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Monday, May 12, 2014 • You do need bags today. • Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. • Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk.

Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

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Page 1: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Monday, May 12, 2014

• You do need bags today.

• Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket.

• Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk.

Page 2: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Extra ppt slides

Page 3: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Sacred Writing Time

What is your most memorable moment or

story from this class? From the first day up until now, what do you remember?

Page 4: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Adjective clauses

An adjective clause—also called an adjectival or relative clause—will meet three requirements:

1. First, it will contain a subject and verb.2. Next, it will begin with a relative pronoun

[who, whom, whose, that, or which] or a relative adverb [when, where, or why].

3. Finally, it will function as an adjective, answering the questions What kind? How many? or Which one?

Page 5: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Examples of adjective clauses:

1. Diane felt manipulated by her beagle Santana, whose big, brown eyes pleaded for another cookie.

2. Chewing with her mouth open is one reason why Fred cannot stand sitting across from his sister Melanie.

3. Laughter erupted from Annamarie, who hiccupped for seven hours afterward.

Page 6: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

When to use each punctuation:

• 1) Short works and parts of long works are usually in quotation marks.

• 2) Long works and collections of short works are usually put in italics (or underlined when writing by hand).

Page 7: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Punctuation examples:

1) "Title of a Short Poem." Title of an Epic Poem or Book-Length PoemEx: "The Raven.“ Ex: The Odyssey2) "Title of a Short Story." Title of a NovelEx: "Young Goodman Brown“ Ex: The Scarlet Letter3) "Title of an Essay" Title of a Collection or Anthology of EssaysEx: "The Fiction of Langston Hughes" Ex: Modern Writers and Their Readers

Page 8: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Verbals

form of a verb used as a noun, adjective

or adverb

Page 9: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Types of verbals:

• Gerunds: verbs acting as nouns. Example: Running is my favorite sport. (always end in –ing).

• Participles: verbs acting as adjectives. Example: I laughed at the girl running down the street.

• Infinitives: to + verb. Example: I like to eat pasta.

Page 10: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Examples of verbals

• Skiing should be an Olympic sport.

• I know that person walking down the hallway.

• Her favorite thing to do it to sew.

Page 11: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Adverb phrases

A word group with an adverb as its beginning. This adverb may be accompanied by modifiers

or qualifiers.

An adverb phrase can modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb, and it can appear in a

number of different positions in a sentence.

Page 12: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Examples of adverb phrases:

1. The players responded surprisingly well to all the pressures of the playoffs.

2. The best way to preserve the flavor and texture of fresh vegetables is to cook them as quickly as possible.

3. The air was warm, stirred only occasionally by a breeze.

Page 13: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Practice:

• Book pages:Pg. 172 #1-10Pg. 410 Practice C (21-30)Pg. 161 #1-20Pg. 145 #1-10

Page 14: Monday, May 12, 2014 You do need bags today. Pick up a notes sheet from the front basket. Have Greek gods presentation notes sheet out on desk

Survey: