Transcript Slide 1

Beowulf Skills and Principles
Day 1
Comparative and Superlative Forms of Adjectives
Comparative Form and Superlative Form (-er/-est)
one-syllable adjectives
two-syllable adjectives ending in -y or -er
Comparative Form and Superlative Form (more/most)
adjectives of three or more syllables (and two-syllable adjectives not
ending in -y/-er)
Do not double up (use both the -er/-est form with more or most)
Titles of Book-length Works
The titles of books or book-length works (such as novels, epic poems or full
length plays) are italicized if word processed or underlined if written by
hand.
Relative Pronouns
When referring to people, use who, whom or whose. Use who to refer to
people who are subjects of sentences and phrases, whom to refer to
people who are objects of sentences and phrases and whose to refer to
people who are possessing something.
When referring to things, use which (preceded by a comma) in clauses
that are not important to the main meaning of the sentence. Never use
which to refer to people because this implies that the person is an object
rather than a human being.
When referring to things, use that (not preceded by a comma) to refer to
things in clauses that are important to the main meaning of the sentence.
Day 2
Use of a Colon before a List
One use of a colon is to introduce a list. Make sure not to use a colon
directly after a preposition or a verb. If you wish to use a colon, add the words
the following after the verb or preposition.
Coordinate Adjectives
If two adjectives modify a noun in the same way, place a comma between
the two adjectives. These are called coordinate adjectives.
There is a two-part test for coordinate adjectives:
(1) Can you replace the comma with the word and?
(2) Can you reverse the order of the adjectives and keep the same
meaning?
If you can do both, then you have coordinate adjectives. Coordinate
adjectives require that you place a comma between them when they appear in
a series.
Pronoun Case: Subject of a Sentence
When the pronoun is the subject of a sentence, use the subjective (nominative)
case: I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they.
Comparative and Superlative Forms of Adjectives
Comparative Form and Superlative Form (-er/-est)
one-syllable adjectives
two-syllable adjectives ending in -y or -er
Comparative Form and Superlative Form (more/most)
adjectives of three or more syllables (and two-syllable adjectives not
ending in -y/-er)
Do not double up (use both the -er/-est form with more or most)
Day 3
Commonly Confused Words: Past versus Passed
Past is either a noun that refers to a time period or a preposition modifying where
something is located.
Passed is the past tense of the verb to pass, meaning to move beyond something.
In order to stop genocide, the scientists decided to go into the past with
their time machine.
I walked past the store that sold instruments of torture.
I passed the store that sold instruments of torture.
Subordinating Conjunction: So That
A subordinating conjuntion connects two parts of a sentence where the
clause that follows is subordinate (requires the main clause to make sense)
to the main clause of the sentence. When used as a subordinating
conjunction, so should be so that.
Sally hid the glue gun so that her brother would not glue his fingers together
again.
Compound Sentence
A compound sentence is a sentence comprised of two complete independent
clauses joined with a comma and a coordinating conjunction.
Use of a Specific Noun to Replace Thing
The word thing is vague to the point that it doesn't really add information to a
sentence. Rather than use thing, figure out the specific noun that thing refers
to and use it instead.
Day 4
Absolute Phrase
An absolute phrase is a phrase made of a noun/pronoun and a participle (with any
related modifiers). They are not a clause because they do not have a true verb.
Absolute phrases modify the whole sentence. They are set off from the rest of
the sentence with commas or dashes.
Non-restrictive Phrases and Clauses
This means that the phrase or clause does not add important information to the
sentence. The sentence would retain its main meaning if the clause or phrase were
removed. Put commas before (and after if needed) non-restrictive clauses.
Commonly Confused Words: Lay versus Lie
lie, lying (to tell a falsehood)
I lie all the time.
I lied to my mother. (past)
I have lied under oath.
lie, lying (to recline)
I lie down at three o'clock every day.
I lay on the bed because I was tired. (past)
He has lain in the grass.
lay, laying (to put, place)
I lay the murder weapon in the drawer after using it.
I laid the baby in her cradle.
We have laid the dishes on the table.
Participles
A participle is a word created from a verb that is used as an adjective.
There are two types of participles--the present participle that end in -ing and past
participles that end in -ed, -en, -d, -t or -n.
Present participle
singing as in "the singing nun"
walking as in "the walking dude"
Past participle
squandered as in "the squandered money"
eaten as in "the eaten soup"
Participial Phrase
A participial phrase is a phrase made up from a participle plus
modifier(s)/nouns/pronoun(s)/or noun phrase(s). It needs to be near whatever
it is modifying.
Irregular Verbs -ought Ending
Some verbs have -ought as their past and past participle
ending. The following are some of the verbs that follow
this pattern:
bring
buy
catch
fight
seek
teach
think
brought
bought
caught (-aught)
fought
sought
taught (-aught)
thought
Day 5
Periods with Initials
When using initials, put a period after each letter.
Capitalization of Words in Titles
Main words of all titles are capitalized. Capitalize the following:
the first word, the last word, the first word after a colon indicating a
subtitle, and the word after a hyphen in a compound word.
Do not capitalize the following: articles (a, an, the), prepositions (before, of,
between, under,through, etcetera), conjunctions (and ,but, for,
etcetera),
and the to in an infinitive (to run, to eat--you would
capitalize run and eat).
If the author of a work has used capital letters or used lower case letters for
something that one would not normally use them, retain his or her format.
Hyphen in Suffix -like
When using the suffix -like, put a hyphen between the root word and -like.
Plurals of Nouns Ending in -o
The plurals of words ending in -o are formed by either adding -s or by
adding -es. The plurals of many words can be formed either way. To
determine whether a particular word ends in -s or -es (or if the word can be spelled
either way), check your dictionary or the list below. There are two helpful rules:
a. All words that end in a vowel plus -o (-ao, -eo, -io, -oo, -uo) have plurals
that end in just -s: stereo--stereos; studio--studios; duo--duos
b. All musical terms ending in -o have plurals ending in just -s.
piano--pianos; cello--cellos; solo--solos
For the rest, you have to learn the plural forms of words ending in -o:
-os
os or oes
albinos
combos
echoes
advocatoes/os
ghettoes/os
armadillos gazebos
embargoes
buffaloes/os
autos
infernos
heroes
hoboes/os
cargoes/os
bravos
kimonos
potatoes
innuendoes/os
palmettoes/os
broncos
logos
tomatoes
desperadoes/os
lassoes/os
cantos
marachinos
torpedoes
peccadilloes/os
dodoes/os
casinos
ponchos
vetoes
mangoes/os
tornadoes/os
-oes
mulattoes/os