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A Little Game. Reading Is Comprehension. Each of the following is a complete sentence--but it may take you a few reads to realize it. Can you understand them all?
1. The man who hunts ducks out on the weekend. 2. The old man the boat. 3. The complex houses married and single soldiers and their families.[list] [Edited 7/5/16 3:14am] | |
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it looks to be olde english to me... i am KING BAD!!!
you are NOT... STOP ME IF YOU HEARD THIS BEFORE... | |
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nope, they're normal modern sentences. | |
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from what area(s)??? [Edited 7/5/16 12:30pm] i am KING BAD!!!
you are NOT... STOP ME IF YOU HEARD THIS BEFORE... | |
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idk I assumed it was from all over the states. | |
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Yes, I get them. Had to read them a couple times slowly though. | |
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The key for me was the last sentence, perhaps because I grew up in a military town, it was an easier sentence to restructure. | |
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Not an English native speaker here and I find them fairly straight forward. I am a languages teacher though, so that might help.. | |
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okay, got them | |
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morningsong said:
Identify the verb. It's easy once you do that! | |
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nothin 'normal' about them its not standard in speakin or writin.
i am KING BAD!!!
you are NOT... STOP ME IF YOU HEARD THIS BEFORE... | |
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without punctuation the clearest statement to me is: "the old man the boat" which in 'normal' speech is 'the old, man the boat' the rest of them seem to be specific to area or group... i am KING BAD!!!
you are NOT... STOP ME IF YOU HEARD THIS BEFORE... | |
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Two & Three came to me fairly quickly, but I found the first one took a little effort to parse out. I think you would ordinarily put some commas in there, no? It was fun working through these, though. | |
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No not in everyday speech, but it does show up from time to time.
But that's why I said the last one was the easiest for me because I did grew up in military territory so the way that's phrased sounded familiar. | |
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nonames said: Not an English native speaker here and I find them fairly straight forward. I am a languages teacher though, so that might help.. Same here. And I'm not even a language teacher, but I've been learning English since age 12 and watching movies and listening to songs also helped... | |
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KingBAD said:
without punctuation the clearest statement to me is: "the old man the boat" which in 'normal' speech is 'the old, man the boat' the rest of them seem to be specific to area or group... If I understand that sentence correctly, that comma is wrong. 'The old (i.e. The elderly) man the boat'. You don't need a comma after the subject. Sorry, I'm just being annoying, but as I sometimes tell my students, I get paid to be annoying... [Edited 7/6/16 16:01pm] | |
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I don't understand nothing at all, well the first it's quite clear, or so i think. | |
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i put it there to show where the break would be and since i wrote it you should very well unnastand that however i write somethin is right, cause i'm the one wrote it.
i am KING BAD!!!
you are NOT... STOP ME IF YOU HEARD THIS BEFORE... | |
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