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ABSOLUTE PHRASES. The following sentences were written by professional writers, but some parts have been deleted. 1.She returned to her bench. 2.The boy.

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Presentation on theme: "ABSOLUTE PHRASES. The following sentences were written by professional writers, but some parts have been deleted. 1.She returned to her bench. 2.The boy."— Presentation transcript:

1 ABSOLUTE PHRASES

2 The following sentences were written by professional writers, but some parts have been deleted. 1.She returned to her bench. 2.The boy watched. 3.About the bones, ants were ebbing away. 4.Six boys came over the hill half an hour early that afternoon, running hard.

3 Now compare those sentences with the originals. Notice that the additions account for the distinctiveness of the original sentence. 1a. She returned to her bench, her face showing all the unhappiness that had suddenly overtaken her. Theodore Dreiser, An American Tragedy 2a. The boy watched, his eyes bulging in the dark. Edmund Ware, “An Underground Episode”

4 3a. About the bones, ants were ebbing away, their pincers full of meat. Doris Lessing, African Stories 4a. Six boys came over the hill half an hour early that afternoon, running hard, their heads down, their forearms working, their breath whistling. John Steinbeck, The Red Pony

5 The boldface phrases are absolute phrases and are an efficient way to combine related ideas into one sentence. Absolutes are sentence parts that describe the rest of the sentence in which they appear. Absolutes are almost complete sentences. As a test, you can make any absolute a sentence by adding was or were. Here are the four absolutes from the previous examples, changed into sentences:

6 Here are the four absolutes from the previous examples, changed into sentences: 1a. Her face was showing all the unhappiness that had suddenly overtaken her. 2a. His eyes were bulging in the dark. 3a. Their pincers were full of meat. 4a. Their heads were down. Their forearms were working. Their breath was whistling.

7 Another way to identify an absolute is that many absolutes begin with the words my, his, her, its, our, their (possessive pronouns). Absolutes can occur as sentence openers, subject-verb splits, or sentence closers. Examples are boldfaced in the following sentences. Sentence Openers 1. His hands raw, he reached a flat place at the top. Richard Connell, “The Most Dangerous Game” 2. Each child carrying his little bag of crackling, we trod the long road home in the cold winter afternoon. Peter Abrahams, Tell Freedom

8 Sentence Openers (cont.) 3.Outside, his carpet bag in his hand, he stood for a time in the courtyard. Jessamyn West, “A Time of Learning” Subject-Verb Splits 1.Miss Hearne, her face burning, hardly listened to these words. Brian Moore, The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne 2.High in the air, a little figure, his hands thrust in his short jacket pockets, stood staring out to sea. Katherine Mansfield, “The Voyage”

9 Subject-Verb Split (cont.) 3.An Arab on a motorcycle, his long robes flying in the wind of his speed, passed John at such a clip that the spirals of dust from his turnings on the winding road looked like little tornadoes. Elizabeth Yates, “Standing in Another’s Shoes” Sentence Closers 1. She screamed for Klaus—shrieked for him—and Klaus came on the dead run, his work boots whitened by the half-full pail of milk he had spilled on them. Stephen King, “The Two Dead Girls”

10 Sentence Closers (cont.) 2.He walked with a prim strut, swinging out his legs in a half-circle with each step, his heels biting smartly into the red velvet on the floor. Carson McCullers, “The Jockey” 3.Those who had caught sharks had taken them to the shark factory on the other side of the cove where they were hoisted on a block and tackle, their livers removed, their fins cut off, and their hides skinned out, and their flesh cut into strips for salting. (four closers) Ernest Hemingway, The Old Man and the Sea

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