English 177-189 Blog

This blog is intended for students in English 177 and English 189 at Athabasca University.

Friday, November 1, 2013

WHAT’S NEW

Eggcorns!

http://grammar.quickanddirtytips.com/ado-versus-adieu.aspx

Apostrophe disaster!

http://www.flickr.com/photos/pondspider/4863410939/in/pool-413045@N24/
Posted by Michael at 8:26 AM
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    • ▼  November (54)
      • WELCOME
      • WHAT’S NEW?
      • WHAT’S HAPPENING?
      • PREVIOUS GRAMMAR QUESTION
      • *GRAMMAR QUESTION*
      • PUZZLE
      • IDIOMS
      • *ALL CHANGE!*
      • AFFIXES
      • *COMPLETE THE SENTENCE*
      • *NUMBER CHANGE*
      • *VOCABULARY*
      • SYNOYMS AND ANTONYMS
      • *ACTIVE vs. PASSIVE*
      • *TIME CHANGE*
      • *SENTENCE COMBINATION*
      • BUILD-A-SENTENCE
      • Welcome to the English 177-189 Blog. English 177...
      • WHAT’S HAPPENING
      • PREVIOUS GRAMMAR QUESTION
      • GRAMMAR QUESTION
      • PUZZLE
      • IDIOMS
      • ALL CHANGE
      • AFFIXES
      • SENTENCE COMPLETION
      • NUMBER CHANGE
      • VOCABULARY
      • SYNOYMS AND ANTONYMS
      • ACTIVE AND PASSIVE
      • TIME CHANGE
      • SENTENCE COMBINATION
      • BUILD-A-SENTENCE
      • HALF-WAY THERE CHALLENGE!
      • Welcome to the English 177-189 Blog. English 177...
      • WHAT’S HAPPENING
      • WHAT’S NEW
      • Previous Grammar Question
      • GRAMMAR QUESTION
      • PUZZLE
      • IDIOMS
      • ALL CHANGE!
      • AFFIXES
      • COMPLETE THE SENTENCE
      • NUMBER CHANGE
      • VOCABULARY
      • IN OTHER WORDS...
      • ACTIVE vs. PASSIVE
      • TIME CHANGE
      • SENTENCE COMBINATION
      • BUILD-A-SENTENCE
      • HWT CHALLENGE
      • PLAIN ENGLISH
      • LAUGH WITH ENGLISH
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DEFINITIONS

Clause: A clause is a group of words containing a subject and a verb.
Independent clause: A clause that can be used alone as a sentence and that does not need any other grammatical construction: e.g. He hit the ball over the fence.
Dependent clause: A clause that cannot form a separate sentence; there must be an independent clause for it to modify: e.g. When Peter played baseball, he hit the ball over the fence.
Phrase: A group of words used together to express an idea but without a subject and a verb: e.g. In the game yesterday, he hit the ball over the fence.

CONJUNCTIONS

Coordinators

Subordinators

F

for

W

who, what, where, when, why, which, whether, while

A

as, after, although

A

and

I

if

B

before, because

N

nor

S

since, so that

O

once

B

but

H

how

U

unless, until

O

or

T

than, that, though

Y

yet

S

so

PUNCTUATION BASICS

1. When using an introductory phrase, remember to set it off with a comma.
2. If you have an introductory dependent clause, set it off with a comma.
3. Two independent clauses can be more difficult; use a semicolon to separate them if there is no coordinating conjunction, but use a comma if there is a one.

WORD OF THE DAY

GRAMMAR GIRL

IDIOMS

If English is not your first language, then English idioms are probably difficult for you. The BBC has a site that provides interesting and crazy videos to explain a variety of idioms.
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