Saturday, September 17, 2016

Sentence making in English, revised -1


We express our thoughts, desires, necessities, requirements, feelings to others through, gestures (smile), sounds (Oh) , words (Yes/No), sentences (Thank you very much), Questions (What are you doing?) etc.
 A sentence is a group of words made by a speaker to say something to others. When we  speak a sentence, we should have a subject to speak about and we should also tell something about the subject. In other words we do two things when we make a sentence.
1. We say the name of a person or place or  thing. The name of the person place or thing is called the subject.
Jack is an expert swimmer.
The weather is fine.
The Siberia is the Coldest place on the Earth.
2. We say/speak something about the person or thing. The part of the sentence that  gives some information about the person, place or thing is called predicate. The  Thing refers to anything
Jack is an expert swimmer.
The weather is fine.
Siberia is the coldest place on the earth.
Generally the subject comes at the beginning of the sentence
(before predicate), but sometimes it may come after predicate.
Here comes Shane.
The Subject can be a
Noun ( cat,  man, chair etc.)
e.g.  cat  is a small animal.
         A cat is sitting on the fence.
Noun phrases  Is  a group of words  ( A cat on the wall, A man on the street,  The chair at the end of the row etc.) e.g.  A cat on the wall is ready to jump
        
NOTE: A noun  phrase might contain several inter connected words (e.g. a cat on the wall). A noun phrase should be considered a single word unit when making sentences. In the above examples  (Noun and Noun Phrase) the subject in both the sentences takes the verb is 
Pronoun (Personal)  – I, we, you, they, he, she and it
e.g. I am a student. 
        We are Indians.
Proper noun (New York, Indian ocean, Alex, President  Obama etc.)
e.g. New York is a Big city.
Abstract noun ( Intelligence, Virtue etc.)
e.g. Intelligence is human trait.
Common noun ( Sea, lake, peak, animal , uncle, etc.)
e.g. Animals are not human
Adjective (The rich, the poor, Cold etc.)
e.g. Obesity is a disease. (Rich = rich people)
Actions (Swimming, watching, wrestling etc.)  
e.g. Swimming is a good exercise
Interrogative pronoun  (What, Which, who whom whose.)
e.g. What is your name?
For more information on Nouns Please click 
For more information and explanation on Nouns please click Noun
There are some sentences that don’t require subject. Look at the following sentences.
1.When someone does a favor to you, say
    Thank you very much.
    Thanks
    That’s, very kind of you.
    Thanks a lot
2.When you require someone’s help, say
    Could you please hold this for some time?
    Would you please mind moving a little bit?
    Please help me, lift this bag.
3. When you want to interrupt someone’s
talk/ privacy say
    Excuse me. Or  May I ……?
4. When you didn’t hear something, say
    Pardon me/excuse me / could you please repeat that/sorry
5. When you cause harm to others unintentionally.
    I am sorry, I am extremely sorry, sorry for……, Sorry I didn’t ……
6 Appreciating someone
    That’s it,  fantastic, marvelous, well-done etc.
7. When you are introduced to someone for first time, say
    Hello, glad/pleased/happy, +  to meet you.
8. When some asked for information and you don’t know that, say
    Sorry, Sorry I don’t know, Sorry I am not aware of this/that
10.Wishing/Greeting people or Taking leave                                             
   12.01 a.m. Up to 11.59.a.m. Good morning
   Exactly at 12.00 noon -  Good noon
   12.00 noon to 4.00 p.m. Good afternoon
   4.00 till 12.00 midnight – Good evening
   After 12.00 midnight- Good morning  
   Good bye./Goodnight./See you/see you soon - Generally speaking
11.Parting with someone.
   Day time – say good day, see you/see you soon , bye etc.
   Evening – say goodnight/ bye/see you (up to 11.59 p.m.)
   Good day/night is same as saying bye
12. Issuing commands/orders (Imperative sentences)
e.g. Don’t move. 
       Sit down etc.
In imperative sentences the subject is left out.
Imperative sentences are command/order  type sentences e.g. don’t shout Don’t shout (= you don’t shout) the subject you is left out. Some times tag question is added at the end, ‘don’t shout,  will you?’
13.  Good wishes on someone’s
  Birth day – Happy grand day, congratulation
  New year  - Wish you a very happy/prosperous new year
  Marriage  - Wish you a very happy married life/congratulation
  Achievement – Well done/excellent/marvelous + congratulation  + firm hand shake.
There are some sentences that  require dummy  subjects  in the sentence structure – We shall see this in future posts.
It and there are the two dummy subjects used in English
e.g. It is impossible to bend a tree.
        There is no alternative to hard work.

 Will continue ........, See you soon. 
 End of this post 

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