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Subject and Verb Agreement

i. a/the number
ii. there is, there are
iii. intervening words, phrases, and clauses
a. with, together with, including, accompanied by, in addition to, or as well
b. prepositional phrase
i. compound subjects joined by and
ii. every or each preceding a compound subject
iii. indefinite pronouns as subjects
iv. subjects joined by or or nor
Number: Singularity/ Plurality

Tense Consistency
i. Do not use auxiliary verbs in the simple tense.
ii. Use have, has, or had as auxiliary verb in the perfect tense.
iii. Use is, are, was, were as auxiliary verb with a main verb ending in ing.
iv. Keep tenses consistent within sentences.
v. Do not change tenses when there is no time change for the action.
vi. Use the present tense when writing essays about your own ideas and factual topics.
vii. Use the past tense when writing about past events and completed studies in research.
viii. Use the future aspect when writing about an event that will occur in the future.

Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
Rule #1 Number
Rule #2 Gender
Rule #3 Case
Rule #4 Person
This, it, his, they





August 4 (Monday) Homework
Locate a news report in a broadsheet that talks about a particular conflict. Study the nature of the conflict very
well. Determine a win-win solution to address the conflict.
Write a short dialogue between the two parties involved that will show how they arrived at the win-win solution.
Use a whole sheet of paper. Attach the copy of the news report to this sheet. Be guided by the rubrics below.



































PLEASE DO NOT FORGET YOUR PERSONALIZED STAMPS (INCENTIVES)
PRINT LESSON PLAN FOR AUG. 6-8
LONG QUIZ QUESTIONNAIRE AND ANSWER SHEET
CLASS RECORD
NARRATIVE


No. Date
Knowledge
Subject and Verb
(20)
Tense
Consistency (15)
Conjunctions
(15)
Pronoun-
Antecedent (15)
Card Catalogue
(10)
1 5 5 5 5
2 5 5 5 5
3 08-08 5 5 5 5 5
Understanding
The First
Monkey
Vocabulary
(15)

5 -Synonyms
5 -Antonyms
5 -Heteronyms
Process
Idioms (Typhoon
Glenda)




Product/ Performance
Poster slogan Broadsheet
(Article)
Notebook
(Lecture and
Homework)












Underline independent clause
Encircle conjunction
Square dependent clause

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