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Correcting Common Sentence Errors

Correcting Common Sentence Errors. Finding and Fixing Comma Splices, Run-ons, Fragments and Parallelism. Do you want papers with fewer r ed marks? . This workshop will:. Help you identify common sentence errors Give you easy ways to make corrections

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Correcting Common Sentence Errors

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  1. Correcting Common Sentence Errors Finding and Fixing Comma Splices, Run-ons, Fragments and Parallelism

  2. Do you want papers with fewer red marks?

  3. This workshop will: • Help you identify common sentence errors • Give you easy ways to make corrections • Enable you to develop your own personal editing checklist

  4. This workshop will NOT: • Make your sentence errors disappear • Guarantee “A” papers But it will help you get closer to your goal of less red, more well said

  5. Examine the following: • In addition, ObafemiAwolowo was a leader who believed that the state should offer resources for example, he introduced free primary education and free health care in the Western Region. • Citizens who had worked hard over the year are being recognized with an award for their service to the nation these citizens celebrate with their leaders. • FruNdi stood up, no matter what, and he formed a political party to challenge the dictator. • Traditional dances with different colors of dressing. • They will tend to find happiness if their marriage is successful, their investment they made for retirement were successful and also with their children achievement in life.

  6. First Example In addition, ObafemiAwolowo was a leader who believed that the state should offer resources, for example, he introduced free primary education and free health care in the Western Region. • Identify subjects and verbs • What is the relationship? • Think about ideas • Why did the author believe these ideas should be connected? • Identify sentence type • Comma used between two independent clauses

  7. Second Example Citizens who had worked hard over the year are being recognized with an award for their service to the nation these citizens celebrate with their leaders. • Identify subjects and verbs • What is the relationship? • Think about ideas • Why did the author believe these ideas should be connected? • Identify sentence type • No punctuation between clauses

  8. Third Example FruNdi stood up, no matter what, and he formed a political party to challenge the dictator. • Identify subjects and verbs • What is the relationship? • Think about ideas • Why did the author believe these ideas should be connected? • Identify sentence type • Compound sentence

  9. Fourth Example Traditional dances with different colors of dressing. • Identify subjects and verbs • What is the relationship? • Think about ideas • What is the author trying to explain? • Identify sentence type • An incomplete thought

  10. Fifth Example They will tend to find happiness if their marriage is successful, their investment they made for retirement were successful and also with their children achievement in life. • Identify conjunction • Think about what is joined together • Are the items joined the same? • Conjunctions require parallel structure

  11. Comma Splice • Very common error • Using a comma incorrectly to separate independent thoughts • Commas have specific uses • Link to Comma Rule power point • Commas can never separate independent clauses in academic writing

  12. Run-On • Punctuation is necessary for reader to process ideas. • Separating or joining independent and/or dependent clauses follows specific rules for punctuation.

  13. Correcting Run-Ons and Comma Splices • Four ways • Add punctuation that separates (period [full stop], exclamation, semi-colon) • Use a comma and FANBOYS • Use a semi-colon and a transitional word • Create a dependent clause, using appropriate punctuation

  14. Fragment • An incomplete thought • Leaves the reader with a question • Requires either • A subject • A real verb • An independent clause • Removal of dependent word

  15. Parallelism • Items must be the same grammatical structure • Determine words that indicate parallel structure • Understand: • Parts of Speech • Clauses • Phrases

  16. A Subject • What is a subject? • Usually a noun or noun phrase • Autumn • The very messy room • A verbal • Eating lots of candy • To debate • A clause • The woman who walks to work everyday • How ever long it takes • All sentences in English require a subject except commands.

  17. A Real Verb • What is a real verb? • An action or feeling word that is conjugated correctly • talks • will have been developed • Not a verbal • He running down the field • -ing only becomes a verb with the helping verb BE • Sheto take classes this semester

  18. Practice • Review the following collection of words. • Determine sentence type or • Determine structural error • If there is an error, how can you correct it?

  19. Practice • This is when a friend sees you for who you are and not being hasty to judge you. • Telephone systems are important because they connect people. • A friendship should make both people in the relationship happy, both people should have fun when they spend time together, accept one another for whom they are. • Though human beings can clash easily when they are not acceptable to each other, which makes it hard for some people to maintain many friends. • Although both genders have probabilities in having common ways in expressing friendships with the same gender, but also there are still a lot of particular habits they differ from each other; communication, how they show support and intimacy.

  20. Recognition and Correction • In your own writing, be aware: • Clauses and Phrases • Sentence Types • Avoid four common structural errors • Comma Splice • Run-On • Fragment • Faulty parallel structure

  21. Your Own Checklist Do you ever see these markings on your papers? CS Frag RO Not //

  22. Your Own Checklist Add these to your editing checklist when revising a paragraph or essay. CS– comma splice – look at either side of the comma. Reassess punctuation. RO – run-on – find the complete thoughts; do they need to be joined together? Separate or join appropriately. Frag– fragment – you need to have a subject and a verb to have a sentence. Not // - not parallel – find the conjunction and determine part of speech, clause or phrase; change parallel items to same type of grammatical structure.

  23. Any questions? Thanks for your attention.

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