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7969

Joined: 26 Mar 2003 Posts: 5782 Location: Coastal Guangdong
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Posted: Thu Nov 02, 2006 12:13 pm Post subject: APPOSITIVES - a lesson (need help) |
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i'm trying to put together a lesson on appositives but have a question. let me provide some examples: appositives in [...]
1. Your friend [Bill] is in trouble.
2. My brother�s car, [a sporty red convertible], is the envy of my friends.
3. [The first state to ratify the US constitution], delaware is rich in history.
my question is this:
how do you determine which is the appositive/appositive phrase and which is the noun? is it that the noun is always the element of the sentence without which the sentence wont make sense?
to add to my confusion:
while noting the use of commas in one, why is the appositive in the following sentence [john kennedy], and in the second sentence its [the popular US president]? whats the difference between these two?
the popular US president [John Kennedy] was known for his eloquent speeches.
john kennedy, [the popular US president], was known for his eloquent speeches.
source:http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/grammar/g_appos.html
7969 |
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foreignDevil
Joined: 23 Jun 2003 Posts: 580
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Posted: Thu Nov 02, 2006 4:01 pm Post subject: Re: APPOSITIVES - a lesson (need help) |
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7969 wrote: |
i'm trying to put together a lesson on appositives but have a question. let me provide some examples: appositives in [...]
1. Your friend [Bill] is in trouble.
2. My brother�s car, [a sporty red convertible], is the envy of my friends.
3. [The first state to ratify the US constitution], delaware is rich in history.
my question is this:
how do you determine which is the appositive/appositive phrase and which is the noun? is it that the noun is always the element of the sentence without which the sentence wont make sense?
to add to my confusion:
while noting the use of commas in one, why is the appositive in the following sentence [john kennedy], and in the second sentence its [the popular US president]? whats the difference between these two?
the popular US president [John Kennedy] was known for his eloquent speeches.
john kennedy, [the popular US president], was known for his eloquent speeches.
source:http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/grammar/g_appos.html
7969 |
hey guy no problem! foreigndevil is here to the rescue! appositives are easy to spot! (and we all use them, these apositives! haha i just used an appositive).
I quickly skimmed.. all your example sentences demonstrate the use of an apposative. The apposative is simply the the noun/pronoun clause that is the same as the one immediately preceeding it in the sentence. For example:
President Bush, the U.S. president I do not like, will be leaving office soon
In this sentence, "the U.S. president" is the apostive... it directly repeats(in meaning) the (pro)noun preceeding it: President Bush.
no thanks necessary. it is all in a day's work.
p.s. i am a little bit drunk now. if i didn't cover some point of your original post, please follow up on it tomorrow. rest assured that foreigndevil will come to the grammar rescue.
foreigndevil |
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foreignDevil
Joined: 23 Jun 2003 Posts: 580
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Posted: Thu Nov 02, 2006 6:51 pm Post subject: |
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a little later... I am curious as to why you are doing a "lesson on appositves". in the end, appositives are just sub-ordinate clauses. is this your lesson? certainly if you are a journalism teacher teaching subordinate clauses would be useful. but i i don't get the "appositive" focus..
anyway have fun. woohooooo a poz it tive!!!!!!! yeah dog!
yeah yeah yeah!
dig it baby! |
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7969

Joined: 26 Mar 2003 Posts: 5782 Location: Coastal Guangdong
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Posted: Fri Nov 03, 2006 1:36 pm Post subject: |
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foreign devil, half of my classes are writing classes. any practice at all in constructing coherent sentences is good practice for these future english teachers. appositives arent that difficult to understand but in a few of the websites i looked to get information, i found some contradictions. the only question i really have that is unanswered is:
is there any one way to determine the appositive from the noun in any sentence? is the appositive ALWAYS preceded by the noun?
thanks for your posts. 7969 |
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foreignDevil
Joined: 23 Jun 2003 Posts: 580
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Posted: Fri Nov 03, 2006 4:22 pm Post subject: |
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7969 wrote: |
foreign devil, half of my classes are writing classes. any practice at all in constructing coherent sentences is good practice for these future english teachers. appositives arent that difficult to understand but in a few of the websites i looked to get information, i found some contradictions. the only question i really have that is unanswered is:
is there any one way to determine the appositive from the noun in any sentence? is the appositive ALWAYS preceded by the noun?
thanks for your posts. 7969 |
yes the appositive always follows the noun. |
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danielb

Joined: 08 Aug 2003 Posts: 490
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7969

Joined: 26 Mar 2003 Posts: 5782 Location: Coastal Guangdong
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Posted: Sun Nov 05, 2006 12:39 am Post subject: |
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yessir daniel b, thats my question. how to determine the appositive without fail. i gave some examples above (my original post) where the noun precedes and also follows.
in that link you provided the appositive always seems to be the modifier describing the proper noun. is this the general rule to follow in appositives?
if so, then one of the sentences in the last pair of examples in my original post above is wrong, but i got them from the purdue uni website which i thought would know this stuff. |
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danielb

Joined: 08 Aug 2003 Posts: 490
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Posted: Sun Nov 05, 2006 4:35 am Post subject: |
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I don't think it has to be the proper noun cobber. I'm no expert but of the two examples you mentioned, one is a non-essential appositive and the other is not. That's why there is a difference in punctuation. |
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DaXiangLouis
Joined: 05 Sep 2005 Posts: 30
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Posted: Mon Nov 06, 2006 11:54 am Post subject: |
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Daniel B has it right:
My best friend, a farmer, lives in the country.
No proper noun there.
The easiest way to view these little beasts is as reduced relative clauses (i.e. with pronouns and verbs ripped out) - in fact, they can be re-written as such:
My best friend, who is a farmer, lives in the country.
They follow the same punctuation rules as relative clauses (commas for non-defining, no commas for defining), plus the same word order rules...
For the defining case, the apossitive comes after the 'main' noun (it should be clear by reading it anyway):
John the farmer livese on Green Street.
For the non-defining case, it's the bit separated by commas (i.e. non-essential information):
Edward Norton, one of the finest actors of his generation, is yet to win an Oscar.
One of the finest actors of his generation, Edward Norton, is yet to win an Oscar.
From a teaching point of view, the relationship between appositives and relative clauses is the easiest way to present them (assuming the students are familiar with relative clauses, whish they no daubt will be if you're covering appositives). Give them some relative clauses and have them chop out the pronouns and verbs, and likewise have them put some 'back' into sentences containing apposition. Then all should be clear... |
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KarenB
Joined: 20 Sep 2005 Posts: 227 Location: Hainan
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Posted: Thu Nov 09, 2006 12:43 am Post subject: |
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With regard to commas,
"John Kennedy, the popular U.S. President, blah blah blah."
"The popular U.S. President John Kennedy blah blah blah."
In the first sentence, because we have the name John Kennedy, then the appositive is just give "extra" info, and is unnecessary to the basic meaning of the sentence. In that instance, we use commas to set it off (something like parenthesis).
In the 2nd sentence, if all we had was "the popular U.S. president," we wouldn't know which president, and thus the name John Kennedy is necessary and thus we do not use commas.
Here's another example of when, and when not, to use commas with appositives.
My sister Heidi is coming to visit today. (in this case I have more than one sister, so the name Heidi is necessary to define which sister, and thus no commas).
The Statue of Liberty, a New York city landmark, was donated by France.
(here, the appositive is "extra" and thus the commas) |
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