Friday, January 16, 2009

APPOSITIVES


The Appositive


Recognize an appositive when you see one.

An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it. The appositive can be a short or long combination of words. Look at these examples:
  1. The insect, a cockroach, is crawling across the kitchen table.
  2. The insect, a large cockroach, is crawling across the kitchen table.
  3. The insect, a large cockroach with hairy legs, is crawling across the kitchen table.
  4. The insect, a large, hairy-legged cockroach that has spied my bowl of oatmeal, is crawling across the kitchen table.


Here are more examples:


During the dinner conversation, Clifford, the messiest eater at the table, spewed mashed potatoes like an erupting volcano.


My 286 computer, a modern-day dinosaur, chews floppy disks as noisily as my brother does peanut brittle.


Genette's bedroom desk, the biggest disaster area in the house, is a collection of overdue library books, dirty plates, computer components, old mail, cat hair, and empty potato chip bags.

Reliable, Diane's eleven-year-old beagle, chews holes in the living room carpeting as if he were still a puppy.


Punctuate the appositive correctly.
The important point to remember is that a nonessential appositive is always separated from the rest of the sentence with comma(s).


When the appositive begins the sentence, it looks like this:


A hot-tempered tennis player, Robbie charged the umpire and tried to crack the poor man's skull with a racket.


When the appositive interrupts the sentence, it looks like this:


Robbie, a hot-tempered tennis player, charged the umpire and tried to crack the poor man's skull with a racket.


And when the appositive ends the sentence, it looks like this:


Upset by the bad call, the crowd cheered Robbie, a hot-tempered tennis player who charged the umpire and tried to crack the poor man's skull with a racket.

CLICK HERE TO GO TO EXERCISES:

http://grammar.about.com/od/basicsentencegrammar/a/practiceappos.htm

http://depts.dyc.edu/learningcenter/owl/exercises/comma_placement_ex5.htm#

WATCH A SHORT VIDEO ABOUT APPOSITIVES:

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