HISTORY 1CC3 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Adpositional Phrase, Herman Melville, Gettysburg Address

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Typically you can put a noun marker in front of word; it is make sense it is a noun: the, a, an, can function as, subject, d. o, i. o, p. n, o. p, pronouns, remember: who and whom are pronouns, adjective. Answer: what kind, which one, how many, adverb. Answer: how, where, when, why, to what extent, preposition. Singular: -one, -body, -thing, each, ether, neither. Plural: both, few, many, several, on the fence (look at prep phrase), more, all, most, any, none, some, collective nouns. See if acting as a group or unit: measurement, percentage, fractions: Look how it"s being used in the sentence first. If not look at prepositional phrase (fraction or percentage: ex: 90% the the student body is at the event. 90% of the students are doing their homework: the following words take singular verbs, civics, gymnastics, physics, linguistics, mathematics, measles, mumps, molasses, news, the following words take plural verbs: Binoculars, pants, shars, eyeglasses, slacks: olympics, phrases, adjective phrase.

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