longer sentences

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Longer Sentences

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Longer Sentences. Are long sentences bad?. Bad long sentences are confusing and awkward. Well written long sentences add clarity and elegance. Propositions and Sentences. Propositions are stated or understood ideas presented (or assumed) in a given sentence. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Longer Sentences

Longer Sentences

Page 2: Longer Sentences

Are long sentences bad?

• Bad long sentences are confusing and awkward.

• Well written long sentences add clarity and elegance.

Page 3: Longer Sentences

Propositions and Sentences

• Propositions are stated or understood ideas presented (or assumed) in a given sentence.

• A sentence can contain one or more implicit or explicit propositions.

Page 4: Longer Sentences

Sentences and Propositions

• I am an English professor. (factual claim)– Someone called “I” exists.– This person is an English professor.– Something called an “English professor” exists.

• I am a good English professor. (argument)– Being an English professor is something that can

be measured or evaluated; the evaluation was positive.

Page 5: Longer Sentences

Propositions in a Sentence

• Know what propositions will be accepted, challenged, or rejected by your readers.– I was a student in your English 191 class.– English 191 should be split into a two-semester

sequence.– I got an F in chemistry.– The F is unreasonable because I did all the

homework.

Page 6: Longer Sentences

Levels of Abstraction

Ford Focus

Car

Transportation

Page 7: Longer Sentences

Levels of Specificity

I love breakfast. I love a breakfast of eggs, sausage, biscuits, and

orange juice.I love a breakfast of three scrambled eggs, one

link of turkey sausage, two buttermilk biscuits, and a half pint of extra pulpy orange juice.

Page 8: Longer Sentences

Ways to Add Length

Addition – Adjectives, adverbs, noun phrases

Coordination– Independent clauses (coordinating conjunctions)

Subordination– Dependent clauses (subordinating conjunctions,

relative pronouns)

Page 9: Longer Sentences

Simple Additions

• The boy kicked the ball.• The young boy violently kicked the soccer ball.• The eight-year old boy violently kicked his

older brother’s soccer ball across the yard.• The eight-year old boy, who had long dreamed

of becoming a soccer player, mightily kicked his older brother’s soccer ball across the yard.

Page 10: Longer Sentences

Compounding

• The boy kicked the ball, and it flew across the yard.

• The boy kicked the ball, it flew across the yard, and his older brother was impressed.

• The boy kicked the ball, it flew across the yard, his older brother was impressed, and he agreed to bring him to practice next week.

Page 11: Longer Sentences

Your Turn

• Expand the following with two additional independent clauses:– The girl won a scholarship.

Page 12: Longer Sentences

Subordination

• The boy kicked the ball.• The boy kicked the soccer ball because he

wanted to impress his older brother.• The boy kicked the soccer ball because he

wanted to impress his older bother, who was on the school’s soccer team.

Page 13: Longer Sentences

Your Turn

• Expand the following with a dependent clause:– The woman was promoted.

Page 14: Longer Sentences

Basic Cumulative Sentence

• Begin with a kernel:– They watched television.

• Add “free modifiers”:– They watched television, the man staring intently

at the talk show, cradling his bloody hand, his wife glancing idly from the screen to the broken window, both of them longing to turn off the set and discuss their son’s decision to marry Catherine.

Page 15: Longer Sentences

Free Modifiers vs. Trains

• Free Modifiers can be shuffled around in a sentence and still make sense. (good)

• Trains are linked together like the cars of a train. (bad)

Page 16: Longer Sentences

Free Modifiers vs. Trains

• The boy sat down to write, retrieving a pen from his bag, which has grandmother had given him for Christmas, which had been a really disappointing holiday that had not been worth the cost of the plane ticket, which was considerable given his lack of money, a problem brought about by losing his job at the camera store, which he had enjoyed because of his keen interest in photography.

Page 17: Longer Sentences

Writing Cumulative Sentences

• The man felt a sudden pain in his chest.• The pain lasted for several minutes and grew stronger.• The man had pains in his left arm, then his back, then

his neck.• The man began to have trouble breathing.• The man broke into a cold sweat and felt lightheaded.• The man was having a heart attack.• He was not aware that it was a heart attack.• He was about to die.

Page 18: Longer Sentences

Cumulative Treatment

• The man felt a sudden pain in his chest, the pain lasting for several minutes, growing stronger with each minute, spreading to his left arm, to his back, to his neck; he struggled to breathe, breaking into a cold sweat and becoming lightheaded, never suspecting that this was a heart attack and that his life would soon be over.

Page 19: Longer Sentences

Tips for Cumulative

• Use phrases instead of clauses (who, which, that):– The dog, who hungered for its supper,• The dog, hungry for its supper,

– The scout was lost in the forest, so he climbed a tree to get a better view.• Lost in the forest, the scout climbed a tree to get a

better view.

Page 20: Longer Sentences

Participial Phrases

• Add –ing and –ed verbals instead of clauses– The boxer sized up his opponent, peering into his

determined eyes, scanning the muscles of his arms and legs, scrutinizing his balance and position on the mat, calculating his odds for a quick knockout.

– The sloppily packaged parcel arrived on his doorstep yesterday, unaddressed, unopened, still unnoticed by its would-be victim.

Page 21: Longer Sentences

Backtrack/Clarify

• Cumulative elements can clarify or “back pedal” to earlier parts to give more info:– The man waited anxiously, constantly checking his

watch, straining his ears for the sound of the train whistle, sweat pouring profusely down his brow, knowing his boss would not give him a second chance.

Page 22: Longer Sentences

Other examples

• The cat purred, rubbing itself against the man’s leg, eager for the tuna the man had just dumped into a bowl.

• The speaker paused, allowing tension to build, hoping her audience would never forget what she was about to say.

• The fencer fought with skill and precision, swinging his rapier one moment, stabbing the next, timing each attack for maximum effect.

Page 23: Longer Sentences

Exercise

• The woman was recklessly driving.– She was weaving in and out of traffic.– She was blasting the radio at maximum volume.– There was a pistol hidden underneath the seat.– Her husband’s body was stuffed in the trunk.

Page 24: Longer Sentences

Exercise with Kernels

• The child sat on Santa’s knee.• The hunter stalked his prey.• The doctor observed her patient.