English Skills with Readings 7e Appendix


Appendix A
Answers and Charts
Preview
This Appendix provides answers for the Sentence-Skills Diagnostic Test on pages 400 404
and for the Introductory Activities in Part Five. It also contains four useful charts: an
assignment chart, a spelling list, a reading comprehension chart, to be filled in by the
student, and a general form for planning a paragraph.
Answers to Sentence-Skills
Diagnostic Test
and Introductory Activities
SENTENCE-SKILLS DIAGNOSTIC TEST (pages 400 404)
Fragments
1 X
2 C
3 X
4 X
5 C
6 X
Run-Ons
1 C
2 X
3 X
4 X
5 C
6 X
Standard English Verbs
1 C
2 C
3 X
4 X
Irregular Verbs
1 X
2 C
3 C
4 X
Subject-Verb Agreement
1 X
2 X
3 C
4 X
Consistent Verb Tense
1 X
2 C
3 C
4 X
Pronoun Agreement, Reference, and Point of View
1 X
2 C
3 X
4 C
5 X
6 C
Pronoun Types
1 X
2 C
Adjectives and Adverbs
1 X
2 X
Misplaced Modifiers
1 X
2 C
3 X
4 X
Dangling Modifiers
1 C
2 X
3 C
4 X
Faulty Parallelism
1 X
2 C
3 X
4 C
Capital Letters
1 X
2 X
3 C
4 X
Apostrophe
1 C
2 X
3 X
4 C
Quotation Marks
1 C
2 X
3 X
4 C
Comma
1 X
2 X
3 C
4 X
5 C
6 X
Commonly Confused Words
1 X
2 X
3 C
4 X
5 X
6 C
Effective Word Use
1 X
2 X
3 X
4 X
Answers to Sentence-Skills Diagnostic Test and Introductory Activities
INTRODUCTORY ACTIVITIES Irregular Verbs (page 454)
Fragments (page 414)
1. crawled, crawled (regular) 2. brought,
brought (irregular)
1 thought 3. used, used (regular)
2 subject 4. did, done (irregular)
verb
3 5. gave, given (irregular)
4 subject 6. laughed, laughed (regular) 7. went, gone (irregular)
Run-Ons (page 430)
8. scared, scared (regular) 1. period9. dressed, dressed (regular) 2. but10.
saw, seen (irregular)
1 semicolon
When
2 Subject-Verb Agreement (page 463) The second sentence in each pair is
Standard English Verbs (page 445)
correct.
enjoyed . . . enjoys; started . . . starts; Pronoun Agreement and cooked . . . cooks Reference (page 470)
-ed
1 past . . . The second sentence in each pair is correct.
2 present . . . -s
Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers (page 488)
1 Intended: On their wedding day, Clyde and Charlotte decided to have two children.
Unintended: Clyde and Charlotte decided to have two children who would appear on their
wedding day.
2 Intended: The students who failed the test no longer like the math instructor.
Unintended: The math instructor failed the test.
3 Intended: My dog sat with me as I smoked a pipe.
Unintended: My dog smoked a pipe.
4 Intended: He was busy talking on a cell phone.
Unintended: His car was talking on a cell phone.
Capital Letters (page 501)
All the answers to questions 1 to 13 should be in capital letters.
14. The 15. I 16. That
Apostrophes (page 514)
1 The purpose of the  s is to show possession (Larry owns the motorcycle, the boyfriend belongs to the sister,
Grandmother owns the shotgun, the room belongs to the men).
2 The purpose of the apostrophe is to show the omission of one or more letters in a contraction two words shortened to
form one word.
3 In each of the second sentences, the  s shows possession: the body of the vampire; the center of the baked potato. In
each of the first sentences, the s is used to form a simple plural: more than one vampire; more than one potato.
770 Appendix A
Quotation Marks (page 523)
1 The purpose of quotation marks is to set off the exact words of a speaker. (The words that the young man actually
spoke aloud are set off with quotation marks, as are the words that the old woman spoke aloud.)
2 Commas and periods go inside quotation marks.
Commas (page 531)
1. a. Frank s interests are Maria, television, and sports.
b. My mother put her feet up, sipped some iced tea, and opened the newspaper.
2. a. Although they are tiny insects, ants are among the strongest creatures on Earth.
b. To remove the cap of the aspirin bottle, you must first press down on it.
3. a. Kitty Litter and Dredge Rivers, Hollywood s leading romantic stars, have made several movies
together.
b. Sarah, who is my next-door neighbor, just entered the hospital with an intestinal infection.
4. a. The wedding was scheduled for four o clock, but the bride changed her mind at two.
b. Verna took three coffee breaks before lunch, and then she went on a two-hour lunch break.
5. a. Lola s mother asked her,  What time do you expect to get home?
b.  Don t bend over to pat the dog, I warned,  or he ll bite you.
6. a. Roy ate seventeen hamburgers on July 29, 2003, and lived to tell about it.
b. Roy lives at 817 Cresson Street, Detroit, Michigan.
Other Punctuation Marks (page 540)
1 pets: holly
2 freeze-dried
3 Shakespeare (1564 1616)
4 Earth; no
5 proudly with
Commonly Confused Words (page 565)
1 Your 4. to
2 There 5. It s
3 then
Effective Word Choice (page 575)
1  Flipped out is slang.
2  Few and far between is a cliché.
3  Ascertained is a pretentious word.
Charts
Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Assignment Chart
Use this chart to record daily or weekly assignments in your writing class. You might want to print
writing assignments and their due dates in capital letters so that they stand out clearly.
Date Given Assignment Date Due
772 Appendix A
Spelling List
Enter here the words that you misspelled in your papers (note the examples). If you add to
and study this list regularly, you will not repeat the same mistakes in your writing.
Incorrect Spelling Correct Spelling Points to Remember
alright all right two words
ocasion occasion two  c s
Charts 773
Reading Comprehension Chart
Write an X through the numbers of any questions you missed while answering the comprehension
questions for each selection in Part Six,  Readings for Writers. Then write in your comprehension score.
To calculate your score for each reading, give yourself 10 points for each item that is not X d out. The
chart will make clear any skill question you get wrong repeatedly, so that you can pay special attention to
that skill in the future.
Subject,
Thesis, or
Vocabulary Comprehension
Main Idea
Selection in Context Key Details Inferences Score
Mrosla 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Logan 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Salinas 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Johnson 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Holland 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Curran 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Carson 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Collier 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Garland 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Scott 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Verderber 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Urbina 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Tan 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Saki 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Wine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Canedy 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Conroy/
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 %
Johnson
774 Appendix A
Form for Planning a Paragraph
To write an effective paragraph, first prepare an outline. Often (though not always) you
may be able to use a form like the one below.
Topic sentence:
Support (1):
Details:
Support (2):
Details:
Support (3):
Details:
Appendix B
A Writer s Journal
Preview
This Appendix provides space for you to record ideas and notes, including a vocabulary list.
776 Appendix B
A Writer s Journal
778 Appendix B
A Writer s Journal
780 Appendix B
Credits
Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Text and Illustrations
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KING FEATURES SYNDICATE; 547: By permission. From the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, © 2007 by
Merriam-Webster, Incorporated (www.Merriam-Webster. com); 548: Random House Webster s College Dictionary, 2000.
Published by the Random House Information Group; 628: Sister Helen P. Mrosla, O.S.F.,  All the Good Things. Originally
published in Proteus, Spring 1991. Reprinted by permission as edited and published by Reader s Digest in October, 1991; 634:
Paul Logan,  Rowing the Bus. Copyright © 1997. Reprinted by permission of the author; 642: Marta Salinas,  The Scholarship
Jacket, from Nosotros: Latina Literature Today, 1986, edited by Maria del Carmen Boza, Beverly Silva, and Carmen Valle.
Copyright Bilingual Press, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ. Reprinted by permission; 649: Beth Johnson,  Joe Davis: A
Cool Man Copyright © Beth Johnson. Reprinted with permission. Beth Johnson lives in Lederach, Pennsylvania; 657: Donald
Holland,  The Fist, the Clay, and the Rock. Reprinted by permission of the author; 662: Delores Curran,  What Good Families
Are Doing Right, from McCall s, March 1983. Reprinted by permission of Delores Curran, author and parent-educator; 676: Dr.
Benjamin Carson; Cecil Murphey,  Do it Better! Excerpt from Think Big. Copyright © 1992 by Benjamin Carson, M.D. Used
by permission of Zondervan; 686: James Lincoln Collier,  Anxiety: Challenge by Another Name. Originally published by
Reader s Digest, December 1986. Reprinted by permission of the author; 693: Anita Garland,  Let s Really Reform Our
Schools. Copyright © 1994. Reprinted by permission of the author; 701: Janny Scott,  How They Get You to Do That.
Originally published in the Los Angeles Times, July 23, 1992. Copyright © 1992 Los Angeles Times. Reprinted by permission;
711: Rudolph Verderber,  Dealing with Feelings. Excerpt from Communicate, 6th edition, by Rudolph F. Verderber. © 1990.
Reprinted with permission of Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning: www.thomsonrights.com. Fax 800-730-2215; 718:
Diane Urbina,  Extra Large, Please. Reprinted by permission of the author; 726: Amy Tan,  The Most Hateful Words from
The Opposite of Fate by Amy Tan. Copyright © 2003 by Amy Tan. First appeared in The New Yorker. Reprinted by permission
of the author and the Sandra Dijkstra Literary Agency; 740: Bill Wine,  Rudeness at the Movies. Copyright © 1989. Reprinted
by permission of the author; 747: Dana Canedy,  From Father to Son, Last Words to Live by. Copyright © 2007 by The New
York Times Co. Reprinted with permission; 753: Theresa Conroy and Christine M. Johnson,  A Drunken Ride, A Tragic
Aftermath. From The Philadelphia Inquirer. Copyright © 1986 The Philadelphia Inquirer. Reprinted by permission.
782 Credits
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