Week 14 & 15

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Week 14 & 15. Instructor: Tsuei -fen Chen Term:100-2. Four Kinds of Sentences in English. Complex Sentences. How to Write a Complex Sentence. Three Kinds of Dependent Clauses. Noun Clause. A noun clause is a dependent clause that functions as a noun. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Week 14 & 15

Instructor: Tsuei-fen ChenTerm:100-2

Simple sentence

Compound sentence

Complex sentence

Compound-complex sentence

Four Kinds of Sentences in English

• A complex

sentence is a combination of one independent clause and one (or more) dependent clause(s).

What is a complex

sentence?

Complex Sentences

An

independent clause

A subordinator

A dependent clause

A comple

x senten

ce

How to Write a Complex Sentence

Adverb clause

Adjective clause

Noun clause

Three Kinds of Dependent Clauses

A noun clause is a dependent clause that

functions as a noun. It is often part of an independent clause. It can be a subject or an object.

Noun Clause

1. that clauses, which began with the word

that 2. if/whether clauses, which begin with the

words whether or if 3. question clauses, which begin with a

question word, such as who, what, where, when, or how

Three Kinds of Noun Clauses

What the newspaper reported was incorrect. People once believed that the world was flat. We were happy that the semester was over. Who first challenged the belief that the world

was flat?

Sample Sentences

A that clause is a dependent noun clause that

begins with the word that.

That Clauses

1. After the independent clause verb—is the

most common position of a noun clause and functions as the object of that verb

e.g. The catalog states that science courses require a laboratory period.

Positions of That Clause

2. After certain adjectives. A that clause can

also follow certain adjectives such as happy, glad, proud, pleased, sad, upset, worried, sorry, certain, surprised, and sure.

e.g. The class was surprised that the instructor canceled the final exam.

Positions cont’d

3. After certain nouns. A that clause can follow

certain nouns such as idea, theory thought, claim, assertion, statement, belief, notion, and opinion.

e.g. No one believed Galileo’s theory that Earth revolves around the sun.

Positions cont’d

4. At the beginning of a sentence. A that

clause at the beginning of a sentence functions as the subject of the independent clause verb.

e.g. That Earth is getting warmer is certain.

Positions cont’d

An if/whether clause is a dependent noun

clause that begins with the subordinator whether or if.

Whether is more formal than if. If/whether clauses are statements, not

questions. If/whether clauses use statement word order

(subject-verb) and do not contain do, does, or did.

If/Whether Clauses

The patient wanted to know whether Dr. Chen

practices acupuncture. The patient wanted to know whether or not Dr.

Chen practices acupuncture. The patient wanted to know whether Dr. Chen

practices acupuncture or not. The patient wants to know if Dr. Chen

practices acupuncture. The patient wants to know if Dr. Chen

practices acupuncture or not.

Sample Sentences

Question: Is the test easy?Statement: The students want to know if the test is easy.Question: Does he know the answer?Statement: I want to know whether he knows the answer.

Sample Sentences cont’d

A question clause is a dependent noun clause

that begins with a subordinator such as who, what, when, where, why, how, how much, how long, and so on.

Question Clauses

1. The subordinator is the subject of the

clause

e.g. The police do not know who committed the robbery.

Two Patterns of Question Clauses

2. the subordinator is not the subject of the

clause.

e.g. The police do not know when the robbery happened.

Patterns cont’d

The word order in question clauses is

statement order (subject + verb), not question order (verb + subject).

Questions clauses do not contain do, does, or did because they are not questions even though they begin with a question word.

Word Order in Question Clauses

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