|
The same piece of lumber could serve as a stud or a rafter. The difference lies in how the lumber is used. It's equally important to know where to place the support beams. Would you want to live in a house built by someone who didn't know the difference between a floor joist and a window sill? No way! The entire house could fall down around you. Language works the same way. Nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, and prepositions are the building blocks of English. You can write without knowing the parts of speech, but you run the risk of faulty construction. If you know the basics, your writing will be much stronger. Once you have a handle on the parts of speech, you will begin to understand how words work. Almost any word can be more than one part of speech, depending on its purpose in a particular context. Recognizing a specific word as a noun or an adjective means understanding how it functions in the sentence.
JabberwockyLewis Carroll's poem "Jabberwocky" teems with portmanteau words. These are words formed by blending distinct words into new words. "Slithy" is Carroll's combination of "slimy" and "lithe." "Jabberwocky" may sound like nonsense, and you may not recognize all of the portmanteau combinations. But if you are aware of how words function, you can sense the meaning of the prattle.
In the poem, toves are obviously things, or creatures, and so are raths. And because those raths outgrabe, "outgrabe" must be a verb. "Brillig," "mimsy," and "frumious" sure sound like adjectives. In other words, readers sense that "fish" could not replace "brillig," but it could replace "toves." Here's a challenge. Think of an acceptable substitute for every nonsense word in "Jabberwocky." As you substitute, you are determining how the words function in their contexts. Watch: "'Twas sunny and the slimy fish ..." or "'Twas ragged and the hairy weightlifters ..."
BACK | NEXT Terms of Use | Privacy Policy Call Toll Free 1-800-453-6227 Fax 206-381-5601 |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||