…if a conjunction is the 'Hitch,' the matchmaker, then the clauses are the two strapping young lovers (the two parts being joined).I've just read this passage out loud to Ed who says, "Obviously you should never use subordinate clauses."
- Independent clauses can stand alone as sentences. In our Hitch analogy, they are the sassy, strong independent sugar mamas and sugar daddies.
- Subordinate clauses are the gold diggers. They cannot stand alone as sentences. They begin with subordinate conjunctions, and are NEEDY.
- They are like parasites. They depend on independent clauses for survival.
Yet more evidence that something happened in 1985. *
Something bad.
* Wikipedia tells us that the first run of Schoolhouse Rock began in 1973 and ended in 1985.
wow
ReplyDeleteI'm flipping through the rest of the presentation…it gets worse.
There's a fair bit about Donald Trumps so far, and here is another observation:
"Coordinating conjunctions join equals together…they join healthy clause partners together, not sugar daddies and gold diggers."
Subordination is a critical component of writing AND THINKING …. and of clarity of expression….the 'dependency' relationship has nothing to do with gold-diggery.
The dependency relationship is typically (or frequently) used to express CONCEPTUAL dependencies.
This idea depends upon that idea.
Oh gosh.
ReplyDeleteNow I'm on a slide that says:
"Note: They SHOULD NOT begin sentences."
Presumably she means coordinators (coordinating conjunctions) should not begin sentences, which is completely false.
I don't think even the most conservative composition handbooks give such advice these days (though I'd have to check).
Yup, she's talking about coordinators.
ReplyDelete"Avoid beginning sentences with any of those words!"
"Type 2: Subordinating conjunctions
ReplyDelete* These conjunctions join a needy gold digger (subordinate clause) with a wealthy, independent sugar daddy (independent clause).
[snip]
Because Donald Trump has money, he can make ghastly faces and still get a hot wife."
I'm actually sitting here thinking my students are lucky to have me….
ReplyDeleteConjunctions! I was listening to a podcast of "Ask Me Another" the other day and the following question came up:
ReplyDelete"Name a 2-letter conjunction in the first line of Hamlet's most famous soliloquy".
Neither of the two (adult, college-educated) contestants got it.
I figure it can only be because they don't know what a conjunction is.
Well, I didn't think "to" was a conjunction, and I still would have guessed correctly. I vote that they didn't know who Hamlet was, and didn't know what a soliloquy was, and hadn't heard of "To Be or Not To Be, that is the question".
ReplyDeleteIn context, it was pretty clear the contestants knew the answer was somewhere in "To be or not to be." One of the contestants actually guessed "to".
ReplyDeleteSo now to teach basic grammar you ought to explain exploitative sexual relationships to your students?
ReplyDeleteIf using public dollars, you have to include all cultures. This is part of the inclusion process....just like in fifth grade when your child was taught the street culture for drug use and in high school when explicit instruction on how to transmit or prevent AIDS was give in health class.
ReplyDeleteWe wouldn't want to exclude the Sucro-American Community.
ReplyDelete