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    Q&A - P4 English

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Primary 4
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    • S Offline
      soyabean
      last edited by

      ridcully:
      soyabean:

      He is wearing an __________ look on his face.


      1) agonized
      2) agonizing


      ๐Ÿ™‚

      It is answer 1).

      'Agonized' means showing or feeling extreme pain/anxiety whereas 'agonizing' means causing extreme pain/anxiety.

      Of course, I could be witty and say that someone's look is so awful that it causes other people pain, therefore 'agonizing' would be correct. But
      I wouldn't be so cruel...

      Hehe, thanks R ๐Ÿ™‚

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • R Offline
        ridcully
        last edited by

        atutor2001:
        Hi ridcully, during my kids' time (more than 10 years ago), PSLE standard uses 'are' when there are two or more nouns joined by 'and'.


        Regards
        Okay, thanks for the correction.

        :celebrate:

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        • B Offline
          busybee
          last edited by

          Need help with this S&T qn


          Sheila lives in Toronto. She started living in Toronto during her teenage years.

          _____since

          Answer key : Sheila had been living in Toronto since her teenage years.

          Why is it "had been living" and not โ€˜has been livingโ€™?

          TIA

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          • R Offline
            ridcully
            last edited by

            busybee:
            Sheila lives in Toronto. She started living in Toronto during her teenage years.


            ________________________________since___________________________

            Answer key : Sheila had been living in Toronto since her teenage years.

            Why is it \"had been living\" and not 'has been living'?
            Answer key is wrong. So many answer keys are wrong, or questions ambiguously/erroneously phrased, in assessment books and the like!

            The present perfect continuous 'has been living' is the correct answer as Sheila is still living in Toronto. The present perfect continuous connects something started in the past which continues through to the present day.

            Rgds
            R

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            • B Offline
              busybee
              last edited by

              R,


              Thanks for your prompt reply.

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              • C Offline
                cl82
                last edited by

                Hi Ridcully,


                What should be the correct punctuation (in red) for this sentence?

                \"Children, don't leave your pencils on the floor ./, \" said Mrs Tan.

                The answer sheet says it shld be a comma. Is it? Why? It's just one statement without any continuation.

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                • R Offline
                  ridcully
                  last edited by

                  cl82:
                  Hi Ridcully,


                  What should be t0he correct punctuation (in red) for this sentence?

                  \"Children, don't leave your pencils on the floor ./, \" said Mrs Tan.

                  The answer sheet says it shld be a comma. Is it? Why? It's just one statement without any continuation.
                  Yes, it is a comma. Commas traditionally have been used to separate the direct speech from the reporting clause (the latter identifying who is speaking).

                  Interestingly, you can put a question mark or an exclamation mark instead of the comma, but not a full stop. Thus, the following two sentences are also correct:

                  \"Children, don't leave your pencils on the floor!\" said Mrs Tan.

                  \"Children, have you left your pencils on the floor?\" asked Mrs Tan.

                  In these two cases, the exclamation mark and the question mark are considered as belonging to the direct speech sentence, not the bigger reporting sentence within which the direct speech is contained, and so it is permissible to continue the reporting clause.

                  In contrast, a full stop is considered too strong an endmark. If you use a full stop at the end of direct speech then that terminates the whole sentence. In other words, the full stop is seen as belonging to the bigger reporting sentence, rather than the direct speech clause, and you are not allowed to continue.

                  In normal compositional writing, it is permissible to use question marks and exclamations within bigger sentences, so I guess there is consistency eg

                  Ridcully answered my question - and wrote with panache! - in a timely fashion.

                  Rgds
                  R

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                  • C Offline
                    Champion
                    last edited by

                    Hello All,


                    Like to consult and seek advice on the followings, pertaining to coming SA1 P3 Compo :-

                    (1) Is it discouraged to use \"speech\" for P3 composition writing? Marks will be deducted?

                    (2) Cannot use phrases like \"smelled like dog poop\", \"like one thousand times\" - these are unacceptable phrases in Composition writing?

                    :thankyou:

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                    • C Offline
                      cl82
                      last edited by

                      haha....thks Ridcully, you answered with great panache, as usual :lol:

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                      • N Offline
                        Niedino
                        last edited by

                        Champion:
                        Hello All,


                        Like to consult and seek advice on the followings, pertaining to coming SA1 P3 Compo :-

                        (1) Is it discouraged to use \"speech\" for P3 composition writing? Marks will be deducted?

                        (2) Cannot use phrases like \"smelled like dog poop\", \"like one thousand times\" - these are unacceptable phrases in Composition writing?

                        :thankyou:
                        Hi,

                        There's no penalty for using speech, but inappropiate punctuation and spelling will be penalised. Hence some teachers discourage the use of dialogue until the child is more proficient with the use of the correct punctuation. E.g. \"A stitch in time saves nine,\" said Henry. vs As the saying goes, 'A stitch in time saves nine.' (Open inverted commas should be double commas while quotations are single commas)

                        As for the phrases you've suggested, it is best to avoid them even though it could be a sign of creative expression from the child. Hope this helps!

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