Sunday 5 October 2014

Kinds of Sentences - 1


Kinds of Sentences - 1

    There are 3 types of sentences they are 

  1. Simple Sentences
  2. Compound Sentences
  3. Complex Sentences


What is a simple sentence? 
A sentence which has one subject and one verb.It  also expresses the complete meaning in a sentence.
It is an independent(main) clause.
Eg. Jim exercises daily in the morning.
      s              v
What  is a  Compound Sentence?
A sentence which has one or more subjects and  verb. It is a combination of two independent (main)clause  added by a coordinating conjunction.
Eg. Jim  was exercising so john went out.
      s                  v                  s       v

What  is a  Complex Sentence?
A sentence which has one independent (main) clause and one or more subordinate(dependent) clause. A Complex Sentence always has a subordinating conjunctions.
Eg. I did not see Jim today because  he has gone to exercise.
      s                 v     s               su co           s                       v

Coordinationg conjuctions  some eg are \and\ for\ but .
subordinatong conjuctions are because\since\after\although.
subject is a  name \noun
verb is an  action \ doing a activity.


IC INDEPENDENT CLAUSE
DC DEPENDENT CLAUSE
SC CUBORDINATE CONJUCTION
CC COORDINATING CONJUCTION
S SUBJECT
V VERB










Saturday 4 October 2014

IDIOMS - What Do They Mean?

IDIOMS


Definition of IDIOMS

group of words established by usage as having a meaning not deducible from those of the individual words (e.g. over the moonsee the light). - Oxford Dictionary

An idiom (Latinidioma, "special property", f. Greekἰδίωμα – idiōma, "special feature, special phrasing", f. Greekἴδιος – idios, "one’s own") is a combination of words that have a figurative meaning owing to its common usage. An idiom's figurative meaning is separate from the literal meaning. There are thousands of idioms and they occur frequently in all languages. There are estimated to be at least twenty-five thousand idiomatic expressions in the English language. - Wikipedia

An idiom is a phrase where the words together have a meaning that is different from the dictionary definitions of the individual words, which can make idioms hard for ESL students and learners to understand. - Idiomsite.com

Examples













x
The following sentences contain idioms. The fixed words constituting the idiom in each case are bolded
a. She is pulling my legto pull someone's leg means to trick them by telling them something untrue.
b. When will you drop them a lineto drop someone a line means to send a note to or call someone.
c. You should keep an eye out for that. to keep an eye out for something means to maintain awareness of it so that you notice it as it occurs.
d. I can't keep my head above waterto keep one's head above water means to manage a situation.
e. It's raining cats and dogsto rain cats and dogs means to rain very heavily (a downpour).
f. Oh no! You spilled the beans! to spill the beans means to let out a secret.
g. Why are you feeling blueto feel blue means to feel sad.
h. That jacket costs an arm and a leg– an arm and a leg means something is very expensive.
i. It is not rocket science– rocket science means something is difficult. Figuratively, not rocket science means not difficult.
j. Put a cork in itput a cork in it is an extremely impolite, informal way to say, shut up, be quiet, and stop talking.