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Contents : Sentence Diagramming Diagramming is a way to show the relationships between the various parts of a sentence. It shows the structure of a sentence and it can sometimes help the writer recognize a grammatical error in a sentence. Why teach diagramming 1. Diagramming gives you a tool to attack sentences as a whole not in a fragmented approach. You get to see how parts interact. You see not only parts but also their functions. "In the town parade Sam carried the scout troop flag." Some students might identify six nouns in that sentence and they might not know which word is the subject. When students diagram that sentence it becomes clear that there are only three nouns in the sentence (parade Sam flag) and it is obvious which one is the subject (Sam). 2. When you diagram you develop an eye for breaking down a sentence so you can fix it more easily. "After the last performance the director of the play thanked Sue Mary and (me/I) for all our work with the children's choir." It's hard to tell whether to use me or I. But when you diagram it you strip it down to the core which is "The director thanked (me/I)." Now that you've simplified it it's easy to fix. 3. For some students diagramming just works much better as a key to understanding. How to diagram: In Five Steps If you follow these steps in order it will make diagramming easier. 1. Mark up the sentence. In advanced sentences mark the break between clauses. In the basic level put parentheses around prepositional phrases. Why I have found that prep. phrases cause more trouble than anything else. They get in there and disguise themselves as other things! So if you safely lock them away in parentheses until you're ready for them (Step 5) they can't fool you and cause trouble. 2. Find the verb and place it onto your diagram to the right of the vertical line. 3. Find the subject and place it onto your diagram to the left of the vertical line.) Why do I find the verb first and then the subject There are usually more nouns than verbs in sentence so it may be hard to know which noun is the subject. Once you know the verb then ask yourself which noun is performing the action. That is your subject. 4. What kind of verb is it (transitive linking or intransitive) Mark the verb type and direct object or complement (predicate noun or predicate adjective). 5. Place everything else onto your diagram. In basic sentences "everything else" usually consists of modifiers (including prepositional phrases). Most modifiers go onto diagonal lines below the word they modify. DIAGRAMMING SENTENCES The basic diagrams used in one system of diagramming are shown below. (1) Diagram for a simple sentence with a simple subject (noun or pronoun) and simple predicate (verb): (2) Diagram for a simple sentence with adjectives or adverbs: (3) Diagram for a simple sentence with prepositional phrases (adjective or adverb): (4) Diagram for a simple sentence with a compound subject: (5) Diagram for a simple sentence with a compound predicate: (6) Diagram for a simple sentence with a direct object: (7) Diagram for a simple sentence with a direct object and an indirect object: (8) Diagram for a simple sentence with a predicate noun: (9) Diagram for a simple sentence with a predicate adjective: (10) Diagram for a compound sentence: (11) Diagram for a complex sentence with a noun clause: (12) Diagram for a complex sentence with a relative or adjective clause: (13) Diagram for a complex sentence with an adverb clause: Other Hints 1. These words are almost always modifiers so put them on a diagonal: a an the very never not. 2. Beware the HELPING VERBS! If you see one of these look for a PARTNER! You'll often find one. have has had do does did would could should will can shall may might must The "BEING" VERBS sometimes have a partner too. Sometimes they're linking verbs. am are is be been was were
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  • Verified : 2012-07-30
  • Source: rpdp.net
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