Pronouns -ANSWER- He, she, and they are examples of...?
Phrases -ANSWER- A sentence that lacks a subject and a verb.
For example:
from that night
among the girls
around the bush
Participle Phrase -ANSWER- A part of a sentence that contains a verb and a participle. When it
introduces and modifies a sentence, it's separated from the rest of a sentence by a comma.
i.e. Pleased by the doctor's complimentary words, the nurse smiled.
Clause -ANSWER- A sentence part that contains a subject and a verb.
Prepositional Phrases -ANSWER- A sentence part that lacks a subject or verb and contains prepositions
Prepositions are words that introduce information to the reader. This information can include where
something takes place (such as 'at' the store), when or why something takes place (such as 'before'
dinner), or general descriptive information (such as the girl 'with' the cool tattoo).
For example:
- to the store
- in the street
- on the roof
- at the hospital
- with a stethoscope
Independent Clause -ANSWER- It can stand on its own as a sentence; it has a subject and a verb and
makes a complete thought.
Dependent Clause -ANSWER- A part of a sentence that depends on other words to be added to it to
make sense. It CANNOT stand on its own because it does not form a complete thought.
For example,
-Until the third shift comes on duty
-Because she missed punching in by 15 minutes
-Whenever the fire alarm went off in the hospital.
Adverbial clause -ANSWER- A dependent clause that modifies an a verb and can be placed at the
beginning or end of a sentence.
i.e. Whenever the doctor operates, he leaves VIRTUALLY no scar.
Adjectival Clause -ANSWER- The dependent clause that modifies a noun or pronoun.
i.e. The only nurse on the shift who is not from New York is Angelina
"who is not from New York," modifies nurse
, HESI ENTRANCE EXAM
Noun Clause -ANSWER- A sentence part that contains a subject and a verb that functions as a noun. This
kind of clause can be the subject of the sentence, or it can receive the action of the verb
i.e. Where have the patient's charts gone is anyone's guess
The noun clause functions as the subject
Predicate -ANSWER- The part of the sentence that contains the action word (verb) that tells us what the
subject is or does
Semicolon -ANSWER- A part of punctuation that is not used as much as a comma, but used to:
A) Separate independent clauses that are not joined by a conjunction, such as and or but
i.e. Working the night shift is exhausting; working the morning one can be also
B) Separate independent clauses when on e or both of them contains a comma
i.e. After the intravenous needle was in, the nurse planned to add a unit of blood; but she had to go
check the patients blood type first.
C) To separate independent clauses when the second clause begins with a conjunctive adverb such as
however, nevertheless, moreover, consequently, or for example
Colon -ANSWER- This punctuation mark is primarily used:
A) Before a list
i.e. The supply closet was missing multiple items: two packages of gaze, six bottles of pain medication,
three boxes of sterile needles and four cotton swabs
B) Before a long quotation
i.e. An anonymous person once said: "When you're a nurse you know that every day you will touch a life
or a life will touch you."
C) After the salutation of a business letter
i.e. Dear Staff Administrator:
Integers -ANSWER- These numbers are:
- Divisible by one
- Do not have anything in after the decimal
- Are the number you use to count things that are divisible such as; cars, marbles, and children
Absolute Value -ANSWER- A number with vertical lines on either side of it and is representative of the
distance from zero. This value is ALWAYS a positive number.
Ex. | -3 |= 3 and | 3 |= 3
Prime numbers -ANSWER- A number that has exactly two different factors: itself and one. It cannot be
negative numbers, 0, or one.
I.E. 2,3,5,7,11, and 13
2,3,5, 7, 11, and 13 -ANSWER- What are the 6 smallest prime numbers?