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Participial Phrases

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English III AP * Adapted from ... Participle is a verbal (look like a verb, but is not). Can end in ing (present participle) or ed (past participle). Can occur ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Participial Phrases


1
Participial Phrases
  • Mrs. Henson
  • English III AP
  • Adapted from Sentence Composing for High School
    Students by Don Killgallon

2
Overview
  • Participles describe nouns or pronouns.
  • Participle is a verbal (look like a verb, but is
    not).
  • Can end in ing (present participle) or ed (past
    participle).
  • Can occur as
  • Sentence Openers
  • Subject-Verb Split
  • Sentence Closers

3
Models
  • Without Participles
  • With Participles
  • The sun rose clear and bright.
  • Spencer took half an hour.
  • The sun rose clear and bright, tinging the foamy
    crests of the waves with a reddish purple.
  • Alexander Dumas, Count of Monte Cristo
  • Spencer took half an hour, swimming in one of the
    pools which was filled with the seasonal rain,
    waiting for the pursuers to catch up to him.
  • Ray Bradbury, The Martian Chronicles

4
Placement of Participial Phrases
  • Sentence Openers
  • Whistling, he let the escalator waft him into the
    still night air.
  • Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451
  • Subject-Verb Splits
  • Eckels, balanced on the narrow path, aimed his
    rifle playfully.
  • Ray Bradbury, A Sound of Thunder
  • Sentence Closers
  • The entire crowd in the saloon gathered about me
    now, urging me to drink.
  • Richard Wright, Black Boy

5
Unscrambling 1
  1. black
  2. a little house
  3. perched on high piles
  4. in the distance
  5. appeared
  • A little house, perched on high piles, appeared
    black in the distance.
  • -Joseph Conrad, The Lagoon

6
Unscrambling 2
  1. with the cautious, half-furtive effort of the
    sightless
  2. and thumping his way before him
  3. he was a blind beggar
  4. carrying the traditional battered cane
  • He was a blind beggar, carrying the traditional
    battered cane and thumping his way before him
    with the cautious, half-furtive effort of the
    sightless.
  • -MacKinlay Kantor, A Man Who Had No Eyes

7
Unscrambling 3
  1. and yet knowing no way to avoid it
  2. that winter my mother and brother came
  3. buying furniture on the installment plan
  4. and we set up housekeeping
  5. being cheated
  • That winter my mother and brother came, and we
    set up housekeeping, buying furniture on the
    installment plan, being cheated, and yet knowing
    no way to avoid it.
  • -Richard Wright, Black Boy
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