Advanced Grammar Special Topics
RAVs • Appositives • Complex-Compound Sentences • Punctuation • Parallel Structure • Embedding Quotes
Reduced Adverb Clauses & Verbal Phrases (RAVs)
Using participial and verbal phrases to create sentence variety and conciseness
A RAV is a shortened (reduced) form of an adverb clause or verbal phrase that adds detail to a sentence without requiring a full clause. RAVs eliminate unnecessary words, making writing more sophisticated and fluid.
Types of RAVs
1. Present Participial Phrase (–ing): Shows an action happening at the same time as the main verb.
2. Past Participial Phrase (–ed / –en): Shows a completed or passive action.
3. Infinitive Phrase (to + verb): Typically shows purpose.
Appositives
Renaming and adding essential detail right beside a noun
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase placed next to another noun to rename, identify, or describe it. Appositives add information efficiently, eliminating the need for a separate sentence.
• Nonrestrictive (nonessential): Extra info — set off with commas. Can be removed without changing the sentence’s meaning.
• Restrictive (essential): Needed to identify the noun — no commas.
Nonrestrictive Appositives
Restrictive Appositives
Notice that no commas surround restrictive appositives because the information is essential to identifying the noun.
Complex-Compound Sentences
Combining coordination and subordination for sophisticated sentence craft
A compound-complex sentence contains at least two independent clauses and at least one dependent (subordinate) clause. It blends the strengths of compound sentences (showing equal ideas) with complex sentences (showing relationships like cause, time, or condition).
Building Blocks
- Independent clause (IC): A complete thought that can stand alone. The storm arrived.
- Dependent clause (DC): Begins with a subordinating conjunction (because, although, when, if, while, since…) or a relative pronoun — cannot stand alone. When the storm arrived…
- Coordinating conjunction: FANBOYS — for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so.
Patterns
Punctuation Essentials
Commas, semicolons, colons, dashes, and more — and when to use each
Commas
- Compound sentence: Use a comma before FANBOYS joining two independent clauses. I finished the book, and I started a new one.
- Introductory element: After an introductory phrase or clause. After the rain stopped, we went outside.
- Series/list: Between items (use the Oxford comma). We bought apples, bananas, and grapes.
- Nonessential elements: Around appositives, nonrestrictive clauses, and parenthetical expressions.
Semicolons
Colons
Use a colon after an independent clause to introduce a list, explanation, or elaboration.
Dashes & Parentheses
Em dashes (—) add emphasis or set off a dramatic aside. Parentheses downplay inserted information.
Parallel Structure
Keeping grammatical forms balanced for clarity and rhythm
Parallel structure (parallelism) means using the same grammatical form for items in a series, comparisons, or paired expressions. It creates balance, clarity, and a pleasing rhythm.
Fixing Faulty Parallelism
Parallelism with Correlative Conjunctions
Embedding Quotes
Integrating source material smoothly and correctly
Effective academic and professional writing requires weaving quotations into your own sentences rather than dropping them in without context. A well-embedded quote flows naturally within the grammar of your sentence.
Three Methods of Embedding
1. Full-sentence introduction with a colon:
2. Signal phrase with a comma:
3. Blended (no comma — the quote completes your sentence):
Key Rules
- Periods and commas always go inside closing quotation marks (in American English).
- Semicolons and colons always go outside closing quotation marks.
- Question marks and exclamation points go inside if they’re part of the quote, outside if they’re part of your sentence.
- Use brackets [ ] to change a word for grammatical fit: The study showed that “[participants] responded positively.”
- Use ellipses (…) to indicate omitted words from the middle of a quote.
- A quote within a quote uses single quotation marks: She said, “I loved the poem ‘The Road Not Taken.'”
📝 Comprehension Quiz
Select the best answer for each question, then click Check Answers to see your score.