Caught’Ya Sentences 1-5

Sentence 1:

felicia began to mutter words of a spell too encourage her freindpauline puerile to cheer up. isabelle ingenuous put her hand over felicias mouth two stop her from uttering her spell

Felicia began to mutter words of a spell to encourage her friend Pauline Puerile to cheer up. Isabelle Ingenuous put her hand over Felicia’s mouth to stop her from uttering her spell.

Vocabulary words:

puerile, ingenuous, uttering

Notes:

  1. homophones to/two/too
  2. “I” before “e” except after “c”
  3. Singular possessive pronouns require an apostrophe

Sentence 2:

you know it will backfire on you felicia cautions isabelle ingenuous. youdont want to obliterate youre knew hairdo do you

“You know it will backfire on you, Felicia,” cautioned Isabelle Ingenuous. “You don’t want to obliterate your new hairdo, do you?”

Vocabulary words:

Obliterate

Notes:

  1. Quotes go around dialogue with the proper punctuation inside the marks
  2. Use commas for a direct address
  3. Verb tense in stories is always in the past

Sentence 3:

me and my other magic friends practiced all summer retorted a slightly indignant felicia. im getting a little gooder at it. im doing good.

“My other magic friends and I practiced all summer,” retorted a slightly indignant Felicia. “I’m getting a little better at it. I’m doing well.”

Vocabulary:

Retorted, indignant

Notes:

  1. Subject pronouns (I) versus object pronouns (me)
  2. Use apostrophes for contractions of two words
  3. Use adjectives (good) versus adverbs (well) correctly

Sentence 4:

heyfelicia how come your not garbed in black as you were all last year asks a boy whos puckish expression mirrored his waggish personality

“Hey, Felicia, how come you’re not garbed in black as you were all last year?” asked a boy whose puckish expression mirrored his waggish personality.

Vocabulary:

Garbed, puckish, waggish

Notes:

  1. Use commas for direct address and interjections
  2. Relative pronoun (whose) versus contraction (who’s)

Sentence 5:

felica fey rolled her eyes and retorted hey william waggish i may dress weirdly and my spells may backfire but you right the most egregious poetry

Felicia Fey rolled her eyes and retorted, “Hey, William Waggish, I may dress weirdly, and my spells may backfire, but you write the most egregious poetry.”

Vocabulary:

Fey, egregious

Notes:

  1. Commas used in a compound sentence
  2. Homophones rite/write/ right
  3. Spelling rule: with a CVC, double the final consonant when you add a suffix