Sentence Fragments, danglers, comma splices, lacking parallel parts

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Anonymous  #490737  Wed, 19 Mar 08 05:50 PM

I am new to this site .. I am not sure how this works .. I am having problems with my homework.  More so I have problems with English ugg.. Can someone help me please?

I have these sentences ... and these choices: Sentence Fragments, danglers, comma splices, lacking parallel parts

1. The new drug proved to be highly effective, it has no side effects.

I would consider this a comma splice since they are complete sentences alone ..

2. Do you advise me to go to college or that I should get a job after high school?

To me this is a run on.. But I am not in full understanding of lacking of parallel parts..

3. To be fit, you should get enought sleep, exercise regulary, and eat a healthy diet.

I find this sentence to be correct .. but they throw a new option in UNCLEAR PRONOUN... to me the pronoun is very clear ..

And someone please explain a dangler and lacks parallel parts to where I can hopefully understand what they mean ..

This class is driving me bonkers!! Where is the math LOL

Corinna

 

  
Grammar Geek  #490738  Wed, 19 Mar 08 06:01 PM

Hi Corinna,

Welcome to English Forums. Why don't you register, and then we can recognize you next time.

Choices: Sentence Fragments, danglers, comma splices, lacking parallel parts

1. The new drug proved to be highly effective, it has no side effects.

I would consider this a comma splice since they are complete sentences alone .. Yup.

2. Do you advise me to go to college or that I should get a job after high school?

To me this is a run on.. But I am not in full understanding of lacking of parallel parts..

...advise me [to do X] or [to do Y] makes it parallel. ... to go to college or to get a job would be parallel

3. To be fit, you should get enought sleep, exercise regulary, and eat a healthy diet.

I find this sentence to be correct .. but they throw a new option in UNCLEAR PRONOUN... to me the pronoun is very clear ..

This one is nice an parallel - get sleep, exercise, eat - all verbs, in the same tense, etc.

There's nothing wrong with using the impersonal you, but apparently this class thinks it should either say "one should" (instead of "you should") or "a person should." 

And someone please explain a dangler and lacks parallel parts to where I can hopefully understand what they mean ..

I hope the bit above helped explain parallelism. A dangler is when you start to describe something, but then don't hook it up with the thing that's being described. My favorite has always been "Hanging in the closet for a year, Lola had forgotten about her aqua dress." This dangles because it was not Lola that was hanging in the closet for a year, but the dress.

  
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Corinna 7  #490753  Wed, 19 Mar 08 06:50 PM

Barbara!!!  

I just signed up!!  Thanks for everything!!! .. I like your kitten!

You are great and I understand everything that you have stated .. and made it funny too .. that always help soothe a bitter ego, on a subject that, a person may not like!

 And you hit the nail on the head for #3 as for the coures ... But strange I did not see it until you stated it LOL .. My gramma is gonna kill me!

Can you explain ... active and passive voice ..

This material has been tested by our engineers, and they like it.

I believe that first is passive (has been) and the second is active (like)

Your machine has been repaired, and it will be returned to you today.

see this is where I get lost ... I have NO CLUE??

You must be a teacher or professor???

 

  
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Grammar Geek  #490764  Wed, 19 Mar 08 07:08 PM

Hey, great - I'm glad you signed up.

No, I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. (The kitten had her first birthday on Monday. She's not such a terrorist anymore. With age comes calmness.)

For active/passive, I hate to use such silly terms, but let's use the terms "doers" and "did-to's" (those things/people that something was done to).

In the active voice, the doer does someething to the did-to. We (the doers) fixed the machine (the did-to).

In the passive, the did-to is the subject of the sentence. The verb is used, but the doer may not be mentioned.

  • Jim made a mistake. Active. Doer - did something - did-to
  • A mistake was made by Jim. Passive. Did-to  had something done to it by the doer.
  • A mistake was made. Passive. The doer is not mentioned.

You machine has been repaired. The machine is the "did-to." The doers are not mentioned. To make it active, you have to have the doers as the subject. We have repaired your machine.

It will be returned. Still passive. The subject is the "did-to" - in this case, "it" (standing in for "the machine").

To be active, you need to say who will be the doer - who will return it? I will return it to you today. Alex will return it to you today.

 

 

  
Corinna 7  #490817  Wed, 19 Mar 08 09:17 PM

Thanks I am too!! I am glad I was fortune it enough to have you reply!!

We have a Siamese, Walker, he is a stinker. He brought a snake to my front door, Good Ole Texas. (May that explains some of the grammar issues j/k)

I am grateful for you help .. I have gone back to college! after being out of school 15+ years. I am an assisant credit manager for a wholesaler.  My English has always been my down fall.  SO I am taking this very serious.  

 

What type of writing; Novels?

 

Okay I believe understand ..  

This material has been tested by our engineers, and it will be returned to you today.

This matieral has been tested by our engineers - this would be Active because the subject is doing?

it will be returned to you today  - Passive since it stands for material - so there is no doer?

Is that right! Big Smile

  
Tanit  #490818  Wed, 19 Mar 08 09:30 PM
Corinna 7

This material has been tested by our engineers - this would be Active because the subject is doing?

it will be returned to you today  - Passive since it stands for material - so there is no doer?



Hi Corinna

1. This material has been tested by our engineers >> It's passive. The subject of the sentence is "material", but the agent is "engineers" (in passive sentences, the "doer" - if clearly stated - is preceded by "by").
The active equivalent of this sentence would be "Our engineers have tested this materials" (You see? Here the subject of the sentence is the "doer" of the action).

2. It will be returned to you today >> Correct, it's passive. Here the "doer" is not clearly stated, but it's understood ("by us").

WOW! Back to study after such a long time ... you're so brave!!!
Good luck!
  
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Grammar Geek  #490862  Wed, 19 Mar 08 11:57 PM

My sister's cat (would that be my nephew?) is named Walker, but he's named after the golf cup.

You'll find lots of help here - just be calm and patient and it will be okay! Promise!

(Business writing. Brochures, that type of thing.)

  
Anonymous  #490863  Thu, 20 Mar 08 12:06 AM

Tanit,

I am glad that I stumbled on upon this site. I hope that I will be able to help someone the same you two have helped me.

 

Now that you explained that it makes sense.  I was looking for a person, not a subject. Thanks for the "by" tip. Not in my text book .. From what I am learning my goal is to be an active writer.

I think I have it!

The supervisor announced the new work schedule. << this is ACTIVE right?  the subject is doing the verb action right? which makes him the doing ...

  
Grammar Geek  #491039  Thu, 20 Mar 08 01:02 PM

The supervisor announced the new work schedule. << this is ACTIVE right? 

Yes, exactly.

Now complete the sentence to make it passive:

The new schedule ...

  
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