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ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1. The purpose of the instruction manual was...what?
ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3. Which sentence in the passage best shows the narrator's point of view on the topic of Chelsea Simpson?
Grade 3 ELA: In Conjunction 71 Views
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Description:
Today we're learning all about but...and or, and and, and not. If you haven't guessed it by now, this video is about conjunctions.
Transcript
- 00:03
[Coop and Dino singing]
- 00:13
The modern world is all about connections...
- 00:15
Roads connecting cities... [A busy road filled with cars]
- 00:16
Telephones connecting people...
- 00:18
Weird iPhone apps connecting people to their secret desire to have the ears and tongue of a dog... [Girl taking a selfie]
Full Transcript
- 00:23
Yup.
- 00:24
Connections are everywhere.
- 00:25
Another thing that gets connected all the time?
- 00:27
Words.
- 00:28
But not through some cool Snapchat filter. [Girl using a snapchat filter]
- 00:30
Nah, words use conjunctions!
- 00:32
Conjunctions are “connecting words” because they're word that, well, connect other words
- 00:36
together.
- 00:37
But enough with the explaining – let's see some examples! [Dino giving conjunction examples]
- 00:40
But. And. Or. Not. For. So. Yet.
- 00:43
Conjunctions can connect two words together...
- 00:45
Like “Chocolate and vanilla.” [Boy holding an ice cream]
- 00:47
As well as two independent clauses or ideas together...
- 00:50
Like, “I see the glass as half full, COMMA BUT you see the glass as half empty.” [Two people looking at a glass]
- 00:54
But guess what?
- 00:55
There are actually special types of conjunctions, too.
- 00:58
Like correlative conjunctions, which are conjunctions that show up in pairs.
- 01:02
This includes conjunctions like “either” or “neither,” which suggest that one thing
- 01:06
doesn't exist without the other. [Man holding hot pizza slice and it turns to a blue slice]
- 01:07
For example, we might say to our pesky sibling, “Either you leave me alone or I tell mom
- 01:12
you're being a butt.”
- 01:13
Of course, we'd never say that. [Little brother pestering older sister]
- 01:15
We're civilized.
- 01:16
We'd say they're being a buttocks.
- 01:18
Another type of conjunction is a subordinating conjunction, which shows how one element of
- 01:22
a sentence is related to another.
- 01:24
Subordinating conjunctions include words like as if, before, how, if, because, unless, and
- 01:30
until.
- 01:31
For example, “Because I was hungry, I ate the cold pizza.” [Hand takes slice of cold pizza out of a fridge]
- 01:34
Which…wow.
- 01:35
What a noble act.
- 01:36
Someone give that guy a medal. [Guy given a medal]
- 01:38
As you've probably guessed, there are a whole lot of different types of conjunctions – but
- 01:42
they all serve the same purpose: to connect the different words and ideas in a sentence
- 01:46
in order to keep it making sense.
- 01:48
And if you disagree with that, then you're just being a stubborn buttocks. [Girl chasing little brother]
- 01:51
So civilized.
- 01:53
Time to take tea in the garden! [Man drinking tea in the garden]
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