue called?
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true
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T/F: Early Britons mined tin and fashioned weapons and tools out of bronze.
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literature; archaeology
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Two areas of study which give us the primary information about early English history are ______ and _______.
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T/F: Language never changes. ~ false, and it changes gradually Which of the following is true of the English language? ~It is a combination of the languages from native and invading peoples. Before written history was used to record events, a spoken tradition, known as the _______ tradition, was used to pass on the stories of a people. ~oral What is Old English? ~the Germanic language used in Anglo-Saxon England
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language
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Danish
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Which of the following is not a Low German language?
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1. AD 120 2. 700 BC 3. invasion 4. 52 BC 5. Britons 6. AD 449-1066 7. Venerable Bede 8. Alcuin 9. Theodore and Hadrian 10. witan 11. AD 500
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Match the item to the date, person, or description. 1. Hadrian's Wall 2. Celtic invasion 3. means of change in early England 4. Roman invasion 5. conquered by Rome 6. Anglo-Saxon period 7. father of English history 8. chosen by Charlemagne 9. established monastic school at Canterbury 10. council of retainers 11. possible time of the legendary King Arthur
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true
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T/F: King Arthur was supposed to have lived around AD 500.
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-The Anglo-Saxon period extends from about AD 449 to AD 1066. -Anglo-Saxon is closely related to Saxon and Frisian (Low German) -The Anglo-Saxons were also an artistic people. Recent archaeological findings reveal that their craftsmen produced artifacts and ornaments such as brooches, helmets, and bracelets. The Anglo-Saxons were originally: _____. Select all that apply. Germanic Angles and Saxons a blended tribe -They were ruled by the traditional Germanic system of the leader, or chieftain, and his *witan*, or council of retainers. They called assemblies to discuss issues and to interpret laws. What happened to many manuscripts of Anglo-Saxon literature? ~Many manuscripts were destroyed by Danish raids. Some manuscripts were taken out of the country to save them. The major event that changed the course of Anglo-Saxon culture, language, and art was the _______ in the year _______. ~Norman Conquest; 1066 AD Where are words of Anglo-Saxon origin commonly used? ~in everyday speech and writing
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Anglo-Saxons
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1066 AD
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The Normans conquered Anglo-Saxon England in the year ____.
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words that remain are basic parts of the modern English vocabulary. Such words as father (faeder), mother (moder), friend (freond), sheep (sceap), and heaven (heafon) are of Anglo-Saxon origin. *Prepositions and conjunctions, as well as most pronouns, articles, and auxiliary verbs come from the Anglo-Saxon.* Although the actual number of Anglo-Saxon words retained in modern English may be outweighed by those from other languages, words of Anglo-Saxon origin are used more frequently in common speech and writing. Anglo-Saxon depended upon *inflections* to indicate gender and grammatical function. The following chart shows the inflectional structure of pronouns. (gray & white chart) *Nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, verbs, and even the article "the" were all inflected.* As the chart illustrates, the pronouns in modern English can be traced to Anglo-Saxon. Some have undergone spelling changes. Others, such as *me, we, he, us, his, or him have retained their original forms.*
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Anglo-Saxon words (Old English)
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Anglo-Saxon
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From what language do most of our pronouns come?
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true
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T/F: Most of our modern pronouns are of Anglo-Saxon origin.
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epic elegy ballad
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Select three common forms of Anglo-Saxon literature.
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Which is true of Alfred the Great? -He was the King of Wessex. -He began the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. -He was a peacemaker. but what isn't true: He successfully kept the Danes out of England. During _______ reign, spelling became more regular. ~Alfred's The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle was: _____. Select all that apply. ~the first account of English *history* written in English, the oldest extant national chronicle -Began by Alfred in AD 892
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Alfred the Great
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The Danelaw was regained in the year AD ____ by followers of _______. ~954; Alfred The portion of England ceded to the Danes to keep peace was called the _______. ~Danelaw T/F: The Vikings broke the Danelaw by looting monasteries. ~false T/F: The Danelaw gave the Danes all of England. ~false The _____ was a portion of England which the Anglo-Saxons ceded to the Danes to avoid more warfare. ~Danelaw
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Danelaw
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true
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T/F: The inhabitants of Wessex were called West Saxons.
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true
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T/F: Danish Vikings invaded England from about AD 787 to about AD 1017.
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Aelfric's
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During ______ reign, spelling became standardized.
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true
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T/F: The Roman Catholic Church played a role in establishing a system of education by setting up monastic and cathedral schools.
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Often called a *scop*; highly respected member of early society. He could come from many backgrounds, such as a historian and entertainer. He recorded the rituals, accomplishments, and beliefs of his culture. *He was the bearer and the preserver of tradition.* The most accurate historical accounts of early Anglo-Saxon times are poetic. The poet told older stories and embellished them, or changed them. Although the poet knew his material well, he always varied it in one way or another. The Anglo-Saxon scop, or poet, used certain set formulas to relate a new tale or to adapt an old one. In the oral tradition, each telling differed from the last. Since a poet often told or sang his story without interruption, he had to have certain frameworks and patterns with which to improvise. Part of this structure included the use of certain *alliterative and rhythmical patterns as well as poetic idioms.* Because alliteration and rhythm are aids to memory, the poet could draw upon various formulas to express common ideas. By utilizing his storehouse of automatic phrases whenever possible, the poet could quickly compose the next line. A poet had to think quickly and to be skilled in language. The oral tradition of poetry contributed an unmatched richness of expression. Anglo-Saxon poetic language is rich in metaphor. A frequently used device is a double metaphor, or kenning. The kenning is a form of expression unfamiliar to most speakers of modern English. This compounding of words and ideas is refreshing when used skillfully. Several kennings exist for the sea in Anglo-Saxon literature. Two of the most common sea kennings are "whaleroad" (hron-rade) and "swanroad" (swan-rade), Kennings can refer to almost anything in nature or life. The sun was referred to as the "world-candle" (woruldcandel), the speech of a man is often called his "wordhoard" (wordhord), and a wanderer is called an "earth-stepper" (eardstapa).
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poet
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oral
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In early cultures, beliefs, stories, and history were passed on through the _____ tradition.
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true
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T/F: In the oral tradition, each telling or singing of a story differed from the last.
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the pause or break in a line of Anglo-Saxon poetry
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caesura
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false
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T/F: A caesura is a primary accent.
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a double metaphor, usually hyphenated. Example, "swan-road" for sea
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kenning
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kennings they did use: alliteration rhythms phrases
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Which was not a method used by scops to help them remember the stories?
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depends upon a combination of weak and heavy stresses in many combinations. The basic unit of meter in Anglo-Saxon verse is the half-line. Each half-line is made up of a phrase with two stresses. A line of Anglo-Saxon poetry consists of two half-lines separated by a pause or break, joined together by alliteration. A line of poetry may vary in length, ranging from eight syllables to about twenty syllables. Whatever the length, each line consists of four stresses, two in each half-line. The initial letter of one or more stressed words in the first half-line must alliterate with the initial letter in the first stress of the second half-line.
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Anglo-Saxon rhythm
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a repetition of initial sounds in two or more words of a line of poetry What is the repetition of initial sounds in two or more words? ~alliteration T/F: Alliteration is a repetition of initial sounds in two or more words. ~true The use of repetition of initial sounds is called ____. ~alliteration
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alliteration
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a poem written in four line stanzas, about love, death, adventure, and so forth; dramatic song passed on orally
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ballad
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A mournful, melancholic or plaintive poem, especially a funeral song or a lament for the dead.
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elegy
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comes from the Greek word meaning tale; an epic is a long narrative poem, dealing with heroic characters and heroic actions. The theme of an epic deals with universal qualities. The narrative is composed from a nation's or a people's history and is, therefore, national in scope. *The hero is an ideal person of almost superhuman qualities. He is loyal to his country or people, brave, strong, and shrewd.* The style of the epic is elevated and dignified. Most epics start in *medias res*, that is, in the middle of the story. The narrator then explains previous action as the story progresses. The hero in an epic is _____. ~an ideal
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epic
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Beowulf
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What is the greatest Anglo-Saxon epic?
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The *comitatus* relationship between the Hlaford (lord) and his witan (council or retainers) was one of the most important in Anglo-Saxon culture. The lord protected his retainers, saw to their needs, paid their debts, and settled their disputes. The retainers, in return, pledged their loyalty and support to the lord at all times, especially in times of need or of war. A *retainer* who was abandoned by the lord or dismissed because of a lack of loyalty was banished from the lord's lands. Other lords would not accept lone retainers readily. The death of a lord was tragic if he had no successor; all of his retainers became detached from any comitatus relationship and could not easily find a new lord. This lonely relationship was the plight of the poet in "The Wanderer." This attitude toward fame was closely linked to the *Anglo-Saxon attitude toward life itself. Life was looked upon as transitory, as passing quickly. The harshness of the weather and the ravages of war and illness were constant reminders of this fleeting nature of man's life.* Both fame and the transitory nature of life were linked to the comitatus. *The relationship of the comitatus could ease the burdens of a hard life. The lord, also called the ring-giver, would bestow treasure on his retainers, would provide food and shelter in time of peace, and would generally make life more bearable.*
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customs and ideals of Anglo-Saxon culture to understand Beowolf
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in the Germanic tradition, the relationship between a leader and his warriors, or a king and his lords Which of the statements best describes comitatus? ~It was closely linked with pagan warriors. T/F: The comitatus was a bond between a king and his nobles (called thegns). ~false What comitatus relationships are shown in Beowulf? Select all that apply. ~Hrothgar and his men ~Beowulf and his men ~Geats and Danes A _____ is the relationship between a king (or Lord) and his retainers in Anglo-Saxon times. ~comitatus
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comitatus
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Outside of the relationship of comitatus, a man had no home, no protection, no lord.
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Why was an exile considered lonely and vulnerable in Anglo-Saxon society?
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a long narrative poem that can be divided into two main sections: -The first section deals with the young noble, Beowulf, who leads his men to Hrothgar's kingdom and offers to rid the Danes of a terrible monster, Grendel. -The second section deals with the older King Beowulf, who has served his people well and who goes out to fight a fiery dragon that is plaguing the kingdom, knowing that this battle will be his last. Beowulf reveals many of the customs and ideals of Anglo-Saxon culture. To understand the poem, some of these customs and ideals must be studied. In Beowulf, this (comitatus) relationship is seen between Hrothgar and his retainers and between Beowulf and his men. The comitatus also extended to a long-standing bond between the Geats (Beowulf's people) and the Danes (Hrothgar's people). Because of this bond, Beowulf and his men left their homes and traveled to the land of the Danes to help them in time of need. The breakdown of comitatus is also seen in Beowulf. Near the end of the poem, Beowulf and his retainers went out to fight the fiery dragon that had been plaguing the kingdom. All the retainers, except one, became frightened and ran off to hide in the woods. *The one supporter, Wiglaf, remained with Beowulf to the end.* Because of his loyalty, Wiglaf was named successor by the dying Beowulf. Because of their desertion, the other retainers were disgraced. Their cowardice was announced so that no other lord would accept them. They and their families had to seek new dwellings.
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Beowulf
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false
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T/F: Beowulf was written in AD 838.
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true
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T/F: Scyld Schefing was a king who died at the beginning of Beowulf.
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Hrothgar
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King _______ called upon Beowulf's help in his quest to rid Heorot Hall of the evil Grendel.
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remained loyal to Beowulf until the end
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Wiglaf was different from Beowulf's other retainers because he _____.
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Grendel's father
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Whom does Beowulf not fight?
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1. Wyrd 2. epic 3. in medias res 4. Geats 5. Grendel 6. Wealhtheow 7. mere 8. Hygelac 9. Wiglaf
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1. fate 2. a long narrative poem about national heroes 3. in the middle of things 4. people of southern Sweden 5. the monster who pillages Heorot Hall 6. Hrothgar's queen 7. a lake or pool 8. Beowulf's uncle 9. loyal companion of Beowulf
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Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian invaders experienced a large-scale conversion to Christianity at the end of the sixth century. *Beowulf exhibits the resulting blend of Christian traditions with those of the pagan warrior. Many ancient Germanic customs were retained, but were given Christian purpose.* In Beowulf, for example, both God and *Wyrd* (Fate) are addressed. The burials mentioned in Beowulf, of Scyld Scefing in the beginning and of Beowulf at the end, were traditional Anglo-Saxon or Viking burials. In Beowulf, they were neither pagan nor Christian in themselves. They were in keeping with the cultural traditions of the people. Such burials discovered in this century by archaeologists have revealed several artifacts among the treasures buried with the body. Many of the descriptions of swords, helmets, goblets, and other artifacts found in Beowulf correspond to those artifacts found by archaeologists at Sutton Hoo in 1939 and at other burial sites.
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Christianity in Beowolf
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Many pagan warrior traditions were kept and given Christian purpose.
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Which of the following best describes the relationship between paganism and Christianity during the time of the Anglo-Saxons?
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transitory occurrence
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How did the Anglo-Saxons regard life?
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1. AD 1000 2. AD 521 3. AD 790-830 4. oral tradition 5. Scyld Scefing 6. Oseburg, Norway 7. Denmark 8. Sweden
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1. date of Beowulf manuscript 2. death of Hygelac 3. latest date for original writing of Beowulf 4. original form of Beowulf story 5. founded Danish royal line 6. ship burial site 7. Hrothgar's kingdom 8. home of Geats and Beowulf
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three rows of blood-thirsty teeth
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Which of the following is not an accurate description of Grendel?
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1. Wealhtheow 2. Heorot 3. Grendel's mother 4. Hygelac - Beowolf's uncle 5. Hrothgar
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1. Hrothgar's queen 2. Hrothgar's hall 3. carried off a chieftain 4. king of the Geats 5. king of the Danes
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death-sick
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What kenning is used in the description of Grendel's end?
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What lines explain why swords were useless against Grendel? ~798 to 805 Which line numbers show Grendel's first recognition that he was facing an extraordinary opponent? ~750 to 754
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What lines...
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Hygelac
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To whom does Beowulf give the treasures he has earned?
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pride
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What does Hrothgar caution Beowulf against?
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bravery
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Which heroic quality was Beowulf not eulogized as having?
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We are members of a great, proud, and dying group of people. I, too, must die.
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Which of the following is the best summary of Beowulf's last words?
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Turks other options are: Britons Celts Romans Danes
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Which of the following is not a group of people who influenced Anglo-Saxon England?
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inflections (gender also)
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The Old English language relied on _______ to communicate relationships between words.
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https://quizlet.com/113412754/review-medieval-english-literature-quiz3test-flash-cards/alphabetical https://quizlet.com/72190528/english-unit-5-flash-cards/alphabetical
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good review sets
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manorial land held by the lord, attached to the manor house, and not held by serfs or freemen
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demesne
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a social, economic, and political system in the Middle Ages in which vassals gave military service in return for land and protection from a lord
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feudalism
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in feudal society, the land held from a lord in return for service
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fief
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ceremony in which the vassal declares his loyalty to his lord and receives his fief
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investiture
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a social and economic system in the Middle Ages.
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manorialism
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a noble holding a fief from another noble of higher rank
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vassal
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The period between the Norman Conquest, AD 1066, and the age of Chaucer, the 1350s, was a time of change. Often referred to as the High Middle Ages, it was a transitional period in English literature, containing the last works in Anglo-Saxon; many Latin works; some Anglo-Norman works; and the first works in Middle English, the language that finally emerged after Norman language and culture blended with English language and culture. This period between 1066 and 1300 also saw the rise of feudalism, the increase of church influence and power, and the gradual emergence of trade, of towns, and of a middle class.
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Medieval England
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1. William 2. Domesday Book 3. Thomas à Becket 4. Harold 5. King John 6. Henry II 7. Edward I 8. Henry I
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1. the "Conqueror" 2. a list of property holders 3. the archbishop of Canterbury 4. lost the throne to William 5. lost most English possessions in France 6. set up the forerunner of the modern grand jury 7. conquered Wales 8. called "Beauclerc" (good clerk)
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*Edward "The Confessor"* was the king of England from AD 1042 to AD 1066. During his reign, many decisions of government fell to the nobles, because King Edward concentrated on the church and on the building of Westminster Abbey. After his death, the throne was claimed by two men: *William of Normandy*, who was Edward's nephew, and *Harold Godwinson*, a Saxon earl. Although the English supported Harold's claim, William invaded England in AD 1066. He defeated the Saxons and established himself as king. The Normans virtually took over the land and the government. *William the Conqueror* awarded half of England to his Norman nobles keeping one-fifth for himself. He set up a council of advisors and *converted the Anglo-Saxon witan into a Great Council.* Positions on this council were awarded to many Norman nobles. He named a Norman archbishop of Canterbury. He prevented conspiracy by requiring every lord to recognize him as supreme ruler. He also compiled a list of holdings for eleventh-century England. This list, called the *Domesday Book*, insured that all property holders were known for tax collection purposes.
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Norman Conquest
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William's son, William II, was a poor ruler. He was succeeded by his brother, *Henry "Beauclerc"* (good clerk). Henry was an educated man and began to grant certain rights to nobles. He secured the support of the church. By marrying a Saxon princess, he also gained peasant support. He set up a more effective legal system. Another period of struggle for power followed Henry's death. His grandson became *King Henry II.* He set up the forerunner of the modern grand jury. Common law based upon legal precedents began to be upheld. Henry II appointed his friend *Thomas à Becket*, archbishop of Canterbury. Becket resisted attempts by the king to gain control of the church and was assassinated in Canterbury cathedral by the king's men. *Becket* became known as a martyr—the "holy blissful martyr" whose shrine is the object of Chaucer's pilgrimage. Henry's son, *Richard the Lion-Hearted*, took the throne in 1189. A popular king and a hero of many medieval tales, Richard spent much time on crusades or as a captive in prison. He lessened the hold of feudalism by allowing nobles and knights to pay money rather than giving personal service in war. Richard hired mercenaries, or professional soldiers, to fight. *King John* had religious, foreign, and domestic problems during his reign. John was an *unpopular king.* He opposed the will of the pope over who should lead the church in England. The power struggle that ensued between the throne and the church caused the English people to despise John. He was forced to surrender to the pope's wishes, keeping England's church under the political influence of the pope in Rome. *John lost most of the English possessions in France because the pope encouraged the French to oppose him.* His own nobles also forced him to sign the *Magna Carta* at Runnymede. The increased power of the church under *Henry III* created an anticlerical attitude among the people. A domestic power dispute led to the assembly of an informal parliament. *Edward I* was king at the turn of the fourteenth century. He called the "model parliament" to win support for wars against Scotland and Wales. *He conquered Wales*, but could not defeat the Scots. He created a stronger monarchy and brought about a strong government, based on the principles of common law, that was ruled by king and Parliament.
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Early kings after William
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Alfred
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Who was not an early Norman king?
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With the Normans came certain political, social, and economic systems. These systems were unlike the Anglo-Saxon systems and had been developing on the continent since the establishment of the Frankish kingdoms after the death of Charlemagne in the year AD 814. *The political system* was known as feudalism. *The social and economic system* was called manorialism. *Feudalism* differed from one country to the next, but the basic concept remained the same. In the feudal system, the king held a great deal of land. To insure loyalty and military support, he would grant parcels of land, known as *fiefs*, to church leaders and to nobles. This fief was granted in a ceremony of *investiture* at which the noble receiving the land became a *vassal* of the king and swore an oath of loyalty. Each noble, in turn, could grant fiefs to lesser nobles. These lesser nobles became vassals of the nobles. The lesser nobles, finally, could grant fiefs to knights. The knights then became vassals of the lesser noble. In time of war or of need in the kingdom, each vassal was pledged to support his lord. Thus, the king could demand aid from the nobles, who in turn demanded aid from the lesser nobles. The lesser nobles demanded aid from the knights. The king had at his command all the nobles and knights of the kingdom by this system. Feudalism involved only the nobility. The peasantry had no place in the system. *Manorialism*, on the other hand, set up the social and economic structure for the lower classes. Like feudalism, manorialism differed greatly from one country to the next, but the basic concept can be described. The land of a noble or lord which he did not grant to others of the nobility had to be cared for by someone. Since the lands often were vast, the lord had to hire workers to tend the crops and the animals. The entire estate became known as a manor. The lord built his house, the manor house, and chose the best land for himself. This select parcel was called the lord's *demesne.* This land was planted, tended, and harvested by peasants. The remaining land on the manor was divided into pastureland, wasteland, forests, and farmland for the peasants. The peasants worked their own land after the lord's had been tended. They often paid the lord fifty percent of their own harvest. The peasants, or *serfs*, had little future. They were *bound to the manor* with little hope of moving off the land. The lord of the manor often did little more than provide the land for their huts and crops. The lord, however, could not evict these peasants. Some peasants, called *freemen*, could afford to pay rent for land, and to hire serfs to work their land. These few peasants also had the right to leave the manor if they could find better land or a better lord. Feudalism and manorialism succeeded primarily in countries with weak monarchies and strong local government. Countries with strong monarchies eventually moved away from feudalism and toward the development of strong national trade and commerce.
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Feudalism and Manorialism
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T/F: Feudalism originated after Charlemagne's death. ~true T/F: Manorialism was a system of government. ~false T/F: The demesne is the best land on the manor. ~true T/F: A fief is a noble. ~false Feudalism was not a(n) _______ system. ~religious
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feudalism/manoralism
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Norman church leaders and practices affected the structure of the English church just as Norman political and social systems had their effects. Church architecture changed. Church power increased as more and more bishops and abbots were invested with grants of land. The increase of church power led to church intervention in political matters as well as to increased political intervention by government into church matters. Unlike present-day American culture, Medieval English culture did not attempt to separate church and state. Life in the Middle Ages was short and harsh. Religion and a belief in the after-life helped people to cope with a transient "earthly" existence. This is reflected in much of the literature from this historical period.
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Church
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true
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T/F: The church was central to the life of medieval man.
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During this time of increased church power, Pope Urban II saw an opportunity to regain the religiously and economically significant "Holy Land" around Jerusalem from Muslim control. This area—and the economically important surrounding trade routes—was ruled by trained warriors. The fighters, with no current battles on their hands, had begun to be a source of trouble for Christian pilgrims on their way to the Holy Lands. Urban emphasized these attacks, calling the Muslims "infidels" who sought to destroy Christianity. Knowing this would spark outrage among Christians, the church promised entrance into Heaven to Christians who were willing to wage war on the Muslims, and the Crusades were born. These wars to regain the Holy Land lasted from 1096 to about 1220. *Although militarily unsuccessful, the Crusades stimulated the growth of trade and banking, the growth of the cities, and the rise of a middle class.* English trade with both the Italian states and Flanders increased. Italy became a banking center as well as a trade center. Flanders became an important supplier of woolen goods. Certain groups formed trade associations called *guilds.* Trade fairs were established for national and international trade purposes. The use of money replaced the old barter system and led to the development of banking and monetary systems. By the eleventh and twelfth centuries, towns were becoming more important. Although most of England was still rural, the population move was to the cities. By 1300, London had a population of forty thousand. Manufacturing and industry grew, causing growth in urban centers. A middle class rose with the growth of the towns. *This new class, made up of shopkeepers, merchants, and tradesmen*, gained influence through their growing wealth. Sometimes these groups joined to charter a new town and thus attained local independence. These people began to find ways of improving their lives and their political positions. By the end of the Middle Ages, the middle class had become the dominant force. This growth of commerce, the cities, and the middle class eventually brought about the death of the feudal system in England and on the continent.
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Changes in Medieval Society
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Because trade increased, cities grew, and a middle class was created, the system was no longer necessary.
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What caused feudalism to decline?
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The development of the English language after the conquest is complex. Anglo-Saxon was influenced first by Norman French, which was a blend of French and the Germanic languages of the Viking raiders who had settled in Normandy. *Medieval French was also very close to medieval Latin.* The upper classes of Norman nobles spoke Norman French, as did the tradespeople, workmen, and retainers who had accompanied them. Anglo-Saxon, however, remained the language of the conquered, especially of the common people. As English kings gained further French territories, new French words from different French dialects entered the language. French and Latin were official court and legal languages, but anyone needing to communicate with the common Englishman would need to know the English spoken by the people. Little literature of the early part of this period survives. What does survive, however, shows little French influence. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle continued for nearly a century after the conquest. Sermons, religious writings, and historical writings also continued to be written in English. The main French influence occurs in words referring to matters of state and to matters of the arts and learning, two areas in which the upper class involved themselves. French became the language of the educated and of the upper class. Several dialects grew out of this strange coexistence of languages. Middle English dialects vary greatly depending on the distance of the region from the central government. The London dialect, the dialect in which Chaucer wrote, eventually took precedence and became the basis of modern English. Had another dialect, such as the Northwest Midland dialect, taken precedence, modern English would be quite different from what it is today.
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English Literature (1066-1300)
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Latin
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What language did medieval French resemble?
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English
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What was the language of the common people?
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Latin and French
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What languages were used officially?
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French; Vikings
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Norman French combined ______ and the Germanic language of the _______.
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Many new literary forms began to appear in the literature at this time. The development of forms appears to have been gradual, based upon examination of extant literary documents. Some of these forms had been used in Anglo-Saxon literature; others were brought from France or were developed by English writers. The literature of this period also struggled for a language. Some authors chose to write in Latin; others, in French; still others, in English. Some wrote the same work in all three languages. The late twelfth and the thirteenth centuries saw the rebirth of a true English literature. The fourteenth- and fifteenth-century writers firmly established English as a literary language. Extant literary works of the twelfth century are scarce. The works consist primarily of sermons, sayings, and historical works, such as the Peterborough Chronicle. An important historical work, *Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain*, was written in Latin. A famous French version of this text was done by Wace. By the late twelfth century, an English verse translation was done by *Layamon and was called simply Brut*. This work traces the origins of Britain back to Troy (a common practice at this time). Brut, the supposed grandson of Aeneas, lead his fellow Trojans out of Greek bondage and arrived on the island that is now Britain. *Other literature of the twelfth century includes sermons and a collection of sayings that became known as the Proverbs of Alfred.* A final literary form found throughout the ages is the *folk ballad*. Ballads are nearly impossible to date. They usually arise from the oral tradition of a common group of people, are spread from group to group by traveling minstrels or troubadours, and are changed slightly by the minstrel's desire to suit the ballad to the group or by his lapse of memory. The ballad can be historical or non-historical. It may deal with romantic, supernatural, tragic, humorous, or adventurous subjects. Many versions of the same ballad exist because these songs were not written down until the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Nearly seventy versions of the ballad The Twa Sisters have been noted. Unlike other forms of poetry, the ballad says very little in many words. A ballad concerns itself with a single incident or scene. The characters reveal the topic of the ballad through dialogue, as in a play. The use of repetition of exact words, or a refrain, is characteristic of this form. This repetition is usually to emphasize the sound of the words and to serve as a convenient memory device. The ballad stanza often consists of four lines of iambic tetrameter. The first and third lines have four accented syllables; the second and the fourth lines have three accented syllables. The second and the fourth lines rhyme. Many of the early ballads are Scottish and English. The important thing to remember about ballads is that they were written to be sung. Although they do not read well as poetry, if read aloud, they do give an indication of the rhythm intended for the music. The Adventures of Robin Hood is a collection of ballads that tell the stories of a local British hero. Below is just one of the ballads from a large series.
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Twelfth-Century Literature
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There chanced to be a pedlar bold, A pedlar bold he chanced to be; He rolled his pack all on his back, And he came tripping o'er the lee. Down, a down, a down, a down, Down, a down, a down. By chance he met two troublesome blades, Two troublesome blades they chanced to be; The one of them was bold Robin Hood, And the other was Little John, so free. 'Oh! pedlar, pedlar, what is in thy pack, Come speedilie and tell to me?' 'I've several suits of the gay green silks, And silken bowstrings two or three.' 'If you have several suits of the gay green silk, And silken bowstrings two or three, Then it's by my body,' cries Little John, 'One half your pack shall belong to me.' Oh! nay, oh! nay,' says the pedlar bold, 'Oh! nay, oh! nay, that never can be, For there's never a man from fair Nottingham Can take one half my pack from me.' Then the pedlar he pulled off his pack, And put it a little below his knee, Saying, 'If you do move me one perch from this, My pack and all shall gang with thee.' Then Little John he drew his sword; The pedlar by his pack did stand; They fought until they both did sweat, Till he cried, 'Pedlar, pray hold your hand!' Then Robin Hood he was standing by, And he did laugh most heartilie, Saying, 'I could find a man of a smaller scale, Could thrash the pedlar, and also thee.' 'Go, you try, master,' says Little John, 'Go, you try, master, most speedilie, Or by my body,' says Little John, 'I am sure this night you will not know me.' Then Robin Hood he drew his sword, And the pedlar by his pack did stand, They fought till the blood in streams did flow, Till he cried, 'Pedlar, pray hold your hand!' 'Pedlar, pedlar! what is thy name? Come speedilie and tell to me.' 'My name! my name, I ne'er will tell, Till both your names you have told to me.' 'The one of us is bold Robin Hood, And the other Little John, so free.' 'Now,' says the pedlar, 'it lays to my good will, Whether my name I chuse to tell to thee. 'I am Gamble Gold of the gay green woods, And travelled far beyond the sea; For killing a man in my father's land, From my country I was forced to flee. 'If you are Gamble Gold of the gay green woods, And travelled far beyond the sea, You are my mother's own sister's son; What nearer cousins then can we be?' They sheathed their swords with friendly words, So merrily they did agree; They went to a tavern and there they dined, And bottles cracked most merrilie
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Ballad of Robin Hood
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It was written in Latin.
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Why is the History of the Kings of Britain unusual?
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an anonymous song passed on through the oral tradition; a poem with many words; several four-lined stanzas written in iambic pentameter
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folk ballad
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uses improvised stanza formats
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What is not a characteristic of the folk ballad?
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It consists of four lines of iambic tetrameter; lines one and three have four accents, lines two and four have three accents; lines two and four rhyme.
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What is the ballad stanza?
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false
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T/F: A ballad is a written report.
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Thirteenth-century literature illustrates a greater diversity of forms and the experimentation with French forms. Attitudes toward chivalry and courtly love had greatly influenced twelfth century French literature. This influence spread to England and to English literature in the thirteenth century.
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Thirteenth-Century Literature
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was an *outgrowth of the feudal system.* A chivalric code of behavior was established for knights. The code demanded honor, loyalty, bravery, and courtesy. It was an ideal rather than a practical reality. Poets, however, created metrical romances based on the ideal. These stories told of the noble deeds of gallant knights, such as King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table. The chivalrous knight is the subject of many tales, poems, and satires from the thirteenth through the fifteenth centuries.
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chivalry
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courtly love others: honor, loyalty, bravery, and courtesy
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Which of the following was not a mandate of the Chivalric code?
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is a term coined in the eighteenth century for a type of love described by a twelfth-century Frenchman, *Andreas Capellanus* (Andrew the Chaplain), in a Latin work. The tradition of courtly love was spread by the minstrels, or troubadours. According to the system of courtly love, the man sees the lady whose beauty wounds him through his eyes; *love's arrows (shot by cupid)* enter his eyes and go to his heart. Only the lady can heal his wound. *He must suffer because of his love.* He fears to reveal his love to the lady or to others; he becomes sickly and sleepless; when in her presence, he becomes pale, speechless, and confused; he is jealous but constant; *he tries to prove himself worthy through brave deeds*; and he leaves his heart with the lady when he goes away. The *lady seems to be perfect in appearance.* She is described in most metrical romances: blond hair, eyes gray as glass, clear complexion, rosy mouth, white skin. She usually comes from a high social position, and treats the lover in a haughty manner. To everyone else she is courteous, kind, and refined; she spreads good will to those around her. Like the ideal of chivalry, courtly love occurs more in literature than it did in history. Several of Chaucer's tales contain comments or satires on courtly love, for example, the "Knight's Tale," the "Franklin's Tale," the "Merchant's Tale," and the "Squire's Tale."
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courtly love
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Much of thirteenth-century literature is religious. This is because the majority of those who could read and write at the time learned to do so while training for church positions or attending schools set up by the church. A popular *theme of the surviving literature of this time is the transient nature of human life*, much like the Anglo-Saxon elegy. *A recurring question throughout these lyrics asks "Where are... ?"* Where are the heroes, the famous men, the lords and ladies of old, and so forth? The response is seldom stated, but the implied reply is that they are gone, dead. The lesson for the reader or hearer is that he too will die; that no amount of riches, fame, or power, can save man from the truth of death. Man, therefore, is urged to live for the life after death, not for the things of this world. This, as in the Anglo-Saxon poetry you read earlier, was a response to the general hardships of medieval life and the prevalence and spread of the Christian belief in the afterlife. *Didactic literature, literature written to teach a lesson*, was also popular. Many of the didactic poems took the form of a *debate*. One of the most famous, *"The Owl and the Nightingale,"* has the poet overhearing a lengthy debate between an owl and a nightingale. Scholars do not agree on the exact point of the debate. Several points are argued: youth versus age, summer versus winter, art versus philosophy, monastic versus secular clergy, moral duty versus pleasure, and so on. Another such debate is the "Debate of the Body and the Soul," one of many debate poems between the soul and the body. The body is usually near death or already dead. The soul berates the body for not living a better life. Didactic literature also included such things as the *"Bestiary,"* a set of short poems *allegorizing animals*. In these poems, the animal is first described with all its traits. Then the allegory is explained. The lion, for example, is described, then compared to the feudal lord. *The Breton lay*, a secular form that came from Brittany and dealt with romance, was a song form that the English began to experiment with at this time. One of the more famous Breton lays to survive is *"Sir Orfeo."* Tales of knights and noble deeds made up the rest of thirteenth century literature. A renewed interest in alliterative poetry developed late in the thirteenth century and reached a high point in the fourteenth century.
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the rest of thirteenth century literature
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transience
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The theme of many religious lyrics was the ______ of life.
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1. Andreas Capellanus 2. "The Owl and the Nightingale" 3. "Sir Orfeo" 4. "Bestiary" 5. "Where are they... ?"
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1. courtly love 2. debate 3. Breton lay 4. animal allegory 5. popular question posed in Medieval lyrics
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a man who must prove himself worthy
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What is not a common tradition in courtly love literary pieces?
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debates, lyrical ballads, didactic and religious poems
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What were the popular types of literature in the thirteenth century?
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religious it WAS: economic social political
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Feudalism was not a(n) _______ system.
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trade industry the Crusades
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From the list of options below, choose the factors influencing why towns began to grow in Medieval England.
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form of literature in which the poet can tell a story within a story. The poet often falls asleep and has a dream, which becomes his story
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dream-vision
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a humorous tale popular in French literature
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fabliau
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type of religious order that taught and ministered to the poor
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mendicant
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literary form that treats trivial matters in an epic style
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mock-heroic
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achieved literary recognition and fame in his lifetime. Chaucer has enjoyed great popularity for centuries. Little is known about his life. Scholars have developed a composite of his life based on his works and on what is known of fourteenth-century society. He was an energetic, enthusiastic man who was able to carry on a successful governmental career and to produce many outstanding literary works at the same time. Chaucer appeals to people for many reasons. His writing reveals an amazing perception of human nature. The name Chaucer comes from the French *chaussier, meaning maker of shoes.* Chaucer's immediate ancestors, however, may have been prosperous vintners. He may have been the Chaucer born in the 1340's to John Chaucer and his wife, whose name is thought to be Agnes. Chaucer probably served as a page in the household of wealthy English nobles. His acquaintance with many royal and influential people may have begun at that time.
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Geoffrey Chaucer
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Europe was aristocratic in the medieval period. The king wielded the greatest power. Other wealthy and influential people of the day, including John of Gaunt, were at the top of a vast feudal system. In return for land granted them by the king, the nobles were obligated to supply the king with money, equipment, and men in defense of the king's interest. Many lesser nobles were dependent upon these overlords. These nobles supplied the same types of things to their overlords in return for land and protection. At the bottom of the feudal system were the knights. The economic system of the manor controlled the serfs, who belonged to the land and might be bought or sold. These serfs worked the land for their masters. By Chaucer's time, feudalism had begun its decline and was gradually being replaced by industry and trade. Some of Chaucer's pilgrims in the *Canterbury Tales * reflect the medieval feudal system. The knight, representing the nobility, held land and served his king. The squire was training to become a knight. A boy of noble birth was first made a page. At the age of fourteen, he became a squire; after completing his training and attaining the age of twenty-one, he took his vow and was knighted. The knight's yeoman in the Prologue was a servant, but a member of the feudal system by his association with the knight. The franklin was a representative of the new rich middle class. *Franklins* were landowners who may have taken part in the feudal system by contributing money or men rather than personally defending the overlord. The *miller*, a resident of a manor or a town, served an area. The reeve was the manager of a large estate in the lord's absence. The plowman was a freeman. *The fourteenth century was a period of transition from feudalism to a more modern world.* The agrarian economy was being replaced gradually by industry and commerce. This more complex society encouraged the emergence of textile workers and artisans to meet the growing needs of the people. As the decline of feudalism produced more and more freemen, a middle class arose. This period in history was influenced significantly by the growing power wielded by this middle class. Warfare became a regular part of the people's lives. Beginning about 1340, the Hundred Years' War was both political and economic in purpose. With the development of the longbow and the military decline of the English feudal system, the freeman, or yeoman, became the equal of the knight. A yeoman class of archers proved its worth at the battle of Crècy in 1346, conquering the army of the French as well as injuring the pride of the English knight. Another factor causing social change was the Black Death (1347-1350). *The Black Death*, or bubonic plague, was a very contagious and deadly form of plague that wiped out almost half of Europe. The already shaky social structure of the times became even more unstable. Edward III attempted to stabilize things by issuing his "*Statute of Workers*," which fixed wages and prices and required peasants to accept any available work. Social discontent was not so easy to contain, however. The relationship between noble and serf was altered drastically. Some serfs remained on deserted estates; others became paid workers on estates or in the growing cities. Social unrest became apparent in rebellions by the peasants who had tasted a slightly better life and who aspired to even greater social or economic advancement.
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Chaucer's England
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upheaval and change
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The fourteenth century was a time of _____.
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novelist
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Which is not a position that Chaucer held in his lifetime?
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Chaucer served in military service during the *Hundred Years' War.* Although *captured by the French near Rheims in 1360*, he was ransomed and returned to England. He may have served the king during the next few years. *He married Philippa Roet*, sister of Katherine of Swynford who later became the wife of John of Gaunt. Both Chaucer and his wife served the royal families. Chaucer is believed to have had *a daughter and two sons.* Chaucer was a *civil servant*, that is, he served in various governmental positions during his lifetime. His position required him to represent the king as a diplomat to France and Italy. Chaucer resided in London in a house paid for by the government. By 1394, he had been appointed *Comptroller* of the Customs and Subsidies on Wools, Skins, and Hides for the port of London. Since wool was one of England's most profitable trade items, Chaucer's position was important. He served in this capacity until his term expired. He moved to Kent where he served as justice of the peace. He also represented Kent as a Member of Parliament. A year or two after his wife's death in 1387, he returned to London, taking office as clerk of the King's Works. He was responsible for construction and repair on buildings such as the Tower of London, Westminster Abbey, the royal residences, and other buildings of royal interest. He also was commissioned to maintain bridges, sewers, and ditches along the Thames River in the London area. He carried out the duties of this office for almost two years until he became a deputy forester for the royal forest in Somerset. He apparently retained the favor of the kings, since he frequently received small gifts of cash and annuities as well as personal gifts. In spite of his government offices and the royal gifts, Chaucer was apparently in and out of debt. Records show a claim or two for debts filed against him as well as several loans or advances. He wrote several poems about debt, but he was probably comfortable most of his life.
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Chaucer's life and career
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Chaucer's language was the language of London, that is, Late Middle English or the Southeast Midland dialect. This dialect, only one of many regional dialects, is the one from which our Modern Standard English developed. Not only had words been added to Old English, but many inflections had been dropped. Middle English, however, retained inflections no longer used in Modern English. The Middle English pronunciation of long vowels and diphthongs is also different from that of Modern English. The following chart demonstrates the correct pronunciation for the long vowel sounds.
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Chaucer's languages
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1. Middle English Spelling : a, aa Example Words : nama 2. Middle English Spelling : e, ee Example Words : heeth 3. Middle English Spelling : e, ee Example Words : feet 4. Middle English Spelling : i, y Example Words : shires 5. Middle English Spelling : o, oo Example Words : holy 6. Middle English Spelling : o, oo Example Words : route 7. Middle English Spelling : ou, ow, ouh Example Words : fowles 8. Middle English Spelling : u Example Words : vertu A final e is not silent in Middle English. Called a neutral vowel sound, it is pronounced like the a in sofa.
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Middle English Long Vowel Sounds 1. Middle English Sound : ā Modern Pronunciation : a as in father 2. Middle English Sound : ē, open Modern Pronunciation : ea in wear 3. Middle English Sound : ē, closed Modern Pronunciation : a in plate 4. Middle English Sound : ī Modern Pronunciation : ee in meet 5. Middle English Sound : ō, open Modern Pronunciation : aw in paw 6. Middle English Sound : ō, closed Modern Pronunciation : o in holy 7. Middle English Sound : ū Modern Pronunciation : oo in hoot 8. Middle English Sound : ū Modern Pronunciation : ew in few
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1. Middle English Spelling : ai, ay, ei, ey Example Word : wey 2. Middle English Spelling : au, aw Example Word : chaunge 3. Middle English Spelling : eu, ew Example Word : newe 4. Middle English Spelling : oi, oy Example Word : coy 5. Middle English Spelling : ou, ow Example Word : growen 6. Middle English Spelling : o (u), before gh Example Word : tho (u) ghte Although Middle English long vowels and diphthongs are much different from Modern English, the short vowel sounds of Middle English are quite similar to those of Modern English
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Middle English Diphthongs 1. Middle English Sound : ēi Modern Pronunciation : ay in say 2. Middle English Sound : au Modern Pronunciation : ou in mouse 3. Middle English Sound : ēu Modern Pronunciation : ew in mew 4. Middle English Sound : oi Modern Pronunciation : oy in joy 5. Middle English Sound : ōu Modern Pronunciation : ow in owe 6. Middle English Sound : ou Modern Pronunciation : aw in awl
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1. Sound : dg in dodge Example : ju *gg* en 2. Sound : da gg ere Example : N/A 3. Sound : ch in porch Example : li*gh*ten 4. Sound : g and n Example : lin*gn*e 5. Sound : k and n Example : *kn*ight 6. Sound : L pronounced Example : pa*l*mers 7. Sound : w and r Example : *wr*ingen Although most consonants of Middle English are pronounced as in their modern counterparts, some unusual pronunciations should be noted. The following chart contains these unusual consonant combinations. Notice that the only silent consonants (such as h and gn) appear in French words. These sounds were pronounced in Old English words.
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Some Middle English Consonants 1. Consonant : gg 2. Consonant : gg in dagger 3. Consonant : gh 4. Consonant : gn 5. Consonant : kn, (cn) 6. Consonant : il, lk, lm 7. Consonant : wr
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Southeast Midland is a dialect of Middle English. ~true England had three dialects of Middle English. ~false Middle English differs from Modern English in pronunciation of long vowels, some diphthongs, and some consonants. ~true Gh is pronounced ch in Middle English. ~true Chaucer's language was the language of London. ~true In Middle English, h and gn are not silent in words of French origin. ~false Final e is silent in Middle English. ~false
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T/F: Dialects
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1. Guillaume de Lorris 2. Dante 3. Boccacio 4. Thomas à Becket 5. Chaucer 6. "Prologue"
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1. Romance of the Rose 2. Divine Comedy 3. Decameron 4. shrine at Canterbury 5. Book of the Duchesse 6. list of characters and setting
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four
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Chaucer's intention was for each traveler to tell how many tales?
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the squire the knight the yeoman
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Which three are members of the chivalric and military group?
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linked to the one before it
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Each tale is _____.
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the prioress the nun's priest the friar the monk the second nun
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Which five are members of the regular clergy?
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pilgrimage
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In the Canterbury Tales, a ______ to the shrine of Thomas à Becket forms the large framework.
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April
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In what month does pilgrimage take place?
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Tabard
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At what inn did the pilgrims meet?
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29
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How many pilgrims are mentioned in the "Prologue" besides Chaucer?
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wise
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Even though the knight won fame and honors, he was also very ____.
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-fought in religious wars -loyal to God, king, and country -combines wisdom and strength -fought in Spain -strong spiritual ideals
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Select all of the characteristics that best describe the knight.
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15
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How many mortal battles did the knight fight?
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sergeant
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As a military man, the yeoman is a ______.
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-composes music and poetry -aspires to courtly love -fought in political wars -fought in France -more worldly ideals
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Select all of the characteristics that best describe the squire. (his son)
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monk
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The ____ was a worldly person who enjoyed hunting and riding, even though those pastimes were against Church Law.
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16
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To become a sergeant of laws, a lawyer had to have at least __ years' experience.
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her attention to fashion her brooch her small dogs
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Which aspects of the prioress would Chaucer most likely find disagreeable? Select all that apply.
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1. friar 2. clerk 3. prioress 4. merchant 5. monk 6. franklin 7. sergeant of laws
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1. Franciscan 2. poor student 3. Madame Eglentyne 4. successful tradesman 5. Augustinian 6. newly rich 7. lawyer of high rank
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the cook
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Which character in this group of pilgrims appears the most disgusting?
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the wife of Bath
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The most colorful of this group of pilgrims seems to be ...
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guildsmen; knives
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The other pilgrims knew that the five _____ were successful because they had silver rather than brass trim on their ______.
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money
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The physician dressed in silk and seemed to love _____ more than the people for whom he cared.
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the parson and the plowman
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Which two characters are the ideal of Christian charity and humility?
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pardoner
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The pilgrim portrayed as immoral and avaricious is the ...
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dishonest man
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The miller in the fourteenth century was generally considered a(n)_____.
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Geoffrey Chaucer
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Who is the only pilgrim not described in the "Prologue"?
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1. Harry Bailly 2. Oswalt 3. pardoner 4. miller 5. summoner 6. manciple
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1. cheerful host turned pilgrim 2. reeve 3. hair as yellow as wax 4. red beard like a fox 5. diseased and morally repulsive 6. a skillful cheat
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The Canterbury Tales
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What is Geoffrey Chaucer's best known work?
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Pearl Book of the Duchesse "Nun's Priest's Tale"
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Which of the following fourteenth-century works contain dream-visions? Select all that apply.
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Dante who WAS? Rolle John Gower Chaucer William Langland
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Who was not a fourteenth-century English author?
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the baker
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Which person was not on the pilgrimage in the Prologue to The Canterbury Tales?
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merchant
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Which of the following is not one of the five social groups represented by Chaucer's pilgrims?
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blood-lust
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Which of the following is not a kenning?
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Feudalism differed in each country, however the basic concept was a political system in which the king held a vast amount of land. To gain loyalty and military support, he would grant parcels of the land to church leaders and nobles. These fiefs were granted in a ceremony of investiture, at which the noble receiving the land became a vassal of the king and swore an oath of loyalty. Each noble could then grant fiefs to lesser nobles, and became vassals of the nobles. Lastly, the lesser nobles could grant fiefs to knights, making them vassals of the lesser noble. This system enabled kings to demand aid in a time of need, because each vassal pledged to support his land. Thus, when the king demanded aid from the nobles, they would demand aid from lesser nobles; lesser nobles demanded aid from the knights. Feudalism only involved the nobility, and there was no place for peasants in the system.
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What is feudalism?
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