Nouns Plural Forms Common and Proper Nouns...9 Capitalization: Proper Nouns Action Verbs Forming Sentences...

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Nouns... 5-6 Plural Forms...7-8 Common and Proper Nouns...9 Capitalization: Proper Nouns... 10-11 Action Verbs... 12 Forming Sentences... 13 Subject and Predicate...14-15 Plain Form and s-form Verbs... 16 s-form Verbs... 17 Agreement...18-21 Past Forms... 22 Past Forms and Auxiliary Verbs... 23-25 Past Forms Review... 26 Forms of Be...27-28 Possessive Form Nouns... 29-30 Nouns as Direct Objects... 31 Nouns as Indirect Objects...32 Subject and Object Pronouns... 33-34 Possessive Pronouns... 35-36 -Self Pronouns... 37 Making Pronouns Clear...38 Indefinite Pronouns... 39 Pronoun Review...40 Indefinite Articles...41 Adjectives...42 Capitalization: Proper Adjectives...43 Comparison of Adjectives... 44-45 Adverbs... 46-47 Comparison of Adverbs... 48 Adjective and Adverb Review... 49 Capitalization: Sentences...50 Kinds of Sentences... 51 Kinds of Sentences and End Punctuation... 52-53 Run-On Sentences... 54-55 Clauses and Phrases... 56 Misplaced Modifiers... 57 Dangling Modifiers...58 Commas... 59-61 Combining Sentences... 62 Combining Sentences: Possessives... 63 Combining Sentences: Who, Which, That... 64

Combining Sentences: Who, Which... 65 Combining Sentences: And... 66 Combining Sentences: Or... 67 Combining Sentences: But... 68 Combining Sentences: And, Or, But... 69 Combining Sentences: More Joining Words... 70-71 Compound and Complex Sentences...72-73 Abbreviations... 74-75 Contractions...76-77 Direct and Indirect Quotations... 78 Direct Quotations... 79-83 Alphabetical Order... 84 Dictionary: Finding Words... 85 Dictionary: Guide Words... 86 Dictionary: Syllables... 87 Dictionary: Respelling... 88 Dictionary: Accent Marks... 89 Dictionary: Parts of Speech... 90-91 Dictionary: Definitions... 92 Dictionary: Multiple Meaning... 93 Homographs... 94 Compound Words... 95 Prefixes... 96-97 Suffixes...98-99 Synonyms...100-101 Antonyms... 102-103 Homophones... 104-106 Homophone Review...107 Let and Leave...108 Don t and Doesn t... 109 Sit and Set... 110 Rise and Raise... 111 Lie and Lay... 112 Good and Well... 113 Between and Among... 114 Can, May, and Must... 115 Paragraphs...116-118 Using an Index...119 Taking Notes...120-121 Making an Outline... 122-123 Writing Friendly Letters... 124-125 Writing Business Letters... 126 Addressing Envelopes... 127 Letter-Writing Review... 128

Past Forms The past form of a verb tells about something that has already happened. We make the past form by: adding -ed to most verbs doubling the final consonant before adding -ed to some verbs changing the y to i and adding -ed to verbs that end in a consonant plus y adding -d to verbs that already end in -e watch transfer deny budge watched transferred denied budged Write the past form of a verb from the box to complete each sentences. Use each verb only once. field stammer drag circulate assassinate resemble ambush quiz raffle rally 1. Lee Harvey Oswald President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. 2. They the team for one final push to victory. 3. We our father when he walked in the door to see what he had in the bag. 4. They the car as a fundraiser during the football game. 5. The guest of honor among the guests to meet those that came to see her. 6. The cake a football. 7. Kit her name in front of the audience. 8. They the sacks of rice across the floor to the bin. 9. My mother me on the material for the science test. 10. The shortstop the ball from the first baseman. 22 practice Exercises in basic ENGLiSH

Combining Sentences: Who, Which, That Sometimes sentences can be joined using the word who or that to refer to people. The word which or that can be used to refer to things. Robert E. Lee was a graduate of West Point. He led the Confederate army. Robert E. Lee was a graduate of West Point (who or that) led the Confederate army. There is the Washington Monument. It honors George Washington. There is the Washington Monument (which or that) honors George Washington. Use who, which, or that to join each pair of sentences below. 1. Ulysses S. Grant was the leader the Union Army. He became president of the United States. 2. Philadelphia and Pittsburgh are big cities. They are in Pennsylvania. 3. Hillary Clinton was a First Lady. She became a U.S. senator and secretary of state. 4. There was an earthquake on the East Coast. It damaged the Washington Monument. 64 practice Exercises in basic english

Dictionary: Guide Words Each page of a dictionary has guide words to help you find the word you are looking for. man 240 monk man monk The first guide word tells you the first word listed on the page. The second guide word tells you the last word listed on the page. Words that come in alphabetical order between the two guide words can be found on that page. Beside each word below, write the number of the dictionary page on which you would find it according to the guide words. cadet 20 catalog lamp 100 lesson celebrate 23 city light 101 lock click 24 compound locust 102 lump 1. lizard 8. capital 15. limb 2. cashier 9. leisure 16. canyon 3. lard 10. chute 17. link 4. club 11. literature 18. climate 5. laundry 12. comic 19. lord 6. cloth 13. logger 20. collar 7. legion 14. choice 21. lodge 86 practice Exercises in basic english

Sit and Set Sit means to be seated. Set means to put something in a certain place. Set is usually used with a direct object. Write sit or set to complete the sentences below correctly. 1. First, we need to up camp. 2. Find the sign for your group and your tents up there. 3. When you are finished at the picnic tables in the pavilion. 4. You don t need to with your group. 5. The next job is to the pans and gear near the grills. 6. Please these boxes of food near the grills, too. 7. After dinner, find your group and with them around the campfire. 8. Don t too close to the campfire though. 110 practice Exercises in basic english