Participial Phrases - East Penn School District
Download
Report
Transcript Participial Phrases - East Penn School District
Participial Phrases
Mitchell Faulkner, Zach Klan, James
Garner
Lesson 1! Definition
• A phrase consisting of a participle and its
related words, such as modifiers, and
compliments, all of which act together as an
adjective.
Lesson 2! Indicators
• The participle: a verb form (past or present
participle, usually ending in –ed or –ing)
that is used as an adjective.
Lesson 3! Examples
• The running water is healthy!
• The falling snow is beautiful!
• Working around the clock, the men helped
the old people.
• The pond was frozen over since early
December, is now safe for ice skating.
GAME TIME!!!
The Rules
• This game, in some countries, is considered
around the world… but it is completely
original.
• You stand up and move to the person next to
you. Then you proceed to answer the
question that you are asked, to move on.
• If you are wrong you have to sit down in the
person’s seat, and they move on.
Taste the rainbow
• The boy ran!
• The play, begun sharply at eight, ended in
two hours.
Next Level
• The water boiled over the pot.
• The whispering breeze scattered seeds.
Your moving on!
• Holding the torch steadily, Merdine
approached the monster.
• After the storm I stepped in a puddle.
Doing good
• Merdine waved the torch over her head,
making a great ring of white light.
• After running a mile the boy was tired.
Keep going!
• The boy got a weekly allowance of ten
dollars.
• Discouraged by the long hours and low pay,
my sister finally quit her job.
Level 6!
• Curling my toes and squinting, I waited for
the doctor to puncture my arm with a
needle.
• The boy hates getting shots, and will do
anything to get out of doing them.
Level 7
• My father’s hair, is streaked with gray and
receding on both sides.
• My father is old.
Wish we were you…..
• Refusing to surrender and functioning with
limited supplies, General Anderson waited
for reinforcements at Fort Sumter.
• Most people find history lame and boring,
but not history teachers!
…..Not
• The Battle of Gettysburg, a significant
turning point in the war lasting on three
days, was won by the Union Army.
• Who doesn’t love learning about American
History?
You’re getting the hang of this
• Soon to win the game, the boy was excited.
• General Sherman blazing his way through
the South led the campaign famously called
The March to the Sea.
You’re doing swimmingly
• We will learn about the civil war in
American Studies this year.
• Surrendering at Appomattox Courthouse to
Ulysses S. Grant, Robert E. Lee acquiesced
to ending the bloodiest four years in
American History
Cow tipping, fun had by all!
• The boy wanted to know why his
classmates PowerPoint was chalk full of
Civil war sentences.
• Colonel Chamberlain, credited with saving
the left flank of the Union Army at the
Battle of Gettysburg used a textbook
maneuver to defeat the Confederate forces.
Love makes the world go round
• Capturing the city of Vicksburg, Ulysses S.
Grant spilt the Confederacy in two.
• The boys friends explained to him that they
liked the Civil war.
Who says your to old to……
• General Pickett, humiliated by the defeat of
his division at Gettysburg, never forgave
General Lee.
• The boy said he would be humiliated as
well if he had lost like that.
TRICK OR TREAT!
• The boy was thankful when his classmates
ran out of civil war sentences.
• Using his loudest voice, the actor recited the
famous speech.
Horrible Jokes and Grammar…
• The class found their peers jokes to be very
funny and laughed.
• Forgetting her lines, the actress tried to
regain her poise.
…..the best way to learn
• The boy thought his dog sounded a bit like a
puppy.
• Taken by surprise the audience jumped
when the gun sounded.
“Leggo my Eggo”
• The boy enjoyed waffles and ate them every
morning.
• The woman crying quietly, was deeply
moved by the performance.
Grammar is important kids…
• The boy wondered why he was constantly
being brought up.
• Made by the famous designer, the costumes
were gorgeous.
…so stay in school, its cool.
• The girl liked it when her boyfriend got her
flowers.
• The roses thrown onto the stage were a sign
of appreciation.
Level 21!
• The girl now failing trigonometry went to
go find herself a tutor.
• The funny actress, entering the stage
backwards, caused the people to laugh
Oooooooo its Level 22!
• Turning the lights to blue, the stage
manager made the scene appear like night.
• The boy liked poetry because he could
rhyme on a dime.
Omg! level 23!
• The student’s teacher was very proud of
their hard work.
• The audience delighted with the
performance, began to clap wildly.
“Green eggs and ham Sam I am.”
• The father read Green Eggs and Ham to his
child.
• General P.T. Beauregard, faced with
possible surrender, fired the first shot
against the North, which began the
American Civil War.
Almost there now…
• General Stonewall Jacks, the most famous
Confederate general and wounded by his
men, died at the of Chancellorsville.
• The boy cried when he saw the Civil War
sentences yet again.
Last one!
• Gone with the Wind and Uncle Tom’s Cabin
became popular novels depicting fictional
events and characters from this tumultuous
period in history.
• The class applauded their peers on their
hard efforts to help them learn.
Good Job!
You win.