Finding Clauses
Practice Exercise # 7
Directions: [Work through the text one sentence at a time.]
1. First place parentheses ( ) around every prepositional phrase.
2. Underline every subject once, every finite verb twice, and label
complements (PA, PN, IO or DO). [Reminder: A predicate adjective describes
the subject; a predicate noun "equals" the subject; an indirect object
is someone or thing "to" or "for" whom (or what) the action of the verb
is performed. Any other complement has to be a direct object.]
The text is: |
Angie and her four-year
old brother, Joel, were sitting together in church. Joel giggled, sang
and talked out loud. Finally, his big sister had had enough. "You're not
supposed to talk out loud in church." "Why? Who's going to stop me?" Joel
asked. Angie pointed to the back of the church and said, "See those two
men standing by the door? They're hushers." |
Note: In creating these pages, I cannot create a double underline.
I will therefore underline both subjects and finite verbs once, but subjects
will be in green; finite verbs in blue. |
Work your way through the text one sentence
at a time. |
Sentence # 1
The first sentence is: |
Angie
and her four-year old brother,
Joel, were sitting together
(in
church). |
Because there is only one S/V/C pattern, all we need to do is
put
a line at the end of the sentence. The sentence is the main clause. |
Angie
and her four-year old brother,
Joel, were sitting together
(in
church)./ |
Sentence # 2
Sentence # 3
Sentence # 4
Sentence # 5
Sentence # 6
The sixth sentence is: |
Angiepointed(to
the back) (of the church) and said,
"See those two men(DO)
standing
(by the door)?
They'rehushers(PN)." |
I have counted this as a "sentence" for a specific reason. Inside
the quotation marks, we have two main clauses: |
"See those
two men(DO)
standing
(by the door)?/
They're
hushers
(PN)."/ |
The quoted sentences, however, both chunk as direct objects to "said."
Thus we could consider them both as subordinate clauses, and mark this: |
Angiepointed(to
the back) (of the church) and said,
"[DO of "said"See
those two men(DO)
standing
(by the door)?][DO
of "said" They're
hushers(PN).]" / |
Theoretically, however, we could have a quotation of a hundred sentences,
all chunking back to a word like "said." Although I can not consider the
previous analysis as incorrect, I prefer to consider the second "main"
clause in the quoted material as a separate main clause: |
Angiepointed(to
the back) (of the church) and said,
"[DO of "said"See
those two men(DO)
standing
(by the door)?]/ They're
hushers
(PN)." / |
I have, by the way, never seen a grammar textbook deal with a problem
like this. But then I don't spend much time reading grammar textbooks.
:) |
|