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10 Minute Sentence Adventure
The 10 Minute Sentence Adventure is the perfect English intervention resource for KS1 and KS2 pupils who need to improve their writing skills. Whether its missing capital letters, a lack of punctuation or too simple use of punctuation, the Sentence
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Live Sentence
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Sentence Flips
Practise sentence building with this flip book featuring words from Letters and Sounds Phases 3 and 4. Ideal for small group activities, the cards feature known decodable words with picture examples to help support meaning. On one side words are made
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Sentence Structure
Sentence Structure:introduces the evidence for sentence structure and reveals its purposeis based on a problem-solving approach to languageteaches the reader how to identify word classes, such as noun, preposition and demonstrativeuses simple tree structures to analyse sentencescontains numerous exercises to encourage practical skills of sentence analysisincludes a database and exercises that compare the structure of English with other languages. The second edition of Sentence Structure has been revised and updated throughout and includes new material on tense, aspect, modality and the verb phrase, whilst the order of topics has been rearranged to improve clarity.
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Which sentence is correct: "I advise you against this adventure" or "I advise you to this adventure"?
The correct sentence is "I advise you against this adventure." This sentence indicates that the speaker is advising the listener not to pursue the adventure. On the other hand, "I advise you to this adventure" is incorrect because it lacks the preposition "against" and does not convey the intended meaning of advising against something.
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How can a sentence be converted into scientific writing style?
To convert a sentence into scientific writing style, one should aim to be clear, concise, and objective. This can be achieved by using formal language, avoiding personal pronouns, and focusing on facts and evidence. Additionally, scientific writing should follow a specific structure, including an introduction, methods, results, and discussion sections. It is also important to use accurate terminology and provide citations to support any claims made in the writing.
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Which sentence do you prefer, sentence 2?
Yes, I prefer sentence 2.
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Which sentence elements does this sentence have?
This sentence has a subject ("sentence elements"), a verb ("does have"), and an object ("which"). It also includes a question word ("which") and a prepositional phrase ("in 3-5 sentences").
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The Sentence
The Sentence is wholly unique: a graphic novel told in the form of a sentence diagram.A single 6732-word sentence, diagrammed in full. Set in a parallel-universe United States in which the government has recently been overthrown by a military coup, the story is narrated by a lonely young grammar professor, Riley, who is suddenly branded a traitor by the new regime.Bewildered by the charges, and fearing a death sentence, Riley manages to flee to an anarchist commune in the wilderness.After a lifetime of feeling alienated, of desperately longing for friendship, Riley is astonished to be accepted and loved by the anarchists—to come to love the anarchists in return.But when the anarchists reveal a plot to assassinate the authoritarian dictator of the country, Riley is forced to choose whether to support the plot—to return to the capital and help the anarchists bomb the headquarters—or to lose their newfound family forever.
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The Sentence
The gripping new thriller from the Sunday Times bestselling phenomenon, VOX ‘Shocking, emotive, urgent and original’ Chris Whitaker ’A non-stop thrill ride’ Jeffery Deaver ’Queen of the “what if” thriller.Unflinching, unguessable and unputdownable’ Simon Lelic ’Thrilling, topical and timely … I ripped through this in a few days’ Louise Swanson ’Provocative, inventive and compulsively page-turning’ David Koepp The one decision you can’t take back Prosecutor, Justine Boucher has only asked for the death penalty once, in a brutal murder case. In doing so, she put her own life on the line. Because, if the convicted are later found innocent, the lawyer who requested the execution will be sentenced to death. Justine had no doubt that the man she sent to the chair was guilty. Until now. Presented with evidence that could prove his innocence, Justine must find out the truth before anyone else does. Her life depends on it.
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Death Sentence
A murder committed on paper, safely within the confines of a novel, is one thing.To see that same crime in the real world, is something else entirely. . . Frank Føns is a very successful crime writer. His novels, famed for their visceral descriptions of violent death, have made him a household name.But now someone is copying his crimes. For Frank what once seemed a clever, intriguing plot twist, has suddenly become a terrifying, blood-spattered reality. In the novel, a redhead who was scared of water is drowned.In the mirror-image of the real world, she has become an ex-girlfriend chained and left to die at the bottom of the harbour.A corrupt police-officer tortured to death becomes a contact who dies with fear in his eyes.Someone is taking Franks' fiction and using it to destroy his life.The writer must become the detective. In fiction, the bad guy always gets caught, but in real life there is no such guarantee.Fear becomes real. The knife cut hurts like hell. Our narrator may not survive. No-one is promising you a happy ending. For Frank what had once been a game is now a matter of life and death.
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French Primary Sentence Builders : French Sentence Builders - Primary
French Primary Sentence Builders is a workbook aimed at beginner students, co-authored by five modern languages educators with over 90 years of extensive classroom experience between the five, both in the UK and internationally.This book is fully photocopiable but may not be scanned and sharedThis 'no-frills' book contains 10 units of work on very popular themes, jam-packed with graded vocabulary-building, listening, reading, translation, retrieval practice and writing activities. Key vocabulary, lexical patterns and structures are recycled and interleaved throughout. Each unit in the book includes:a sentence builder modelling the target constructions, introduced by questions to guide communication;,a set of Listening-As-Modelling activities to train decoding skills, sound awareness, speech-segmentation, lexical-retrieval and parsing skills;,a set of reading tasks focusing on both the meaning and structural levels of the text;,a set of translation tasks aimed at consolidation through retrieval practice;,a set of writing tasks targeting essential writing micro-skills such as spelling, functional and positional processing, editing and communication of meaning.,answers to all activities, including transcripts,Based on the E.P.I. principle that learners learn best from comprehensible and highly patterned input flooded with the target linguistic features, the authors have carefully designed each and every text and activity to enable the student to process and produce each item many times over. Alongside the units you will find: No Snakes No Ladders tasks created to practise speaking skills with an engaging and fun board game that can be photocopied and played in groups of 3 students.Please note that The Language Gym www.language-gym.com website is an ideal supplement to this booklet. Our website recycles every single lexical and structural item found in this book many times over via self-marking vocabulary and reading workouts, in addition to engaging and fun games and a powerful vocab, listening, sentence & verb trainer.This book is fully photocopiable but may not be scanned and sharedEquivalent to ISBN 9783949651359
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What are sentence types and sentence elements?
Sentence types refer to the different classifications of sentences based on their purpose and structure, such as declarative (making a statement), interrogative (asking a question), imperative (giving a command), and exclamatory (expressing strong emotion). On the other hand, sentence elements are the components that make up a sentence, including subjects, predicates, objects, adjectives, adverbs, and conjunctions. Understanding both sentence types and sentence elements is crucial for effective communication and writing.
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What kind of sentence is that? Kathen sentence, height sentence, Pythagorean theorem, etc.
The question "What kind of sentence is that?" is a declarative sentence. It is a type of sentence that makes a statement or expresses an idea. In this case, the sentence is asking for clarification on the type of sentence being referred to.
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What kind of sentence is this? Kathen sentence, height sentence, Pythagorean theorem, etc.
This is a question asking for the classification of a sentence based on its structure or content. It is not a specific type of sentence like a Kathen sentence, height sentence, or Pythagorean theorem. It is simply a question seeking information or clarification on a particular topic.
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Which sentence element actually determines the number of sentence elements in a sentence?
The main verb in a sentence is the element that determines the number of sentence elements. The main verb dictates the structure of the sentence and influences the number of other elements that can be included, such as subjects, objects, and complements. The type of verb used (transitive, intransitive, linking) will also impact the number and type of elements that can be present in the sentence.
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