Understanding sentence structure is crucial for mastering grammar. Different patterns exist depending on the type of verb and the elements that follow it. For instance, sentences can be structured with a subject, a '
If you can insert "to be" in the sentence, it is probably 9 or 10, like in the sentence, "He considered Anne his lover," you can insert "to be" in front of lover
Extra Notes that are helpful to have
Adverbial Objective:
A word typically used as a noun but functioning within a sentence as an adverb - pg. 85
*I walked home
*When mapped, it looks like an indirect object, going under the verb with the slanty L shape, nothing goes on the part where a preposition would usually go
Common English:
Mr. Stark… I don’t feel so good…
Standard English:
Mr. Stark… I don’t feel so well...
Random tips:
*the straight line rather than slanted line only happens when verb is transitive or intransitive
*If you are putting something under verb in sentence diagramming, it means that it modifies the whole sentence, meaning you can stick that phrase in the beginning or ending of the sentence and still have it make sense
PEDESTAL NEEDED WHEN:
1) Prep phrase needed for sentence to make sense
2) Can be replaced by a single word
*NOTE that pedestals will only be found in 2, 4, and 10*
PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE just means a preposition that’s not one word, like a portion of a sentence. Prepositions are the ones that could be done to a box, next to, inside, on, etc.
*Anything following the word “of” is gonna be a prep. phrase
*Will have a noun inside
*If you find a random noun you don’t know what to do with, check around it, it might be a prep. phrase
PREDICATE just means the section of a sentence that has the verb in it, and states something about the subject
Objective Complement (9&10)
*Definition: An adjective or noun that modifies or renames the direct object
*Can insert “to be” in front of it
*Test:
-Necessary to sentence meaning
-Must rename or modify the direct object
*If it is a prep. Phrase, goes on a pedestal
Indirect Object
*Answers one of six questions: to whom? For whom? Of whom? To what? For what? If you take it out, the sentence can still make sense
*Always gonna be underneath verb as the “L” shaped slanty noun thing
Direct Object
*Answers the question “whom” or “what” after the verb, if you take it out, sentence no longer makes sense
*Always gonna follow verb with the straight line thing