| A | B |
| Subject of the IC? | (you) understood since an imperative sentence |
| Verb in the IC? | bring |
| DO in the IC? | girl (You bring WHAT? You bring girl) |
| IO in the IC? | ME -- You bring girl to WHOM? ME! |
| Verb tense in IC? | Present |
| Type of dependent clause? | adjective since starts with relative pronoun WHO |
| Subject of DC? | WHO |
| Verb in DC? | Sits |
| Verb in DC -- VI or VT? | VI since no DO! |
| Verb in the IC -- VI or VT? | VT since there is a DO |
| Prep Phrase is adjective or adverb? | adverb -- it's next to the verb SITS and adjective prep phrases MUST be next to noun or pronoun it modifies. |
| Is the dependent clause essential or nonessential? | Essential -- you don't know which girl without the dependent clause |
| When you use an interjection to start a sentence, you can punctuate it two ways. Rewrite the DGP sentence twice using each method to correctly punctuate and capitalize. | Yes, bring me the girl who sits in the dungeon! OR Yes! Bring me the girl who sits in the dungeon. |
| Write an original sentence using an adjective dependent clause. Do NOT use WHO in this week's sentence. | I can drop by her house, WHICH is in my neighborhood. |
| 12. Write an original sentence with a dependent clause AND a DO. | The dog that belongs to my neighbor destroyed the my ball! -- THAT is relative pronoun and BALL is DO. |
| What is the adjective dependent clause in this sentence: That woman’s shoes are the priciest ones that I have ever seen! | that I have ever seen! |
| • E. B. White who wrote the book Stuart Little got the idea for the book while he was sleeping on a train. | WHO wrote the book Stuart Little -- essential to understanding the rest of the sentence |
| The birds, which never showed fear of the vehicle, watched as we swerved around them. | WHICH never showed fear of the vehicle |