Grammar for high school admissions tests
Sentence construction[edit | edit source]
sentence[edit | edit source]
- = a grammatically complete thought
- contains a finite verb
- makes a complete thought
- The dog is playing.
- as opposed to Since he is playing, which is not a complete thought.
- The dog is playing.
- note: commands or "imperative" verbs are finite verbs, even if the subject is unstated (it is assumed)
- ex.:Go home! = [you] Go home!
- this concept will note be on a high school admissions test, but it may be on a college admissions test
finite verb[edit | edit source]
- verb that has a subject
- finite verbs form the predicate
- predicate = the verb and its direct modifiers and objects
non-finite verb[edit | edit source]
- verb that does not have a subject
- non-finite verbs include
- present participle adjective: That boring class is tedious
- gerund (present participle as a noun): Cooking is a good skill to have
- past participle adjective: The comedian left the audience
- infinitive: can be an adjective, adverb, or noun
- the concept of infinitives will not be measured on the high school entrance exam
- non-finite verbs act as adjectives, adverbs, or nouns
- they DO NOT directly indicate an action by someone or something
- however, they indicate a sense of an action
clause[edit | edit source]
- part of a sentence that contains a finite verb
- if the clause could be a sentence by itself, it is an independent clause
- if the clause cannot be a sentence by itself, it is a dependent clause
independent clause (IC)[edit | edit source]
- a part of a sentence that contains a finite verb and can be a sentence by itself
- ex. The dog is playing happily, since I gave him a bone
dependent clause (DC)[edit | edit source]
- a part of a sentence that contains a finite verb but cannot be a sentence by itsel
- ex. The dog is playing happily, since I gave him a bone
phrase[edit | edit source]
- two or more words that do not contain a finite verb
- important phrases for the high school entrance exam include
- attributive noun phrase
- two nouns next to one another, with one noun giving an "attribute" to the other
- dog food, wine glass
- two nouns next to one another, with one noun giving an "attribute" to the other
- appositive phrase
- a parenthetical phrase to add information to another word or part of a sentence
- ex. Steve, my nextdoor neighbor, is friendly
- note that appositive phrases can come at the beginning or end of a sentence
- A world expert physician, Dr. Goesa performed a postocalaptia, a groundbreaking operation.
- Dr. Goesa,a world expert physician, performed a postocalaptia, a groundbreaking operation.
- a parenthetical phrase to add information to another word or part of a sentence
- prepositional phrase
- adds information to a noun or verb
- He hit the ball out of the park
- Thinking about math gives me a headache
- adds information to a noun or verb
- attributive noun phrase
sentence parts[edit | edit source]
predicate[edit | edit source]
- the verb and its direct modifiers, objects and complements
- finite verbs form the basis of a predicate
subject[edit | edit source]
- the actor or doer of a sentence
- a subject ALWAYS has a finite verb that matches to it
- The kid wins v. The kids won
- kid = singular; "wins" = singular verb conjugation
- kids = plural; "win" = plural verb conjugation
- The kid wins v. The kids won
Singular | Plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First person | I | win | We | win | |
Second person | You | win | You (pural) | win | |
Third person | He/She/It | wins | They | win |
complement[edit | edit source]
- adds additional information to a noun
- can be either to a subject or object
- "complement" means to "go along with," "coordinate with"
- complements can be adjectives, adverbs or nouns, as well as phrases
- ex:
- The dog is nice
- "nice" is not the object of the linking verb "is"
- My friend considers her brother crazy
- The dog is nice
object[edit | edit source]
- the recipient of an action
- note that complements are similar, but add information and are not the result of the verb's action
direct object[edit | edit source]
- the direct recipient of the action
- She kicked the ball over the fence
indirect object[edit | edit source]
- a noun that is the indirect recipient of an action
- ex. I gave the dog a bone
- the bone is what "I gave" (result of the action, thus direct object)
- the dog is the secondary effect or recipient of the verb (indirect object)
- ex. I gave the dog a bone
- to test:
- if the object can be restated with "to" or "for" after the direct object, it is an indirect object:
- The teacher taught the class grammar
- = The teacher taught grammar to the class
- if the object can be restated with "to" or "for" after the direct object, it is an indirect object:
note on objects of non-finite verbs[edit | edit source]
- non-finite verbs do not have subjects, but they can have objects
- high school placement tests will not student comprehension of this concept
- ex:
subject | verb | direct object | indirect object |
---|---|---|---|
school | provides | education | [for] students |
ex:
subject | object of gerund | verb | direct object | indirect object |
---|---|---|---|---|
Attending | school | provides | education | [for] students |
note: "attending" may also be seen as a present participle adjective modifier of the subject "school" |
Complement[edit | edit source]
Complement[edit | edit source]
Verbs[edit | edit source]
Subject-verb matching[edit | edit source]
conjugation[edit | edit source]
- finite verbs match the subject case
tense[edit | edit source]
- finite verbs match the subject case
Parallel verb tense[edit | edit source]
- if a sentence contains two tenses, it is likely incorrect
- ex. HSPT test 1 no.
Punctuation[edit | edit source]
apostrophe[edit | edit source]
does 3 things:
1. create possessives
Owen's parents
2. create contractions
Can't, won't, it's
it's v its
they're v their
3. (less commonly) indicate plurality > ex. "1960's"
Comma[edit | edit source]
does 6 things:
1. combine independent clauses (IC) with coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS)
- rule
2. combine phrases or DC w/ IC
3. create lists
4. set up quotation
(first word of the equation is capitalized)
5. set aside parenthetical information (appositives, relative clauses, etc.)
ex. "Steve, my neighbor, is not very nice."
"Steve, who is my neibhbro, is not very nice"
6. separate dates and place names
proper noun capitalization[edit | edit source]
quotation marks[edit | edit source]
do 3 things:
1. quotations
2. indicate sarcasm
personal pronoun subjective & objective case[edit | edit source]
in compound objects, remove the first noun and test the pronoun
> Steve and I went to the park.
> Steve and me went to the park
me went to the park = wrong
> She gave Joey and me a bad grade.
> She gave Joey and I a bad grade
remove "joey"
she gave I a bad grade = wrong
personal pronouns and prepositions[edit | edit source]
> prepositions create a prep phrase
> prep prhase contains a
> preoposition + an object
Between you and I, grammar sucks. x b/c I = subjective
Between you and me, grammar sucks.
The car stopped right in front of the dog and he.
The car stopped right in front of the dog and him.
attributive nouns[edit | edit source]
nouns that act like adjectives (but are not adjectives)
dog food
wine glass
class government
dog, wine, class = nouns, but they are modifying the 2nd noun .. giving them an "attribute"
the attributive noun is ALWAYS SINGULAR .. bc it's acting like an adjective (which don't change pluraity)
> dog food not dogs food
attributive noun is ALWAYS next to the noun it modifies
big dog bone.
dog big bone x
-------
cumulative v. coordinate adjectives[edit | edit source]
cumulative adjectives = no comma
the 1st adjective modifies the 2nd adj + the noun
expensive small gift
= expensive [small gift]
small expensive gift
= small [expensive gift]
coordinate adjectives
= uses a comma
big, red balloon
if you can swtich them, or put "and" in between them, it uses a comma (coordinate)
=
big and red balloon = ok
red, big balloon = ok
may v. please[edit | edit source]
- Please pass the salt = ok
- May you pass the sale = x
- please = asking permission
- may = instruction/command
lie v. lay:[edit | edit source]
- lie = to put oneself down
- lay = to put an object down
- past tense
- lie >> lay
- participle lain/lied/lying
- lay > laid
- participle: laid/laying
irregular past participles[edit | edit source]
go
- simple past (preterite) = went
participle : gone
perfect tenses use the participle!
past perfect : have/has gone
present perfect: had gone
future perfect: will have gone