Pronouns and Verbs. Perspective (Pronouns)  First Person: the person speaking Singular: I, me,/ my, mine,/ myself Plural: we, us,/ our, ours,/ ourselves.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
Advertisements

Pasco-Hernando Community College Tutorial Series.
Pronouns.
A verb must agree with its subject in number (singular/plural) and person. A singular subject takes a singular verb. A plural subject takes a plural.
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
Pronouns A matter of agreement. Pronouns A pronoun is a word used in place of a noun. Pronouns may refer to the person speaking: This is a first-person.
PRONOUN ANTECEDENT AGREEMENT DEFINITION  A pronoun (I, me, he, she, herself, you, it, that, they, each, few, many, who, whoever, whose, someone, everybody,
PRONOUNS.
The Eight Parts of Speech
The Art of Agreement: Correct Pronoun-Antecedent Pairing
Pronouns What are they?.
Personal and Possessive Pronouns
An LSCC Learning Center Self-Paced Tutorial
Pronouns and Antecedents. A pronoun must agree with its antecedent in three ways: Person (1 st, 2 nd or 3 rd ). Number is the quality that distinguishes.
Pronouns Takes the place of a noun, and makes the sentence less repetitive or cumbersome.
Writing in Third Person Academically  Use third person for all academic writing.[1] Third person is a point of speech that looks outside the self, and.
 A pronoun is a word that takes the place of one or more nouns or pronouns.  The word that the pronoun refers to is called the antecedent.  There are.
PRONOUNS!! A pronoun is a word used in place of a noun or another pronoun.
A pronoun is a word used in place of one or more nouns. Zac Lawrence Taylor Crowder.
The Basics of Writing Expository Writing and Personal Responses.
Mr. Loeb English II Kenwood Academy High School
Directions: Press F5 to begin the slide show. Press the enter key to view each part of the review.
Pronouns replace nouns Pronouns come in many different varieties.
Subject Verb Agreement. The Rule A verb must agree with its subject in number and person.
Eight Parts of Speech NounsAdverb PronounsConjunction VerbPreposition AdjectiveInterjection.
Pronouns. A pronoun is a word used in place of one noun or more than one noun.
Personal Pronouns A pronoun is a word that takes the place of one or more nouns. personal pronouns refer to people or things.
Pronouns A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun.
Parts of Speech A Brief Review. Noun Person, Place, Thing, or Idea Common: begins with lower case letter (city) Proper: begins with capital letter (Detroit)
Mrs. Dianne Cline 7th grade GRC Oak Mountain Middle School
Eight Parts of Speech NounsAdverb PronounsConjunction VerbPreposition AdjectiveInterjection.
Parts of Speech A Brief Review. Noun Person, Place, Thing, or Idea Common: begins with lower case letter (city) Proper: begins with capital letter (Detroit)
Pronouns. Cases of Personal Pronouns Case/exam.UseExampleCondition Nominative (subject case) I, we, you, he, she, it, they Subject Predicate pronoun We.
WCH 502 Pronouns. What is a pronoun? A pronoun is a word that takes the place of or refers to a noun.
Pronouns Mrs. Brown.
Pronouns.
 The four principal parts of a verb are as follows:  Infinitive (base form)  Present Participle  Past  Past Participle.
Subject-Verb Agreement
Eight Parts of Speech NounsAdverb PronounsConjunction VerbPreposition AdjectiveInterjection.
Pronouns and Antecedents. A pronoun must agree with its antecedent in three ways: Person (1 st, 2 nd or 3 rd ). Number (singular or plural) Gender (masculine.
Pronouns come in many different varieties. Pronouns take the place of nouns.
Nouns and Pronouns Today we are going to focus on one of these two grammar elements-Pronouns FACT Nouns and pronouns are the only two parts of speech that.
 Pronoun A word that takes the place of a noun or a group of words acting as a noun.
Subject-Verb Agreement. NUMBER — the form a word takes to indicate whether the word is SINGULAR or PLURAL.  SINGULAR — a word that refers to one person,
PRONOUNS. Pronouns A pronoun is a word used in place of one or more nouns or pronouns. Example: Ask Dan if Dan has done Dan’s homework. Ask Dan if he.
 Check Folders  Take out Thesis Statements  Take Survey.
ACLA Countdown  Check In  Leave your stuff in a stack on your desk!  Questions, song requests, etc. to the Parking Lot.
Pronouns Definition: A word used in place of a noun or more than one noun. We use them to help make our speech less repetitive and awkward. ANTECEDENT:
English 11 ACT/MME Preparation
Parts of Speech Notes Nouns and Pronouns.
PRONOUNS A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun. The noun being replaced is called the antecedent. Ex. He sneezed. (John sneezed.) George.
Grammar: Issues with Agreement
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
PARTS OF SPEECH L.Nabulsi.
Personal Pronouns Parts of Speech 3.
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
Pronouns.
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
Pronouns.
PARTS OF SPEECH L.Nabulsi.
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
Pronouns.
Pronouns.
Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
Pronouns Sandra Boyd.
Pronouns.
Pronoun: a word that has taken the place of a noun
Pronouns.
PRONOUNS UNIT 11.
Presentation transcript:

Pronouns and Verbs

Perspective (Pronouns)  First Person: the person speaking Singular: I, me,/ my, mine,/ myself Plural: we, us,/ our, ours,/ ourselves  Second Person: the person being spoken to Singular: you,/ your, yours,/ yourself Plural: you,/ your, yours,/ yourselves  Third Person: the person being discussed Singular: he, him, she, her, it,/ his, her, hers, its,/ himself, herself, itself Plural: they, them,/ their, theirs,/ themselves

Indefinite Pronouns  In expository writing, avoid using indefinite pronouns because they are too ambiguous and vague.  Indefinite pronoun: refers to persons, places or ideas in a more general way than nouns. ie. Anything, everything, thing, it, someone, some, something, somebody, nobody, no one, everybody, everyone, one, any, etc…

Using Pronouns Correctly  Pronoun: a word that takes the place of a noun.  Antecedent: the noun to which the pronoun is referring to.  In expository writing, do not use a pronoun without an antecedent. i.e.. Though Georgia O’Keefe was born in Wisconsin, she grew to love the landscape of the American Southwest. (ID the antecedent)

Using Pronouns Correctly  Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement: all pronouns must agree with their antecedents in number, gender, and person. Number: agree with plural or singular ant. Gender: agree with masculine or feminine ant. ie. Emily Dickinson wrote her poems on scrap paper. (singular feminine pronoun) Person: agree with 1 st, 2 nd, or 3 rd person ant.  The lost generation wrote about their loss of innocence because of the World Wars.

Clear Pronoun Reference  Clearly state the antecedent of the pronoun. Make sure that a pronoun does not refer to more than one antecedent. Don’t use the pronoun this, that, which, it, any, or one without a clearly stated antecedent. ie. Dickens loved public speaking, and that greatly boosted his popularity. (What boosted his popularity? His speeches did, but the word speeches is not specifically mentioned.) Dickens loved public speaking, and his speeches greatly boosted his popularity.

Clear Pronoun Reference  If a pronoun seems to refer to more than one antecedent, either reword the sentence to make the antecedent clear or eliminate the pronoun. ie. After the tickets slipped between the reports, they were lost. (Tickets or reports?) The tickets were lost when they slipped between the reports. (clear antecedent) When the tickets slipped between the reports, the tickets were lost. (no pronoun)

Verb Tenses (Present Tense)  Verb Tense: forms that help to show time.  In expository writing, use only present tense verbs.  Present Tense: expresses a constant, repeated, or habitual action or condition. It can also express a general truth. The present-tense form of a verb is the same as the base form of the verb, except for the 3 rd person singular, which adds –s or –es.

Present Tense Examples  Hemingway writes in a simplistic and rich style. (always; a habitual action)  Shakespeare explores the use of language in his works. (not just in one play but in every play; a repeated action)  Bilbo Baggins is an unusual hero. (a general truth).

Verb Tenses (Past Tense)  Never use past tense in expository writing because literature is ongoing.  Past Tense: expresses an action or a condition that was started and completed in the past.  Nearly all regular and irregular verbs (except be) have just one past-tense form, such as climbed or ran. The verb be has two: was and were

Verb Tenses (Future Tense)  Future Tense: expresses an action or a condition that will occur in the future.  Form future tense by using the auxiliary verb shall or will with the base form. Also, by using going to or about to with the present tense of the verb be and the base form of the verb. Pip will achieve great expectations. When shall I study? Pip is going to achieve great expectations. Pip is about to achieve great expectations.

Consistency of Tenses  Don’t shift, or change, tenses when two or more events occur at the same time. The soloist stopped suddenly and coughs loudly. (correct this)  Keep a statement about a general truth in the present tense if other verbs are in the past tense. We remembered that Shakespeare is a master of characterization.

Voice of Verbs (Active Voice)  In expository writing, always use active voice.  With active voice the action comes alive.  An action verb is in active voice when the subject performs the action. ie. The brown bear caught a salmon. ie. Shakespeare wrote these sonnets.

Voice of Verbs (Passive Voice)  An action verb is in passive voice when its action is performed on the subject.  Do not use passive voice- it is boring.  Form the passive voice by using the auxiliary verb be with the past participle of the verb. A salmon was caught by the brown bear. These sonnets were wrote by Shakespeare.

Subject- Verb Agreement  A verb must agree with its subject in number.  Number refers to whether the word is singular or plural. A Singular subject indicates one (with most regular verbs, add –s or –es to form the sing.)  ie. The author writes. Plural subjects indicate more than one and require plural verbs.  ie. The authors write.

Agreement with Compound Subjects  A compound subject that is joined by and or both is plural unless its parts belong to one unit or they both refer to the same person or thing. ie. The lion and the tiger are roaring. (plural) ie. Peanut butter and jelly is my favorite type of sandwich. (singular because it is one unit). ie. His best friend and companion is George. (singular because it is one person).

Agreement with Compound Subjects  With compound subjects joined by or or nor (or either…or or neither…nor), the verb agrees with the subject closer to it.