Home » Downloads » ENGL 333 » ENGL 333 Final
- In the sentence “That rabbits multiply so fast worries people”:
- A transitive verb:
- Adverbs are like adjectives in that they modify nouns.
- A conjunctive adverb can be a subordinating conjunction.
- “That” is often used to signal a noun clause.
- An intransitive verb transfers action to an indirect object.
- What is the predicate in the following: “They flew over the housetops.”
- Adverbs:
- An appositive adjective precedes the modified noun.
- What are functions of prepositional phrases?
- A noun clause is simply a clause that has a noun.
- In the sentence, “Candy is bad,” the subject is “candy.”
- The following has a clause within a clause: “I saw that which he stepped upon.”
- In the sentence “She is very tall”:
- What are the functions of “that” in the following: “Gourmets know that Julia Child wrote that ”
- The sentence “He is a worldly person” has an adverb.
- Progressive aspect is represented as a past perfect form of a verb.
- A relative pronoun can be “who” or “that.”
- What is a subordinate conjunction?
- What is the subject of the independent clause in the following: “While he ate, John saw his friend outside falling down the hill.”
- A relative clause is the same thing as an adjective clause.
- All sentences are clauses.
- The following has a prepositional particle: “He ran onto a platform.”
- An infinitive phrase is the preposition “in” plus a bare form of a verb.
- In the sentence “The two kids were in a hurry”
- The sentence “Sara has shoes that have holes in them” has a relative clause modifying “Sara.”
- “Tom,” “Janet,” Edward,” etc., are examples of pronouns.
- An adjective may be found before or after the modified noun.
- In the sentence “It is raining”, “it” is a dummy subject or has no reference.
- The three basic verb types are transitive, linking and equative.
- “And” is a conjunctive adverb.
- Which is the adjective in the following? “She was very tall.”
- What is “case” in reference to English pronouns?
- In the sentence “That subject bores me,” “that” introduces a noun clause.
- A grammatical subject:
- Expletive “there” replaces the object in a clause.
- In the following sentence, “What she does baffles people”:
- Which of the following contains an adjectival?
- The grammatical subject of a clause is always a noun.
- Which of the following is “form,” not “function?
- “This, that, these, and those” are examples of demonstrative pronouns.
- Which of the following has an adjective clause?
- A restrictive relative clause merely adds information.
- What is the main verb or verb phrase in the following: “Because the driver was careless his truck was hit by a speeding train.”
- What is the subject of the following: “To err is human.”
- A subordinate conjunction can signal an adverbial.
- An adjective clause is found after the modified noun.
- What is the auxiliary rule?
- How is a transitive verb di”erent from an intransitive one?
- A linking verb: