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Tiêu đề Choosing the best pronoun for a tricky sentence
Người hướng dẫn Mr. Levi Martin, Associate Professor
Trường học Adventure Land University
Chuyên ngành English
Thể loại Field trip report
Năm xuất bản 2012
Thành phố Adventure Land
Định dạng
Số trang 6
Dung lượng 226,28 KB

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& This sentence should say that it was “the only one of the many that takes.” When you get into “only one of ____” territory, you know that the pronoun is singular and needs a singular v

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7 The clerk wisely never dates anyone from work You can eliminate the vague pronoun which

in several different ways Another possible correction: The clerk’s policy never to date anyone from work is wise.

8 The clerk quotes poetry because she’s hoping to become a literary critic; Jeffrey majored in literary criticism in college, so in theory he is a good match for her In reality, they would hit

the divorce court within a month, but the problem with the original sentence is the pronoun,

not Jeffrey’s romance In the original sentence it refers to nothing Jeffrey didn’t major in literary critic (the expression in the original); he majored in literary criticism, an expression that

replaces it in the corrected sentence.

9 In the original sentence, which refers to the fact that the day passed without incident The

pro-noun can’t replace an entire sentence One possible fix: “The fact that the day passed was a great relief to me.”

0 One what? The pronoun has no noun to refer to, just the verb eating Reword to add some food (“ saw me eating an ice cream cone”) and the one will make sense.

! The pronoun everyone is singular, so it must be paired with his or her, not their.

@ The pronoun this needs one noun to replace, not a whole sentence Eliminate the pronoun with

something like “The lunch packs were a at me.”

Mr Levi Martin Associate Professor, English 103 Field Trip Report, 1/18/12

I left school at 10:03 a.m with 45 freshmen, all of whom were excited about

our visit to Adventure Land The day passed without incident, which was a

great relief to me I sat in the Adventure Land Bar and Grille for five hours while the youngsters visited Space Camp, Pirates’ Mountain, and other attractions that are overrated but popular The group saw me eating and said

they wanted one too, but I replied that everyone had their his or her school-issued lunch This was a disappointment, and several students threw

them at me We got on one of the vans that was were overdue for

mainte-nance The motor whirred loudly, and it scared the van driver We drove to Makoski Brake and Wheel Repairs because the driver said their its

exper-tise was what we needed Makoski is also the only one of the many repair

shops on Route 9 that take takes credit cards, which was helpful because I

had spent all my money in the Adventure Land Bar and Grille.

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3 6

2 4 5 7

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8 0

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Chapter 11: Choosing the Best Pronoun for a Tricky Sentence

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# In the original, the pronoun them refers to nothing Add “lunch packs” or “sandwiches” and

you’re in business

$ The sentence should read “one of the vans that were,” not “one of the vans that was.” The

pro-noun that is a stand-in for vans.

% What does it mean? The motor didn’t scare the driver; the whirring sound scared him But it

should replace a noun Fix this problem by saying that “the driver was scared” or a similar statement

^ Their shouldn’t refer to a company Try its.

& This sentence should say that it was “the only one of the many that takes.” When you get into

“only one of ” territory, you know that the pronoun is singular and needs a singular verb

* What does which mean? The fact that the repair shop takes credit cards! The pronoun can’t

replace all those words Rewrite to eliminate the pronoun with something like “Makoski’s acceptance of credit cards was helpful because .”

154 Part III: The Pickier Points of Correct Verb and Pronoun Use

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Chapter 12

Traveling in Time: Tricky Verb-Tense Situations

In This Chapter

䊳Choosing the proper tense to summarize speech

䊳Expressing unchangeable facts in the correct verb tense

䊳Putting events in order with verbals

I’ve always been attracted to sci-fi movies in which the heroes move around through the millennia I probably like fiddling with verb tense for exactly the same reason; standard English verbs allow writers and speakers to time travel You may not have a chief engineer

to warn you when the motor’s about to overheat, but you do have this chapter, which allows

you to practice some tricky verb-tense situations For example, did Arthur say that he has

or had a cold? Did or does Mars qualify as a planet? And what effect do verbals — hybrid

forms that are half verb, half another part of speech — have on the timing of events in a sen-tence? If you’re sure of all these issues, drop the book and play a round of miniature golf If you’re not completely certain, try your hand at these exercises

Telling Tales of the Past

Humans love to gossip, so I’m betting that your lunch table is filled with a ton of stories, many of which include summaries of what others have said or written Because you’re telling (actually, retelling) something that already happened, your base of operations is past tense Note the past-tense verbs in italics:

She caught Arthur with Stella, but he told her that he was only tying Stella’s bow tie and not nibbling her neck Then she said that Arthur brought her a box of candy with a note saying that no one else had eyes like hers.

What’s wrong with the preceding example? Apart from the fact that Arthur was indeed nib-bling Stella’s neck, nothing The verb tenses are all in the past because that’s where a sum-mary of speech resides So even if she still has incomparable eyes, in this paragraph the verb had is better (One important exception to the stay-in-past-tense-for-speech-summary

rule is explained in the next section, “The Unchanging Universe: When You’re Stuck in the Present.”)

A common error is to switch from one tense to another with no valid reason I often hear statements such as this one (the verbs are italicized):

So she sat home and waited for the phone to ring He finally called Then he says that the big dance is a waste of time and they will skip the whole thing!

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Penalty box If she sat and waited until he called (all past-tense verbs), the next three verbs (says, is, and will skip) should be in past tense also (said, was, and would skip).

Take a crack at selecting the right verb from the choices in parentheses — circle your answer Just to be sure you’re paying attention, I sneak in a few verbs that aren’t sum-mary of speech and therefore shouldn’t be in past tense

Q.During yesterday’s tryouts for the new reality show, Grammarian Idol Factor, Roberta

(tells/told/will tell) the producer that she (likes/liked/will like) selecting pronouns while dangling 200 feet above the ground

A.told, liked The first answer is easy If the tryouts were yesterday, the fact that Roberta

lied to the producer (she actually hates pronouns) has to be in past tense Told is past

tense The second part is trickier She may always “like” selecting pronouns, but in sum-mary of speech, past tense is the way to go (with one exception, which I note in the next section of this chapter)

1 The director of the show, Grammarian Idol Factor, explained to the candidates that he

(has/had/will have) to select a maximum of 30 contestants

2 Most of the contestants eagerly replied that they (want/wanted/would want) to make

the final 30

3 Roberta, who (likes/like/had liked) to play hard to get, screamed at the director that he

(doesn’t/didn’t) have the faintest idea how to select the best applicants

4 One who didn’t make the cut, Michael Hooper, told me that Roberta (is/was/had been)

the clear winner of the first three challenges — the noun toss, the pronoun shuffle, and the verb race

5 Michael also whispered something surprising: Roberta (fails/failed/had failed) the

psychological screening

6 Last week when the psychologist (asks/asked) Roberta her feelings about various parts of

speech, Roberta said that the linking verbs (do/did) present a problem

7 “Why (don’t/didn’t) you like linking verbs?” continued the psychologist.

8 Roberta explained that any form of the verb to be (annoys/annoyed) her.

9 “I (try/tried) to avoid any sentence with that sort of verb,” added Roberta.

10 She went on to say that adjectives (are/were/had been) her favorite part of speech.

11 The psychologist later reported that he (is/was/had been) worried about Roberta’s

reac-tion to punctuareac-tion

12 Roberta apparently said that commas (are/were/had been) “out to get her.”

13 She added that exclamation points (threaten/threatened/had threatened) her also.

14 The psychologist complained that quotation marks (hem/hemmed) him in and (make/

made) him feel trapped

15 Roberta and the psychologist disagreed, however, when Roberta said that the semicolon

(is/was) the best punctuation mark

156 Part III: The Pickier Points of Correct Verb and Pronoun Use

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16 The director said that he (doesn’t/didn’t) know what to make of Roberta’s punctuation

obsession

17 He declared that she (is/was) too unstable for a show that relies heavily on question marks.

18 The assistant director, on the other hand, whispered that Roberta (is/was) faking a

punc-tuation phobia just to attract attention

19 The camera operator added that he (knows/knew) many people who (are/were) truly

ter-rified by commas and apostrophes

20 In the final report on Roberta, the psychologist mentioned that she (is/was/had been)

afraid of punctuation because of a childhood attack by a mad copy editor

The Unchanging Universe: When You’re Stuck in the Present

Verb tenses express the march of time: past, present, and future actions But some things don’t march; they stay in one, unchanging state forever When you talk about these things, present tense is the only one that makes sense, no matter what else is going on in the sen-tence Take a look at these examples:

Wrong: Marty told me that the earth was a planet.

Why it is wrong: What is the earth now, a bagel? The unchanging fact, that the

earth is a planet, must be expressed in present tense, despite the fact that all other summarized speech should be in past tense (See “Telling Tales of the Past,”

the previous section in this chapter, for more information.)

Right: Marty told me that the earth is a planet.

Choose the correct verb from the parentheses in the following sentences To complicate your life, I mixed “eternal truths” with changeable information The eternal truths get present tense no matter what, but with the other stuff you’re on your own

Q.Although Marty knew that 10 plus 10 (equals/equaled) 20, she wrote “15” on the test as a gesture of defiance

A.equals In our number system (I’m not sure what they do on Mars), 10 added to 10

makes 20 No change is possible, so present tense is what you want here

21 Marty’s job as a schoolteacher won’t last very long if she keeps telling her class that each

molecule of water (has/had) three oxygen atoms

22 Science has never been Marty’s best subject, but she did explain that water (covers/

covered) nine tenths of the planet

23 I gently confronted her with the fact that land (makes/made) up about a quarter of the

earth’s surface

24 Marty sniffed and said that she (has/had) a cold and couldn’t think about the earth

anyway

25 We went out for a snack (bagels and cream cheese), and Marty told me that cheese (is/

was) a dairy product

157

Chapter 12: Traveling in Time: Tricky Verb-Tense Situations

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26 “Not the way they make it here,” I replied, pointing out that the product (is/was) mostly

artificial

27 Did anyone actually like guar gum, I wondered, and why (is/was) it on my bagel,

pretend-ing to be cheese?

28 Marty put on her best science teacher’s voice and intoned, “Dairy produce (comes/came)

from milk.”

29 “Do you know that guar gum (is/was) not naturally found in dairy?” I asked.

30 Marty shook her head and began to compute the tip, muttering that twenty percent of ten

dollars (is/was) two dollars

31 Ten years ago I took Marty to a restaurant that served only peanut butter, which (is/was)

made from nuts

32 Marty used to be a big fan of jelly, though she never liked strawberries because they

(have/had) seeds

33 Marty is such a fanatic about seeds that she once counted all the seeds on a strawberry

before she ate it; there (are/were) 45

34 Marty was very critical of the cuisine, even though she (knows/knew) almost nothing

about cooking

35 Marty at the time was following a vegetarian diet, which (does/did) not include meat.

Tackling the Timeline: Verbals to the Rescue

In Chapter 1 I explain the basic and “perfect” tenses of verbs (past, present, future, past perfect, present perfect, and future perfect) Here I drop you into a vat of boiling

grammar as you choose the best tense for some complicated elements called verbals.

Verbals, as the name implies, have a link with verbs, but they also have a link with other parts of speech (nouns, adjectives, and adverbs) Verbals never act as the verb

in a sentence, but they do influence the sense of time that the sentence conveys The three types of verbals are as follows:

⻬ Gerunds look like the -ing form of a verb but function as a noun; that is, a gerund

names a person, place, thing, or idea (“I like smiling,” commented Alice, who had just had her braces removed In this sentence, smiling is a gerund.)

⻬ Infinitives are what you get when you add “to” to a verb Infinitives may function

as nouns or they may take a descriptive role (“To be safe, Alice packed a few hundred rolls of breath mints.” In this sentence, to be is an infinitive.)

⻬ Participles are the -ing or -ed or -en form of a verb, plus a few irregulars They’re

also the form of the verb that joins up with has, have, or had Participles

describe, often explaining what action someone is doing, but they never function

as the actual verb in a sentence (“Inhaling sharply, Elaine stepped away from the blast of peppermint that escaped from Alice’s mouth.” In this sentence, inhaling

is a participle giving information about Elaine The verb is stepped.) All three verbals give time information The plain form (without has, have, having, or had) shows action happening at the same time as the action expressed by the main verb in the sentence The perfect form (with has, have, having, or had) places the

action expressed by the verbal before the action of the main verb

158 Part III: The Pickier Points of Correct Verb and Pronoun Use

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