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This video explains the difference between affect and effect and provide tips for remembering which is which and when to use each one. If you suffe...
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Initial Modifiers 443 Views
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Transcript
- 00:04
Initial modifiers, a la Shmoop. Essay got you feelin’ down? Sentences sounding
- 00:10
more like a funeral march than a symphony in A major?
- 00:14
Mix it up with… initial modifiers!
- 00:16
Okay, so…. what IS an initial modifier?
- 00:21
A modifier is a word, phrase, or clause that can, well, modify your sentence. That is,
Full Transcript
- 00:27
make it better.
- 00:27
And, just like it sounds, an initial modifier adds a little somethin’ somethin’ to the
- 00:32
beginning of your sentence.
- 00:34
It makes your sentence – or sentences, if they can be combined into one -- do some grammatical
- 00:38
gymnastics, switching up the order of your words, so that your writing has more flow,
- 00:43
is more interesting…
- 00:45
… and doesn’t sound like you’re leading your sentences en masse to their deaths.
- 00:49
There are four types of initial modifiers.
- 00:53
An initial dependent clause starts your sentence with a word like although, because, or since.
- 01:00
An initial infinitive phrase opens your sentence with the infinitive of a verb. We’ll explain
- 01:07
what that is in a bit..
- 01:08
An initial adverb starts you off with one of those words that end in “l-y” – clearly,
- 01:15
happily…
- 01:16
…and finally, an initial participial<<part-uh-sip-ee-uhl>> phrase begins your sentence with the “i-n-g”
- 01:24
form of a verb. As in, “wanting a better explanation of initial modifiers.”
- 01:31
Part one: initial dependent clauses.
- 01:33
Now would be a good time to brush up on your dependent clauses – but it’s basically
- 01:37
any phrase that can’t stand on its own and starts with one of those words mentioned above.
- 01:43
Like “because my adorable kitten mistook my laptop for its litterbox.”
- 01:48
Normally, you’d probably say something like “I don’t have my final paper because my
- 01:54
adorable kitten mistook my laptop for its litter box…”
- 01:57
…probably followed by “I’m sorry” and “I don’t understand why you’re giving
- 02:01
me an F when it’s clearly Cupcake’s fault.”
- 02:04
A perfect example for why you should use initial modifiers! You’ve got three sentences in
- 02:09
a row that start with the subject…”I” this, “I” that. Boooring.
- 02:14
So the initial modifier comes in and shakes things up. The dependent clause moves to the
- 02:19
front, and you get:
- 02:20
“Because my adorable kitten mistook my laptop for its litter box, I don’t have my final
- 02:24
paper.”
- 02:25
Still kind of a flimsy excuse, but at least it flows better.
- 02:30
Part two: initial infinitive. An infinitive is just “to” plus a verb. So, you take
- 02:37
this:
- 02:38
“I brought in the laptop. I wanted to avoid getting into trouble.”
- 02:43
That stinks…both grammatically and literally. Stick an infinitive on the front:
- 02:47
“To avoid getting into trouble, I brought in the laptop.”
- 02:52
Part three: the initial adverb. An adverb describes how you did something and usually
- 02:58
ends in “l-y.”
- 02:59
“I was careful to keep the kitten from peeing on me on the way to school, too.”
- 03:04
“Carefully keeping him from peeing on me, I brought the kitten to school.”
- 03:12
And part four: the participial phrase initial modifier – that is, a phrase starting with
- 03:18
a verb that ends with “i-n-g.”
- 03:20
Like this:
- 03:21
“I brought Cupcake as proof. I hope you’ll give me an extension.”
- 03:25
“Hoping to get an extension, I brought Cukcake as proof.”
- 03:31
Dang, that is some adorable proof.
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