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Participial Phrases

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Participial Phrases p. 361 7-5 Sometimes a participle is accompanied by other words that complete its meaning. Amazed by his success, the scientist continued his work. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Participial Phrases


1
Participial Phrases
  • p. 361
  • 7-5

2
  • Sometimes a participle is accompanied by other
    words that complete its meaning.
  • Amazed by his success, the scientist continued
    his work.

3
  • A participle and its accompanying words make up a
    participial phrase.
  • A participial phrase, like a participle alone,
    modifies a noun or a pronoun.
  • Sitting in his office, he reread the
    instructions.

4
The words that complete a participial phrase may
be one or more prepositional phrases.
  • Thomas Edison, experimenting with different
    materials in his laboratory, eventually improved
    the light bulb.
  • A participial phrase may contain a direct object,
    and it may contain an adverb that modifies the
    participle.
  • Fearing failure, the scientist almost abandoned
    his work.
  • Then, steadily gaining confidence, he succeeded.
  • (label pg. 361)

5
You will not confuse the main verb of a sentence
with a participial phrase as long as you first
identify the subject and the simple predicate of
a sentence.
  • The crowd was watching the inventor testing his
    new creation. (p. 361)

6
A participial phrase may come before or after the
word it modifies.
  • Misplaced John created a robot experimenting in
    his lab.
  • To be clear, place a participial phrase near the
    word that it modifies.
  • Correct Experimenting in his lab, John created a
    robot.

7
  • Use a comma after a participial phrase that
    introduces a sentence.
  • Struck by joy, Dee laughed.
  • Also use commas to set off a participial phrase
    following the subject if the phrase is not
    necessary to the meaning of a sentence.
  • Dan, waving good-bye, drove away.

8
Identify each participial phrase. Which word does
it modify.
  1. How could someone photograph objects moving
    rapidly?
  2. In the 1870s this was a serious question facing
    inventors.
  3. Meeting the challenge, one photographer found a
    solution.
  4. The photographer and his assistants worked with
    twenty-four cameras neatly arranged in a row
    along a racetrack.
  5. Running past the row of loaded cameras, a horse
    caused each camera to shoot a picture.
  6. For the first time, people saw something moving
    in a picture.

9
  • 7. In the Civil War, food sealed in cans was
    given to soldiers.
  • 8. Troops in the hot South could now eat totally
    unspoiled food.
  • 9. Pork and beans canned in tomato sauce became a
    popular meal among the soldiers.
  • 10. Many soldiers returning from war asked local
    shopkeepers for canned food.
  • 11. Canning everything from milk to cherries
    canners were selling thirty million cans a year
    by 1870.
  • 12. Inventors noting the success of the tin can
    turned to other methods of food preservation.
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