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For students competing for the decreasing pool of college scholarships, writing a stellar entrance essay can make all the difference. With discrete explanations of vital grammar rules, common usage errors, and the other key concepts people need to refer to most often, Grammar Essentials For Dummies provides crucial information to help students communicate accurately and effectively. This guide is also a perfect reference for parents who need to review critical grammar concepts as they help students with homework assignments or college entrance essays, as well as for adult learners headed back into the classroom and people learning English as a next language. The Essentials For Dummies Series Dummies is proud to present our new series, The Essentials For Dummies. Now students who are prepping for exams, preparing to study new material, or who just need a refresher can have a concise, easy-to-understand review guide that covers an entire course by concentrating solely on the most important concepts. From algebra and chemistry to grammar and Spanish, our expert authors focus on the skills students most need to succeed in a subject.

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Grammar Essentials For Dummies®

Table of Contents

Introduction

About This Book

Conventions Used in This Book

Foolish Assumptions

Icons Used in This Book

Where to Go from Here

Chapter 1: Grasping Grammar Nitty-Gritty

Grammar: What It Is!

The Big Ideas of Grammar

Making the right word choices

Arranging words for optimal understanding

Pinpointing punctuation

Putting Grammar to Work in the Real World

Chapter 2: Making Peace between Subjects and Verbs

Getting Reacquainted with Verbs

Linking verbs: The giant equal sign

Action verbs: The go-getters

Helping verbs: The do-gooders

Doubling your money: Compound verbs

Infinitives: Verb imposters

Identifying Subjects

Getting two for the price of one: Compound subjects

Figuring out you-understood

Finding subjects when words are missing

Grappling with unusual word order

Searching for the subject in questions

Tossing fake subjects aside

Give Peace a Chance: Making Subjects and Verbs Agree

No mixing allowed: Singles and plurals

Verbs that change and verbs that don’t

Dealing with negative statements

Cutting through distractions

Coming to an Agreement with Difficult Subjects

Spotting five little pronouns that break the rules

Finding problems here and there

Meeting the ones, the things, and the bodies

Figuring out either and neither

Chapter 3: Perfecting Your Pronoun Usage

Playing Matchmaker with Pronouns and Nouns

Selecting Singular or Plural Pronouns

Letting your ear be your guide

Treating companies as singular nouns

Steering clear of “person” problems

Getting Possessive with Your Pronouns

Keeping Your Pronouns and Antecedents Close

Pairing Pronouns with Pronoun Antecedents

Wrestling with everybody, somebody, and no one

Following each and every rule

Examining either and neither

Avoiding Sexist Pronouns

Chapter 4: Constructing a Complete Sentence

Creating Complete Sentences from Complete Thoughts

Locating subject-verb pairs

Not relying on context

Fishing for complements

Banning Fragments from Formal Writing

Enough Is Enough: Avoiding Run-ons

Getting your endmarks in place

Fixing comma splices

Attaching Sentences Legally

Employing coordinate conjunctions

Relying on semicolons

Connecting Unequal Ideas

Giving subordinate clauses a job

Finding homes for your subordinate clauses

Making connections with subordinate conjunctions

Combining Sentences with Pronouns

Don’t Keep Your Audience Hanging: Removing Danglers

Dangling participles

Dangling infinitives

Chapter 5: Drawing Parallels (Without the Lines)

Seeking Balance

Striving for Consistency

Matching verb tenses

Staying active (or passive)

Being true to your person

Using Conjunction Pairs Correctly

Constructing Proper Comparisons

Chapter 6: Adjectives, Adverbs, and Comparisons

Spotting Adjectives

Describing nouns and pronouns

Working hand in hand with linking verbs

Recognizing articles as adjectives

Locating adjectives

Hunting for Adverbs

Sprucing up verbs

Modifying adjectives and other adverbs

Locating adverbs

Sorting through Some Sticky Choices

Choosing between “good” and “well”

Do you feel “bad” or “badly”?

Coping with adjectives and adverbs that look the same

Getting Picky about Word Placement

Placing “even”

Placing “almost” and “nearly”

Placing “only” and “just”

Creating Comparisons

Getting the hang of regular comparisons

Good, better, best: Working with irregular comparisons

Error alert: Using words that you can’t compare

Confusing your reader with incomplete comparisons

Chapter 7: Polishing Your Punctuation

More Rules Than the IRS: Using Apostrophes

Showing possession

Cutting it short: Contractions

Quoting Correctly

Punctuating your quotations

Identifying speaker changes

Using quotation marks in titles

Making Comma Sense

Placing commas in a series

Adding information to your sentence

Directly addressing someone

Presenting addresses and dates

Setting off introductory words

Punctuating with conjunctions

Mastering Dashes

Long dashes

Short dashes

Wielding Hyphens with Ease

Creating compound words

Hyphenating numbers

Connecting two-word descriptions

Creating a Stopping Point: Colons

Sprucing up a business letter

Inserting long lists

Introducing long quotations

Chapter 8: Capitalizing Correctly

Covering the Basic Rules

Capitalizing (Or Not) References to People

Treating a person’s titles with care

Handling family relationships

Tackling race and ethnicity

Getting a Geography Lesson: Places, Directions, and More

Locations and languages

Directions and areas

Looking at Seasons and Times of Day

Getting Schooled in Education Terms

Wrestling with Capitals in Titles

Writing about Events and Eras

Capitalizing Abbreviations

Chapter 9: Choosing the Right Words

One Word or Two?

Always opting for two

Picking your meaning

Separating Possessive Pronouns from Contractions

Its/it’s

Your/you’re

There/their/they’re

Whose/who’s

Using Words That Seem Interchangeable but Aren’t

Affect versus effect

Between versus among

Continual versus continuous

Due to versus because of

Farther versus further

Lie versus lay

Rise versus raise

Since versus because

Sit versus set

Suppose versus supposed

Whether versus if

Who versus whom

A Word and a Phrase to Avoid

Irregardless

Different than

Chapter 10: Tackling Other Troublemakers

Creating Noun Plurals

The -ies and -ys have it

Gooses? Childs? Forming irregular plurals

Making plurals with hyphenated nouns

Perfecting Prepositions

Expressing relationships

Eyeing the objects of prepositional phrases

Identifying the objects of prepositions

Paying attention to prepositions

Are you talking to I? Matching prepositions and pronouns

A good part of speech to end a sentence with?

Deleting Double Negatives

Chapter 11: Improving Your Writing

Identifying Your Audience

Keeping it formal

Knowing when conversational English will work

Cutting Ties with Your Computer Grammar Checker

Giving Your Writing Punch with Great Verbs

Staying active

Knowing when “there is” a problem

Recognizing that your writing “has” issues

Letting your subjects do more than “say” and “walk”

Deleting All That’s Extra

Spicing Up Boring Sentences

The clause that refreshes

Verbally speaking

Writing for Electronic Media

Scoping your audience

Being clear and concise

Structuring an e-mail message

Proofreading before you send

Chapter 12: Ten Ways to Improve Your Grammar Every Day

Pick Up a Good Book

Read the Newspaper

Sample Some Magazines

Delve into Strunk and White

Surf the Web

Review Style Manuals

Watch High-Quality TV Shows

Peruse the News

Download Podcasts

Listen to Authorities

Grammar Essentials For Dummies®

by Geraldine Woods with Joan Friedman

Grammar Essentials For Dummies®

Published byWiley Publishing, Inc.111 River St.Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774www.wiley.com

Copyright © 2010 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana

Published simultaneously in Canada

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise, except as permitted under Sections 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, fax (978) 646-8600. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748-6011, fax (201) 748-6008, or online at http://www.wiley.com/go/permissions.

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Library of Congress Control Number: 2010923557

ISBN: 978-0-470-61837-0

Manufactured in the United States of America

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

About the Author

Geraldine Woods began her education when teachers still supplied inkwells to their students. She credits her 35-year career as an English teacher to a set of ultrastrict nuns armed with thick grammar books. She lives in New York City, where with great difficulty she refrains from correcting signs containing messages such as “Bagel’s for sale.” She is the author of more than 40 books, including English Grammar For Dummies, English Grammar Workbook For Dummies, Research Papers For Dummies, College Admission Essays For Dummies, and The SAT For Dummies.

Publisher’s Acknowledgments

We’re proud of this book; please send us your comments at http://dummies.custhelp.com. For other comments, please contact our Customer Care Department within the U.S. at 877-762-2974, outside the U.S. at 317-572-3993, or fax 317-572-4002.

Some of the people who helped bring this book to market include the following:

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Publishing and Editorial for Consumer Dummies

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Publishing for Technology Dummies

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Composition Services

Debbie Stailey, Director of Composition Services

Introduction

When you’re a grammarian, people react to you in interesting — and sometimes downright strange — ways. An elderly man once asked me about something that had puzzled him for eight decades: Why did his church, St. Paul’s, include an apostrophe in its name? My nephew recently called to inquire whether his company’s sign in Times Square should include a semicolon. (I said no, though the notion of a two-story-tall neon semicolon was tempting.) Lots of people become tongue-tied, sure that I’ll judge their choice of who or whom. (They worry needlessly, because I consider myself off-duty when I’m not teaching or writing.)

Though you may aspire to be something other than a grammarian, knowing how to use proper grammar is always an advantage — especially in the workplace. Most jobs that provide you with a desk (and many jobs that don’t!) demand that you know how to communicate in both speech and writing.

If you haven’t yet reached the workplace, now’s the best time to master good grammar. No matter what subject you’re studying, teachers favor proper English. Also, the SAT includes a writing section that’s heavy on grammar and, ironically, light on writing.

In this book, I show you the tricks of the grammar trade, the strategies that help you make the right decision when you’re facing such grammatical dilemmas as the choice between I and me or was and were. I explain what you need to do in such situations, and I also tell you whya particular word is correct or incorrect. You don’t have to memorize a list of meaningless rules (with the exception of some points from the punctuation chapter) because when you understand the reason for a particular choice, you’ll pick the correct word automatically.

About This Book

I concentrate on what English teachers call the common errors. You don’t have to read this book in order, and you don’t have to read the whole thing. Just browse through the table of contents and look for things that you often get wrong. Or start with Chapter 1, which outlines the usage issues voted “most likely to succeed” — in giving you a headache. When you recognize something that nags you every time you write, jump to the chapter where I explain how to handle it like a pro.

Conventions Used in This Book

When I introduce a term or concept that may be unfamiliar to you, I italicize it so you know I’m aware that jargon is at hand. I quickly follow it up with an explanation or definition so you can continue on with the topic.

Foolish Assumptions

I assume that you already speak English to some extent and that you want to speak it — and write it — better. I also assume that you’re a busy person with better things to do than worry about pronouns. This book is for you if you want

Better grades

Skill in communicating exactly what you mean

A higher-paying or higher-status job

Speech and writing that presents you as an educated, intelligent person

A good score on the SAT I Writing or the ACT exam

Polished skills in English as a second language

Icons Used in This Book

In the left margins of this book, you find the following four icons, each of which highlights a particular type of material:

This icon points out a nugget of information you’ll want to recall later, so make room for it in your mental filing cabinet.

Are you hoping to spend some time behind ivy-covered walls? To put it another way: Are you aiming for college? If so, you should pay special attention to the information next to this icon, because college-admissions testers love this material.

Wherever you see this icon, you’ll find helpful strategies for understanding sentence structure or choosing the correct word.

Not every grammar trick has a built-in trap, but some do. This icon tells you how to avoid common mistakes.

Where to Go from Here

Need some pointers on how to improve your writing — fast? Jump to Chapter 11. Want to refresh your memory regarding punctuation regulations? Head straight for Chapter 7. Not sure where to begin? Chapter 1 can help.

I truly don’t mind where you start — just allow me one last word before you do. Actually, two last words: Trust yourself. You already know a lot. If you’re a native speaker, you’ve communicated in English all your life, including the years before you set foot in school and saw your first textbook. If English is an acquired language for you, you’ve probably already absorbed a fair amount of vocabulary and grammar, even if you don’t know the technical terms.

I’m just here to help you refine what you know and get past any grammar gremlins that haunt you. So if the word grammar usually makes you sweat, wipe your brow and remember that nothing in this book is too difficult for you to master.

Chapter 1

Grasping Grammar Nitty-Gritty

In This Chapter

Defining what grammar means

Identifying the problems grammar can solve

Bringing grammar into the real world

I’m well aware that you’ve been studying grammar in one form or another for a lot of years. You may have been in first or second grade when a teacher introduced the notion that different words in a sentence do different things: Some words name people, animals, and objects, for example, and other words indicate what those people, animals, and objects are doing.

If you were blessed with brilliant, enlightened teachers, your experience with grammar has led you to understand not only how to use it but also why it’s essential. However, because you’re holding this book in your hands, I suspect that may not have been the case. More likely, you were blessed with caring, dedicated teachers who followed a pattern of instruction handed down to them from teachers past. That pattern likely focused on memorizing parts of speech and diagramming sentences. And here you are, years later, trying to recall what indirect objects are and why you should care.

In this chapter, I explain how I approach the study of grammar in this book. A clue: I honestly don’t care whether you can identify an indirect object (a part of speech I describe in Chapter 4). I do, however, care a great deal about your ability to construct a complete sentence that communicates information clearly and meets the needs of your audience.

Grammar: What It Is!

In the Middle Ages (a few years before I went to school), grammar meant the study of Latin, the language of choice for educated people. In fact, grammar was so closely associated with Latin that the word referred to any kind of learning. This meaning of grammar shows up when people of grandparent age talk about their grammar school, not their elementary school. The term grammar school is a leftover from the old days.

These days, grammar is the study of language — specifically, how words are put together. Because of obsessive English teachers and their rules, grammar also means a set of standards that you have to follow in order to speak and write better. However, the definition of better changes according to your situation, your purpose, and your audience. (I discuss this subject more in the final section of this chapter, as well as in Chapter 11, where I offer tips on how to become a better writer.)

Actually, several different types of grammar exist, including historical (how language has changed through the centuries) and comparative (how languages differ from or resemble each other). In this book, I deal with only two types of grammar — the two you need to know in order to improve your speech and writing:

Descriptive grammar: This type of grammar gives names to the parts of speech and parts of a sentence. When you learn descriptive grammar, you understand what every word is (its part of speech) and what every word does (its function in the sentence).

Knowing some grammar terms can help you understand why a particular word or phrase is correct or incorrect, so I sprinkle descriptive grammar terms throughout this book. However, you don’t need to be able to explain the difference between a participle and a gerund to use them correctly. My main purpose is to show you how to put words together in appropriate ways so you can write a school assignment, a report for work, or any other formal communication effectively. That’s why descriptive grammar plays second fiddle in this book to the type I describe in the next bullet1.

Functional grammar: The bulk of this book is devoted to functional grammar, which shows you how words behave when they’re doing their jobs properly. Functional grammar guides you to the right expression — the one that fits what you’re trying to say — by ensuring that the sentence is put together correctly. When you’re agonizing over whether to say I or me, you’re solving a problem of functional grammar.

So here’s the formula for success: A little descriptive grammar plus a lot of functional grammar equals better grammar overall.

The Big Ideas of Grammar

When you get right down to it, the study of grammar is the study of three key issues: choosing the right words to get your point across to a reader or listener, putting those words in the right order, and (when you’re writing) inserting the correct punctuation marks (commas, apostrophes, and so on) in the correct places. In this section, I explain why each issue matters so much.

Making the right word choices

This issue is an umbrella that covers many grammar gremlins. Four of the biggest are selecting verb forms that match the subjects in your sentence, using the right pronouns, deciding between adjectives and adverbs, and choosing wisely between two (or more) words that sound similar or seem to be interchangeable (but aren’t).

Creating subject-verb harmony

Say you’re writing a sentence that describes what three people are doing:

Ralph, Lulu, and Stan is skipping through the woods.

Do you detect a problem? Even if you can’t put your finger on what’s wrong, you probably realize that something about this sentence doesn’t sound right. That “something” is the verb is, which doesn’t get along with Ralph, Lulu, and Stan.

In grammatical terms, what you have here is a subject-verb disagreement. The subject of a sentence is the noun (person, place, thing, or idea) that is doing or being something. The verb is the part of the sentence that explains what the subject is doing.

To make the multiple (or plural) subjects in this sentence play nice with the verb, you must change is to are:

Ralph, Lulu, and Stan are skipping through the woods.

Subject-verb agreement can get complicated sometimes, and I devote Chapter 2 to refreshing your memory about how to identify subjects and verbs and how to create harmony between them.

Selecting pronouns

Allow me to tell you a riveting story:

My brother and me went to the store yesterday to look for some new dish towels. We looked in every department but couldn’t find it anywhere. We asked a salesman for help, but they couldn’t answer our question.

Aside from “riveting” being an out-and-out lie, can you figure out what’s wrong with this story? This example contains three grammatical errors, all of which are problems with pronoun selection.

A pronoun is a word that substitutes for a noun, and figuring out which pronoun to use in a sentence can sometimes be truly challenging. Choosing incorrectly can offend your reader’s ear and also create confusion.

To correct this story, you need to make the following changes (shown in italics):

My brother and I went to the store yesterday to look for some new dish towels. We looked in every department but couldn’t find them anywhere. We asked a salesman for help, but he couldn’t answer our question.

Not sure why you need I instead of me or he instead of they? Chapter 3 offers a detailed discussion of how to make good pronoun choices; be sure to check it out.

Describing nouns and verbs with the right words

The reason you’re reading this chapter is because you want to write good, right? Actually, no. What you really want to do is to write well. The grammatical explanation is that good is always an adjective: a word used to describe nouns. Well, on the other hand, is usually an adverb: a word that describes a verb or modifies an adjective. But even if you never memorize the grammatical reason, you must know when to use good and when to use well.

Likewise, you need to know when to use an adjective versus when to use an adverb. Luckily, Chapter 6 provides all the details, so you’ll never again feel bad (as opposed to badly) about your writing.

Choosing between similar words

If you’re going to write well, your word choices have to be correct. In some cases, you choose among several words that sound alike. In others, you choose between two words that most people (incorrectly) believe to be interchangeable. Sometimes the choices are tricky, but if you spend some time reading Chapter 9, I can help.

Arranging words for optimal understanding

In this book, I commit a particular grammatical sin that wouldn’t be acceptable in a more formal type of writing: I write fragments, which are incomplete sentences. Like this one. And this one.

The opposite of a fragment is a run-on sentence: one that keeps going long after it should have stopped. For example, I create a run-on if I use a comma to try to join two complete sentences, I should use a semicolon or a conjunction (such as and, or, or but) instead. (That was intentional, mind you. I do have my certified grammarian’s license.)

Fragments and run-ons are two problems writers grapple with when trying to create complete sentences. Other problems can be a bit tougher to identify, such as combining ideas of unequal importance in ways that make them seem equal. Consider an example:

First idea: I tripped and broke my leg.

Second idea: I was chewing gum.

Combination: I tripped and broke my leg, and I was chewing gum.

Technically, the combined sentence is okay. But are you really helping the reader understand what happened here? Just by changing and to a different connecting word, you can clarify what happened. For example:

I tripped and broke my leg while I was chewing gum.

I tripped and broke my leg because I was chewing gum.

I devote Chapter 4 to a thorough discussion of how to create complete sentences that provide the reader with an appropriate amount of information arranged in a helpful way.

Chapter 5 tackles still more issues related to word arrangement, such as making sentences parallel. Take a look at a sentence that isn’t parallel:

My goal is to study economics, Arabic, and impress my boss.

What you’re saying is that you plan to study three things, the third being “impress my boss.” Huh? By making the sentence parallel, you clarify for your reader what you actually mean:

My goal is to study economics, learn Arabic, and impress my boss.

By adding learn, you start each of the three items in your list with a verb, which makes the sentence parallel.

Chapter 5 deals with several other word arrangement issues as well, with the goal of helping you create clear, consistent writing.

Pinpointing punctuation

Its a real shame, when you write a perfectly fine sentence; and mess it up with ‘improper’ punctuation.

We all need occasional reminders about how to use punctuation marks. So many rules exist, and not all of them make logical sense. Your job is not to argue the logic; it’s to apply the rules to every sentence you write. If you don’t, your boss, teacher, or other authority figure is likely to dismiss your written observations because he or she won’t be able to look past the errors to discover your brilliance.

To impress someone with your writing, you simply must know the punctuation rules and use punctuation marks correctly. That’s why I suggest getting very cozy with Chapter 7. After all,

It’s a real shame when you write a perfectly fine sentence and mess it up with improper punctuation.

Oh, and if you ever get confused about when to use capital letters and when to stick with lowercase, be sure to check out Chapter 8.

Putting Grammar to Work in the Real World

The grammar lessons in this book are useless if they don’t stick with you when you sit down to write. I strongly suggest keeping this book handy as a reference whenever you’re working on an assignment or report; I don’t expect you to memorize every punctuation or capitalization rule.

However, I work hard to bring the lessons in this book to life for you by providing lots of examples. The goal is for your “ear” — the part of your brain that can tell whether something you’ve written sounds right or wrong — to get lots of practice identifying common problems.