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LA: Thursday, January 24, 2019 LA 6-M

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1 LA: Thursday, January 24, 2019 LA 6-M
Handouts: * Grammar #48 (Making Subjects and Verbs Agree) Homework: * Grammar #48 (Making Subjects and Verbs Agree) [If you don’t finish in class, it is homework. ] Assignments due: * None

2 Starter #1 Take out your comp book. Turn to the first blank page
Starter #1 Take out your comp book. Turn to the first blank page. In the upper right hand corner, write the following: Jan. 23/24, 2019 QW #39: Great Advice What is the best piece of advice that anyone has ever given you or the best piece of advice you have ever heard? Did you follow that advice? Or did you not follow that advice and later wished you had? Explain why that advice is the best advice you have ever heard. Remember to write in complete sentences, avoiding fragments and run-ons. If you are not sure how to spell a certain word, just sound it out and circle it.

3 Lesson Goal: Learn about making subjects and verbs agree.
Outcomes: Be able to . . . Explain what is meant by “subject and verb agreement.” Explain what is unusual about singular and plural verb endings compared to noun endings. Apply the correct verb form that agrees the subject noun in any given sentence.

4 awesome hey oh, no wow bravo hi oops yes
Starter #2: Last week we learned about interjections. What’s an interjection? An interjection is a word or group of words that expresses mild or strong feeling. Common Interjections ah congratulations hooray ouch aha good grief whew no all right great oh ugh awesome hey oh, no wow bravo hi oops yes

5 When do you use an exclamation point with an interjection?
Starter #3: Unlike other parts of speech, an interjection is not related to other words in a sentence. For that reason, it is set off from the rest of the sentence with either a comma or an exclamation point. When do you use an exclamation point with an interjection? When it stands alone, either before or after a sentence Interjections that stand alone are ones that express great emotion. When do you use a comma with an interjection? You use it with interjections that express mild emotion, either before or after the interjection. Examples: Yes! I knew you could do it! You got front row seats! Great! Congratulations, you passed the test.

6 What do we mean by “subject and verb agreement”?
Starter #4: One of the most common mistakes I see in your writing is this one—making subjects and verbs agree. Today we are going to learn what is meant by “subject and verb agreement.” What do we mean by “subject and verb agreement”? The subject and verb must agree in number (singular or plural). A noun that is singular always takes a singular verb form. A noun that is plural always takes a plural verb form. Here’s what I think students stumble over. When we speak of a plural noun, we usually mean that you add an “s” to the end of it. But verbs are just the opposite. A singular verb ends in “s.” A cat sleeps during the day. The singular noun is cat. The singular verb is sleeps. Cats sleep during the day. The plural noun is cats. The plural verb is sleep.


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