



Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Prepare for your exams
Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points to download
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Community
Ask the community for help and clear up your study doubts
Discover the best universities in your country according to Docsity users
Free resources
Download our free guides on studying techniques, anxiety management strategies, and thesis advice from Docsity tutors
Parapro assessment writing portion Answers.pdf
Typology: Exams
1 / 5
This page cannot be seen from the preview
Don't miss anything!
Writing Mode:: Argumentative - Ans Purpose: to persuade Writing mode: narrative - Ans Purpose: to tell a story, share an experience, entertain Writing mode: informative - Ans Purpose: to teach or inform Writing mode: descriptive - Ans Purpose: to deliver sensory details to the reader Which point of view directly addresses the reader? - Ans Second Which is correct? Monday, may 18 2016 or Monday, may 18, 2016 - Ans Monday, may 18, 2016 When should italics be used vs. quotations when referencing? - Ans Quotation for short works, italics for everything else When do you use a semicolon? - Ans To join 2 independent clauses. Each clause could function as its own sentence (a comma can only be used if there is a conjunction such as "and" or "so". What type of word is "he" - Ans Pronoun What is an imperative sentence? - Ans A sentence that expresses a command and ends with a period or exclamation point Two independent clauses can only be joined by... - Ans a comma and a conjunction or a semicolon subjects - Ans who or what the sentence describes simple subjects - Ans noun or nouns that the sentence describes,without modifiers (dog) simple sentence - Ans A sentence consisting of one independent clause and no dependent clause (I am going to win) pronoun-antecedent agreement - Ans pronouns and antecedents must agree in number and gender Prepositional phrase - Ans Phrases that begin with a preposition and end with a noun or pronoun predicates - Ans the rest of the sentence that isn't the subject (The gigantic green character WAS FUNNIER THAT THE REST.) Predicate nominative - Ans Renames the subject (John is a CARPENTER) Predicate adjective - Ans Describes the subject (Margaret is BEAUTIFUL)
Phrase - Ans A group of words that go together but do not include a subject or a verb. (I know ALL THE SHORTEST ROUTES) Particles - Ans Minor function words like "not, in, out" Participles - Ans Words formed from verbs that are often used to modify (the RUNNING teenager collided with the cyclist)
Parallel structure or parallelism - Ans Using the same grammatical form in a sentence modifier - Ans a word or phrase meant to describe or clarify another word in the sentence misplaced modifier - Ans A modifier that is not placed near the word it modifies (ex: we gave the hot cocoa to the children that was filled with marshmallows) Is "neither" singular or plural and which verb correlates with it? - Ans Singular, is Interrogative (type of sentence) - Ans A question that ends with a question mark indirect subjects - Ans subjects that are implied. The subject is "you" but it doesn't appear in the sentence. (feed the short skinny dog first) (aka the understood you) Indirect object - Ans the words that tell us to or for whom the action is being done (he bought HER a hula hoop) independent clause - Ans can stand alone as a sentence Imperative (type of sentence) - Ans A command, instruction or request that ends with a period. How many basic forms of verbs are there? - Ans 5. The base form, the - s form, the - ing form, the past form, and the past participle form. Homophones - Ans Two or more words that have no particular relationship to one another except their identical pronunciations. Exclamatory (type of sentence) - Ans A statement or command that expresses emotions like anger, urgency or surprise and ends with an exclamation mark. every complete sentence can be divided into these 2 parts - Ans subject and predicate direct subjects - Ans subjects that appear in the text of the sentence