Appositives and Appositive Phrases Notes

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Appositives and Appositive Phrases Notes
A phrase is a group of words that may have a subject or a
verb but not both. A phrase cannot stand alone and does not
express a complete thought.
An appositive is a noun or pronoun that identifies or renames
another noun or pronoun.
Ex. My friend Tracie is a stay-at-home mom.
An appositive phrase is made up of an appositive plus its
modifiers.
Ex. My father, a rep for MBS Books, travels throughout
the southeast.
An essential (or restrictive) appositive gives information that is
needed to identify the preceding noun or pronoun. Because this
information is necessary, no commas are needed.
Ex. The band Journey was popular in the 1970s and 1980s.
(Without the name Journey, I could be talking about lots of
different bands; adding this restrictive appositive provides
necessary information to the meaning of my sentence.)
A nonessential (or nonrestrictive) appositive adds extra
information about a noun or pronoun whose meaning is already
clear. Because it is not necessary, a nonessential appositive
phrase must be set off from the rest of the sentence with
commas.
Ex. Journey, a band from my childhood, was popular in
the 1970s and 1980s.
(In this case, the essential information is outside of the
appositive phrase; the phrase I added in bold simply specifies
and gives extra detail about the noun it modifies.)
A good way to check if a phrase is essential or nonessential is to
say the sentence aloud without the appositive in it. If all
necessary information for understanding is present without the
appositive phrase, it is nonessential. If the sentence “loses”
important meaning, then the phrase is essential.
In general, nonessential appositive phrases are more commonly
found in writing than essential ones are.
Examples for class:
In these sentences, underline the appositive phrase.
1. San Francisco, home of the famed cable cars, was named
for St. Francis.
2. Pennsylvania is named for William Penn, one of its
founders.
3. American Indian place names abound in Oklahoma, home
of the Choctaw and other peoples.
4. Montreal, the name of a city in Quebec Province, means
“Mount Royal.”
5. The Spanish, early settlers of California, left their mark
with these place names.
6. San Jose, the name of a city in California, is Spanish for
“Saint Joseph.”
7. New York City, a mixture of many ethnic groups, is the
largest city in the United States.
8. Paris, the son of the Trojan king, had kidnapped Helen.
9. Agamemnon, the brother of King Menelaus, led his
warriors to Troy to rescue her.
In these sentences, add the appropriate punctuation and
underline the appositive phrase.
10.The king of the gods Zeus tried to remain impartial.
11. How was the Greek goddess Athena involved in the
Trojan War?
12.Thetis Achilles’ mother tried to protect her son from death.
13.She dipped him into the Styx a sacred river.
14.Achilles killed Hector the Trojan king’s son.
15.Achilles mourned the death of his friend Patroclus.
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