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mercy
01-12-2008, 08:16 PM
Does anyone out there know where I can find a detailed list of dissected sentences? I searched the net with no luck.
Thanks
Bluemouth
01-12-2008, 08:44 PM
I found a site with three examples, but I'm sure you already found it considering it was in a Google search. Here's the link. (http://www.intelligencetest.ca/Intelligence/Dissected-Sentences.html)
mercy
01-12-2008, 09:18 PM
Thanks for the link.
I'm really looking for a long list of sentences that are broke down into the parts of speech.
mercy
01-14-2008, 05:09 PM
Ah Ha! I should have searched under sentence diagrams. This is a nice link for anyone who is interested.
Diagramming Sentences (http://www.geocities.com/gene_moutoux/basicdiagrams.htm)
dwspig2
01-15-2008, 05:42 PM
Not to sound like a prick, but why do you want to diagram sentences? There really isn't much practical reason for doing so.
Cogito
01-15-2008, 06:00 PM
It all depends on to what degree you wish to be a seat-of-the-pants writer, I believe there is real value in understanding the full anatomy of a sentence.
For one thing, it illuminates grammatical ambiguity.
mercy
01-16-2008, 06:23 AM
Not to sound like a prick, but why do you want to diagram sentences? There really isn't much practical reason for doing so.
No, you don't sound like a prick. It's ok. I just want to have a full understanding of what's what inside a sentence. If you read the functions of the parts of speech, it seems that the next step is to look at them in use. For example, You may read, "An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb." To see it applied in a sentence and see its relationship with the other words in the sentence makes it very clear.
For one thing, it illuminates grammatical ambiguity.
Exactly
Also, I am hoping that diagramming sentences can help me understand how my favorite writers create different styles. If I can break down their sentences, I may be able to find a pattern in the way they are arranged. Then I can apply it to my own writing.
That's all.
dwspig2
01-16-2008, 11:07 AM
I guess I always found it superfluous because I could understand what going on in the sentence without having to break it down into some tree-shaped mess. To me, that conglomeration is more confusing that simply trying to figure out what's going on in the sentence as it is.
That said, I think this evening I'm going to have the man that I tutor in Latin diagram the exercise sentences. He doesn't understand how nouns interact with verbs anymore than he knows how prepositions interact with their objects. For people like that, I can see that diagramming would begin the steps toward understanding, but once you do understand what's going on, I don't see the real practicality of it. That could just be me though.
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