ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
AP English Language and Composition 9.8 Passage Drill 170 Views
Share It!
Description:
AP English Language and Composition 9.8 Passage Drill. What kind of clause is this?
Transcript
- 00:00
Thank you We sneak and here's your shmoop du jour
- 00:05
brought to you by correlation the worst form of data
- 00:08
analysis known to man kind Take a little falling passage
- 00:12
were skimming along every time you scheme this and then
- 00:14
you just can't look at it again It's kind of
Full Transcript
- 00:16
like that Okay here we go For he not only
- 00:20
beholds intensely the present as it is is what kind
- 00:23
of claws and here are potential answers are relative Okay
- 00:29
Is it a relative adjective claws while relative and restrictive
- 00:32
clauses limit the possibilities or implications of what they modified
- 00:36
For example if you say all students who do well
- 00:38
on the test will achieve advanced placement the claws who
- 00:41
do well on the test is the essential modifier Without
- 00:45
it we just have all students will achieve advanced placement
- 00:48
and that's Not what we want Since the sentence in
- 00:50
question doesn't contain a relative or restrictive klaus we can
- 00:54
cross out a night What about b is our sense
- 00:56
A relative adverb clause Well a relative adverb klaus What
- 01:00
again Put restrictions on the subject or object it is
- 01:02
modifying The restriction might come in the form of a
- 01:05
time or place specifications like of the author said for
- 01:08
he not on ly beholds intensely the present as it
- 01:11
is when he feels like it yeah that would make
- 01:14
the sentence more of a relative adverb Claws are sentenced
- 01:17
connects to different ideas that the author says poets can
- 01:20
consider simultaneously the sentence doesn't put any restrictions on when
- 01:24
and how the poet can do so So b is
- 01:26
in our answer either How about c Is the sentence
- 01:29
an independent klaus Well independent clauses are more like the
- 01:31
clauses in the following sentence many young people hate age
- 01:35
restrictions on youtube even when they can figure out how
- 01:38
to get around them the clauses on either side of
- 01:41
even when could each stand alone hence their independence If
- 01:45
we just had that not only part of the sentence
- 01:47
and didn't follow it up with a but then the
- 01:49
sense wouldn't make any sense pence she's off our list
- 01:53
is the clause non restrictive Well as we know it's
- 01:56
not relative or restrictive but we can't really consider the
- 01:59
claws technique thickly non restrictive a non restrictive klaus will
- 02:02
often add non essential information if you removed the extra
- 02:05
Information The meaning of the sense would not change all
- 02:08
the information in the original quote is essential sum No
- 02:11
non restrictive clauses here Well our last remaining option is
- 02:14
correlative klaus We talked earlier about how the author is
- 02:17
connecting two ideas Those ideas are beholding intensely the present
- 02:22
as it is and beholding the future in the present
- 02:25
Well those may sound like lines from a time travel
- 02:27
flick What they actually tell us is that the pull
- 02:29
it in the author's words does both of these things
- 02:31
at the same time What makes the claws correlative is
- 02:35
the use of the not on ly but also tool
- 02:38
also is implied We didn't even have to see it
- 02:41
to know it was there just like that monster who
- 02:43
lives under our bed So yeah just remember the correlation
- 02:46
isn't cause ality and you're good to go and while
- 02:49
you're at it maybe rent the movie causalities of war 00:02:52.373 --> [endTime] it's a good one
Up Next
AP English Language and Composition: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 2. What is the speaker's primary purpose in using onomatopoeia in line four?
Related Videos
AP English Literature and Composition 1.1 Passage Drill 7. The primary purpose of this passage is what?
Wishing upon a star may help you pass your AP English Language and Composition test, but answering this question would be a safer bet.
Take a look at this shmoopy question and see if you can figure out which device the speaker employs the most.
Feel like shifting gears and answering a question about shifting tones? We've got you covered. Take a look at this question and see if you can foll...