Wednesday, August 21, 2013

The subject of a sentence may be what parts of speech?

I always told my students that the subject of a sentence had to be a noun or a pronoun. Pronouns didn't usually bother them, because the basic subject pronouns are so familiar to us: I, you, he, she, it, we, and they.


Concrete nouns were no problem: tree, desk, pencil.


Sometimes they had problems with abstract nouns: freedom, anger, seriousness, difference


To make it really simple, I told them the following: If it isn't a what or a who, it isn't a noun and can't be a subject.


For instance, freedom is what we want, anger is what we sometimes feel, seriousness is what we need when taking a test, and difference is what sometimes exists between two thing.


When we started studying dependent clauses, it still worked in finding subjects.


"Who will be speaking is a mystery." What is the mystery???


Who will be speaking is the thing that is the mystery.


A noun = a what or a who           A pronoun = a who


 I hope this helps you with your grammar.

No comments:

Post a Comment

What is the main function of the fool in "King Lear"? What is the secondly function?

The fool as a character is confusing, but part of this is the difference between the 1600s and today, as well as the difference in place. If...