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It may surprise you to know
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that I really enjoy scary stories.
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Not the kind with monsters and killing,
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but the kind with strange sounds at night
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and mysterious shadows.
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These stories are thrilling
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because I know they're just for fun.
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We especially like scary stories in October
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here in the U.S.
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That's when we celebrate Halloween.
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Well, a good story is enjoyable any time of the year,
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and I'd like to share a story with you now
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to help us talk about a grammar point.
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Adverb clauses and how we reduce them to phrases.
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The first time you hear the story,
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don't concern yourself with structures.
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Just enjoy the story.
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Try to focus on what's happening.
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That's the first step to mastering a grammar point:
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understanding the meaning.
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After reading the story, we'll look more closely at the words and forms I chose to use.
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Let me ask you some questions.
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This story is what we'd call realistic fiction.
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I made it up, but it could happen in real life.
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I do have a husband that snores.
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Have you ever heard strange sounds at night?
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Did they alarm you?
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Let's talk about grammar now.
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In the text, I placed a number of phrases in bold.
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Those phrases act like adverbs.
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They were formed from adverb clauses.
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As you may know, there are different types of adverb clauses.
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For example, and adverb clause can express...
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To keep things simple in this lesson,
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we'll only look at adverb clauses of time
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and adverb clauses of reason.
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Adverb clauses of time begin with words like...
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Adverb clauses of reason begin with words like...
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Adverb clauses are dependent clauses.
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They can't stand alone.
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They give important information,
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but they're not complete sentences.
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To form a complete sentence,
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we use an adverb clause and a main clause, an independent clause.
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This is the main part of our sentence,
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and the adverb clause gives more information.
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For example, when something happened or why something happened.
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Let me give you examples.
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Our first example is a line from the story.
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Let me give you a second example.
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Do you see the two adverb clauses?
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Here they are.
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They're adverb clauses of time.
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They answer the question WHEN?
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When did these events happen?
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The events are told in the main part of the sentence.
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The adverb clauses then give information about when.
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Look closely and you'll see that all the clauses,
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both dependent and independent, have a subject and a verb.
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Our example:
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This phrase has a verb form, but no subject.
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That's an important difference between a phrase and a clause.
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We can often reduce adverb clauses to shorter phrases.
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These shorter phrases can give our writing a better flow.
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They're common in fiction, in the news, in reports.
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They're less common in conversation.
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Now let's look at how we reduce the full adverb clauses to phrases.