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SENTENCE VARIETY SENTENCE VARIETY

SENTENCE VARIETY - PowerPoint Presentation

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SENTENCE VARIETY - PPT Presentation

Varietys the very spice of life  That gives it all its flavour William Cowper A group of words that expresses a thought and is complete in itself Sentence noun The Quality of Being Different not having uniformity or sameness ID: 444617

sentences sentence pizza poetry sentence sentences poetry pizza boy color ate clause independent dependent writing variety book ways professor

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Slide1

SENTENCE VARIETY

“Variety’s

the very spice of life 

That gives it all its

flavour

.”

-

William CowperSlide2

A group of words that expresses a thought and is complete in itself.

Sentence

(noun)Slide3

The Quality of Being Different; not having uniformity or sameness

Variety

(noun)Slide4

Poetry is difficult. I don't write it very well. My English professor in college agrees with me. He sent me a book. He sent me

Poetry for Dummies

. I felt stupid after seeing it. I still talk to the professor. We don't talk much about poetry. He sent me that book, after all. We do talk about our children. I asked for his recommendation on poetry books for children. He suggested something to me. He suggested they teach me poetry. He really humiliated me. I am over it now. I talked to my therapist about it. I decided to do a poetry extravaganza. I went to the library with my kids. I chose 20 poetry books. They voted on the top 5. That's why I'm writing this

.Slide5

Poetry, the bane of my existence, is an activity enjoyed by my English professor that tormented me, a college graduate, for many years. My professor, still a good friend of mine who converses with me from time to time about literature and other tidbits, told me I was not very good at poetry, going as far as to send me a copy of a book, a rather useful yet insulting book, entitled

Poetry for Dummies

, which, although intended as humor, hurt my feelings. I talked to my therapist, a rather good man who, like me, has a general disdain for poetry, and he told me I should have a poetry extravaganza with my children--Tom, Joe, and Mary--and let them see if they enjoy poetry.Slide6

Sentence Basics!

It starts with a capital letter and ends with a full stop, a question, or an exclamation point.

Declarative Sentence:

The sky is blue.

Interrogative Sentence:

Why is the sky blue?

Exclamatory Sentence:

The sky is blue now!

Imperative Sentence:

Don’t go outside!Slide7

Independent & Dependent Clauses

A

clause

is a group of words that has a

subject

and a

verb

.

Independent Clause

: A complete sentenceDependent Clause: An incomplete thought that contains a

subordinator

When… Since… After… If… Although… In… Because… While…

A DEPENDENT CLAUSE MUST BE COMBINED WITH AN INDEPENDENT CLAUSE TO AVOID THE SENTENCE BEING A FRAGMENT.Slide8

Independent & Dependent Clauses

For example:

When

Alexa

gets here, let’s start the music.

If

Danny comes to class late,

he

will stay after class to get his assignment.I’m going to take a walk because the weather is beautiful.

Clare will go shopping

after

she makes a list.

Although

the assignment

i

s not due until next Friday, the students will have all of their work done before the end of this week.Slide9

Independent & Dependent Clauses

For example:

When

Alexa

gets here

,

let’s start the music

.

If

Danny comes to class late

,

she will stay after class to get his assignment

.

I’m going to take a walk

because

the weather is beautiful

.

Clare will go shopping

after

she makes a list

.

Although

the assignment

i

s not due until next Friday

,

the students will have all of their work done before the end of this week

.Slide10

Compound & Complex Sentences

Compound Sentence

: Combining two sentences with a conjunction

For… And… But… Or… Yet… So… etc.

Complex Sentence

: Using at least one dependent clause and one independent clauseSlide11

Sentence Patterns

The most common sentence pattern is subject-verb-object (

SVO

).

The boy ate pizza.

I play soccer.

Homework is boring.

There are many ways to rewrite these simple sentences!Slide12

Spice up those sentences!

Turn it into a question:

Do you know what the boy ate? Pizza.

Turn it into an exclamatory sentence:

The boy ate pizza again!

Combine it with your next sentence:

The boy wolfed down the pizza and then ran outside to play.

Other examples:

As fast as he could, the boy ate the pizza.

Although the he wanted to keep playing, the boy rushed in and wolfed down his pizza lunch.

The boy ate pizza.Slide13

Sentence Length

Avoid using sentences that are all the same length.

Your most important sentences should be clear and concise

. Keep them short!

Short sentences are powerful. Combine short sentences with long sentences to make your writing flow more naturally.Slide14

Which paragraph

has more natural variety?

The boy’s mother called him inside for dinner. The boy ate his pizza. He was very hungry. He didn’t want to eat, though. He wanted to play outside with his friends.

The boy’s mother called him inside for dinner. It was pizza. Even though the boy was hungry and pizza was his favorite meal, he wanted to stay outside and play. He wolfed the pizza down and ran back outside.Slide15
Slide16

“When you dip her in the middle of the dance floor, it is the color of her dress. When she whispers in your ear, it is the color of her lips. When you make love, it is the trace you want her to leave all over your body. When she places her palm over your heart, it is the color that comes to the surface as her fingertips trail like a sentence that can never be finished. When you see her in the bedroom with another, it is the color of your breath. When you smash the vase in the hall, it is the color that threatens you to abandon the shattered pieces. When you scream at the top of your lungs, it is the color that pierces the atmosphere. When she hears you, it is the color of her pulse. When you look in her eyes for the last time, it is the fading color of your heart falling to your knees. It is not the color you see when she leaves

.”

Describing the color red without using

the word

‘red’, by Tyler FordSlide17

a word or phrase naming an attribute, added to

a

noun to modify or describe it.

Adjectives

(noun)Slide18

Spice Up Your Sentences

One of the easiest ways to add a variety of details is by adding

adjectives

to your sentences.

The boy ate pizza.

The exhausted young boy ate the cold, stale pizza leftover from yesterday’s dinner.Slide19

A variety of sentences can help make your writing flow smoothly and beautifully. Adding details to expand on your experiences creates a more realistic story that readers can connect with!

REMEMBER!Slide20

As you are working on your first draft, take note of how you are writing your sentences, how they sound, and how they look!Slide21
Slide22
Slide23
Slide24

Push through! You can do it! I believe in you

Slide25
Slide26

How many ways can you rewrite, expand, reorder, or reword these boring sentences?

WRITING CHALLENGE!Slide27

How many ways can you rewrite these sentences?

I am sick.

I have school tomorrow.

My room is small.

Amanda is busy.

It’s Wednesday.

There’s nothing to do.

It’s cold in this house.