mercredi 15 janvier 2014

What is a sentence?

Sentences v2
Sentences v2 (Photo credit: eldeeem)


Usually think about a sentence as it's  skeleton, the skeleton has various bones and these bones are put together to form different parts of the body. So sentences also are formed by words, the words are the bones and they are put together in different ways to form sentences.

1-Simple Sentences

A simple sentence contains a single subject and predicate. It describes only one thing, idea or question, and has only one verb - it contains only an independent (main) clause.
Any independent clause can stand alone as a sentence. It has a subject and a verb and expresses a complete thought.
For Instance:
Kamal reads.
Even the addition of adjectives, adverbs, and prepositional phrases to a simple sentence does not change it into a complex sentence.
For example:
  • The whit Dog with the red collar always bark.
Even if you join several nouns with a conjunction, or several verbs with a conjunction, it remains a simple sentence.
For example:
  • The dog barked and growled loudly.
2- Compound Sentences

Compound sentences are made up of two or more simple sentences combined using a conjunction such as and, ororbut. They are made up of more than one independent clause joined together with a co-ordinating conjunction.
For example:
"The sun was setting in the west and the moon was just rising."
Each clause can stand alone as a sentence.
For example:
"The sun was setting in the west. The moon was just rising."
Every clause is like a sentence with a subject and a verb. A coordinating conjunction goes in the middle of the sentence, it is the word that joins the two clauses together, the most common are (and, or, but)
For example:
·         I walked to the market, but my friend drove.
·         I might watch the tv, or I might go to my friends house.
·         My father enjoyed the meal, but hedidn't like the meat.

3- Complex Sentences

Complex sentences describe more than one thing or idea and have more than one verb in them. They are made up of more than one clause, an independent clause (that can stand by itself) and a dependent (subordinate) clause (which cannot stand by itself).
For example:
"My mother likes cat that eat fish."

Dependent clauses can be nominal, adverbial or adjectival.
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mercredi 1 janvier 2014

What the Internet is doing to our brains

What the Internet is doing to our brains instead of providing us with knowledge ... 

The  internet is affecting us, it changes who we think, who we live, who we work .... in this short video Nicholas Carr, the author of, "The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains," about how the Internet is influencing us, our creativity, our thought processes, our ideas, and how we think. explain this process ,,,