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Question
wayground formerly quizizz worksheets
participiple phrases
total questions: 10
worksheet time: 5mins
instructor name: erica booth - taylor
- identify the participial phrase in the sentence: removing his coat, jack rushed to the river.
a) removing his coat,
b) removing
c) rushed
d) jack rushed to the river
- identify the past participle in the sentence: sarah noticed her sister walking along the shoreline.
a) shoreline
b) noticed
c) walking
d) walking along
- identify the participial phrase in the sentence: children introduced to music early develop strong intellectual skills.
a) introduced to music early
b) develop strong intellectual skills
- participle is a verb that is used as an adjective in a sentence.
check all that apply to \participle\
a) past participles often end in -ed, -d, or -t.
b) present participles end in -ing
c) it is not the main verb of the sentence and does not have a subject.
Brief Explanations
- A participial phrase includes the participle and its modifiers. In "Removing his coat, Jack rushed to the river", "Removing his coat" is the participial phrase.
- The past - tense verb "noticed" is the past participle in "Sarah noticed her sister walking along the shoreline". "Walking" is a present participle.
- In "Children introduced to music early develop strong intellectual skills", "introduced to music early" is the participial phrase modifying "children".
- Past participles often end in -ed, -d, or -t (e.g., "introduced"), present participles end in -ing (e.g., "walking"), and a participle is not the main verb and has no subject of its own.
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- A. Removing his coat
- B. noticed
- A. introduced to music early
- A. past participles often end in -ed, -d, or -t., B. Present participles end in -ing, C. It is not the main verb of the sentence and does not have a subject.