Week 10 -- Sentence Openers: #1 Subject, #2 Prepositional Phrase
Week 10
The dress-ups are one part of IEW style. The five dress-ups are -ly adverb, who-which clause, strong verb, quality adjective, and www.asia words (clause starters). The dress- ups help you use stronger vocabulary and more complex sentence structure.
Now that you are familiar with all the dress-ups, you can learn some sentence openers. Since you have learned about clauses and phrases, these will be easy.
#1 Subject Opener
You have already learned that main clauses usually start with a subject or with an article (a, an, the)and/or adjectives plus subject. You also learned that sometimes the subject-verb will be switched. Examples: [There gathered around him displaced countrymen]. [Up rose his Merry Men].
We call the sentences that start with this pattern subject openers.. When you see a sentence starting with a main clause, it is a subject opener.
#2 Prepositional
This is another kind of sentence opener. When a sentence begins with a prepositional phrase, mark it a #2 prep.
Be sure the #2 follows this pattern: preposition + noun/pronoun (no verb). These openers are not clauses; they are phrases. A clause must have a subject and a verb. Prepositional phrases have no verb.
Continue to underline all prepositional phrases, including #2 openers. Do not include #2 openers with the main clauses after them when adding brackets.
Example: In the tree [Robin safely hid].
the yeomen vowed that they would in return rob there/their/they’re oppressors as they
themselves had been robbed
if possessions were plundered by even the most powerful baron abbot knight or squire, the yeomen would recapture the goods and return them to the poor
to those in need, these brave and upright men would offer succor
besides this, they earnestly swore never to harm a child or to wrong a woman whether she was a maid wife or widow
Week 11 -- Sentence Openers: #3 -ly Adverb, Combining Sentences w/ a Who-Which
This week you will learn the next sentence opener.
#3 -ly Adverb Opener
The difference between an -ly adverb dress-up and an -ly adverb sentence opener is simply where the word appears: It will be the first word in the sentence if it is an opener; it will be later than the first word if it is a dress-up.
Continue to label all the -ly adverbs with an ly. If it is the first word of a sentence, mark it with a #3 ly.
Do not include the #3 opener in the MC brackets. It is just tacked onto the front of the sentence.
Example:Regularly [the common folk came to praise Robin and his Merry Men].
When you decide on the strongest dress-ups, choose from one of the -ly dress-ups if there are any that week, not an opener.
Combining Sentences
Who-which clauses are handy because they can often be used to combine sentences. This week and on occasion in the future, you will be asked to create your own sentence by combining the two sentences provided with a who-which. Combine the sentences as instructed. Complete the labeling and brackets using the new sentence.
Week 11
in times of desperation, these yeomen transferred money or food from the pockets of
the corrupt nobility into the hands of impoverished families
First, combine the two sentences by starting a new who clause after folk.The new sentence should have two verbs,
First, combine the two sentences by starting a new who clause after folk.The new sentence should have two verbs,
one that goes with who and one that goes with folk. Use the new sentence for the rest of your Fix It work.
regularly the common folk came to praise robin and his merry men. they related many tales of his audacious escapades
naturally, because of robin hood’s magnanimous work in sherwood forest, people felt that he was like them
in a sense, robin had therefore returned to the town he had left, living vicariouslythrough the town folk whom he was forced to leave
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