INTRODUCTION TO THE ENGLISH SYLLABUS IN KENYAN SECONDARY SCHOOLS
The syllabus covers the following areas as examined in the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE).
These are the areas examined under paper one
PAPER TWO
Paper two has the following areas
PAPER THREE
Paper three is about creative and critical writing.
SCHEMES OF WORK FORM TWO ENGLISH TERM 1-3
ENGLISH GRAMMAR AND POETRY NOTES
English free lesson plans for all topics (Form one to four)
ENGLISH GRAMMAR NOTES FOR F1-4: SIMPLIFIED
ENGLISH GRAMMAR FORM 4 ASSIGNMENTS
FORM ONE ENGLISH LESSON PLANS FREE
KCSE ENGLISH PAPER 1 PREDICTION QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
English Functional Skills writing notes, exams, revision questions and samples
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Writing legibly
The main aim of writing is to communicate. There is no point in writing anything illegible as information is therefore inaccessible and the purpose of wring no achieved.
So, to write legibly and coherently observe the following:
Debating Skills
A debate is a formal discussion on a contentious or controversial issue between two groups of people. To debate effectively, members of each group plus the hosts must understand the debating rules, schedule and skills.
The debating schedule is fixed by the hosts and indicates the time the debate is supposed to begin and the two opposing teams. The schedule also indicates the format of debate like how many members per team, how many proposers and opposers and how many minutes allocated per speaker. It is also important for the participants to know if they can use the entire stage, be fixed at the microphone or dress in a defined way.
When preparing for debate
During debate
Using a dictionary
All words in a dictionary are alphabetically arranged in order of all letters of the words respectively. This is for convenience of usage.
A dictionary will help he user
–Find out the correct spellings of a word.
–Identify how the word functions in a sentence e.g. a verb, conjunction, adjective etc.
–Get the meaning of the word.
–Get the correct pronunciation.
–Find the synonyms the homophones of a word.
–Identify compound nouns that can be derived from the word. E.g. Over—overcrowd, over react, overachieve, overwork etc.
Some words in a dictionary are polysemy i.e. they have several meanings depending on the context. It is therefore important when checking up the meaning of a word in the dictionary to know the context where you want to apply the meaning. E.g. Minute can refer to time or something tiny.
Composition writing
When writing a composition consider the following:
Articles
Articles are very short words placed in front of nouns. They tell us whether we are referring to a noun in a specific or general way.
Definite article is the. It is definite because it is used when the speaker and the listener know what is being talked about. E.g. The desk that you asked for is this. The man has come. The Indian Ocean. The guitar.
–It is also used when talking about nationalities because they are familiar. E.g. The Kenyan, the Briton, the American etc.
–It is also used when referring to inventions because they are known and studied. E.g. Who invented the computer, the telegram, the electricity etc.
–Use with superlative forms because they refer to unique things or people within a group who are known. E.g. She is the tallest in our class. Mount Everest is the tallest in the world. USA is the richest country in the world.
Indefinite articles ‘a’ and ‘an’ are used with singular nouns. ‘a’ is used with nouns that begin with consonant sounds like a cow, a goat, a stick etc. whereas ‘an’ is used with nouns that begin with vowel sounds like an elephant, an umbrella, an hour etc.
–The indefinite article ‘a’ and ‘an’ is mainly used when mentioning something or someone for the first time and in cases where not all parties are aware of who or what is being talked about. E.g. I saw a man run away. A lady came was asking for you. I need an umbrella.
Exercise
Fill in each blank space with an appropriate article.
__man came into the room with__ woman carrying __umbrella. They took their seats and ordered tea. __ man whispered something in __ woman’s ear. She remained transfixed for a while before lurching forward and hugging him . __ umbrella which was on the table fell.
Capitalization
A capital letter is used to
Turn taking
Turn taking involves skills in making a good conversation.
When having a conversation observe the following
a)Listen carefully when others talk.
You can tell when it is your turn by
1) Listening for pauses in the other party’s speech.
Group Discussions
To effectively participate in a group discussion
A chairperson to
–guide the group
–to call upon individual members to contribute.
–Keep the discussion moving and guide from digression or going out of topic.
–keep emotions in check.
A secretary to
–record important points of discussion
–identify and record areas of agreement
–make a presentation of what was discussed to the rest of the class.
–Research and list the points you want to make
–Arrange them in some order—preferably from the least to the most important plus their respective examples.
–Do not memorize the points as your speech might not flow naturally.
–listen critically to others
–show interest in their contribution
–and when it is your turn to speak do so in plain English for clarity
–do not show off for others can turn against you.
–be brief and stick to the time allocated
–be polite thoughtful and considerate
–don’t interrupt others if you disagree.
Disagreeing politely
If you are in disagreement with another person try to
–listen attentively in order to understand the other person’s point of view. Sometimes we disagree because we have not understood each other.
–put yourself in the shoes of the other person and deliberately take the other person’s point of view; try to understand that person’s position.
–Focus on the current issue. Even if you have disagreed before, do not revisit past issues. Doing so raises unnecessary tensions.
–Explain clearly what you disagree with. Do not attack the person by humiliating him or her tackle the problem.
–Exercise self-control. Use polite language that is sound and sincere.
–Remember that we can agree to disagree. Other people have a right to hold differing opinions.
When disagreeing use these expressions
I am sorry to say this… I am afraid you are wrong on that…. please consider also….
Pardon me on this… excuse me… I regret to admit that… I understand what you mean but…
That is probably true but… You have a point but suppose…
This is not easy for me to say but….
Interrupting Courteously
In the course of listening, we may find it necessary to interrupt the speaker. This could happen when we feel that we have something important to add to what is being said and it cannot wait till the speaker finishes talking. We may also interrupt when we feel inclined to urgently express doubt or disbelief about a falsehood on something important being passed as a fact. Interrupting should be done only when it is absolutely necessary.
When you want to interrupt
— begin with polite expressions such as excuse me, pardon me, sorry etc.
–only interject when the speaker pauses between one sentence and another, not in the middle of a sentence or a word.
–interrupt in a polite respectful manner without portraying intolerance
–do not laugh at the mistakes of others as you interrupt with your contribution
–do not wait impatiently to seize the opportunity to interrupt since this will disrupt your listening.
Using you voice effectively
To use your voice effectively on the stage, it is important to manage stage fright by
–doing thorough preparation on what you are going to present
–Learning to acquaint yourself with the audience so that you see them as a bunch of ordinary people who shouldn’t scare you.
–Standing upright when speaking
–Looking straight at the audience by establishing eye contact
–using appropriate gestures and facial expressions that tally with what you are saying.
To be able to use your voice effectively
–open your mouth wide enough to let out the voice
–avoid shrill and high-pitched tones
–avoid horse and harsh tones
–breathe in regularly and smoothly—take a break when you pause
–finish on one word before starting on another
–pronounce words correctly
Barriers to effective listening
—Distractions such as noise and movement of other people
–Failure to pay attention or having a short concentration spun, which occurs when someone is speaking to us and our minds begin to wander.
–Impatience—we get so impatient with a speaker that we begin to guess what he or she wants to say. We end up not understanding what one says because we make wrong guesses.
–Criticising delivery and physical appearance—as listeners, we may focus more on the manner and language of the speaker, for instance, mispronunciation or the manner of dressing at the expense of the message.
–Jumping to conclusions—we may not let the speaker finish to speak; instead ,we react to what we think he is going to say.
–Overreacting to emotional words—when a speaker uses words that provoke us emotionally, we make judgement that block out things that we do not want to hear.
–Our desire to speak—when someone else is speaking to us, we may be busy thinking about what to say next.
–Physiological and emotional states—sometimes hunger, anxiety, tiredness or sickness can prevent us from listening effectively.
–Day dreaming.
Personal space
Personal space is simply the space around someone whenever they are. A distance of one metre radius could be seen as an ideal personal space. On the queue, in a bus, at a party, in public or private, everyone has their own personal space no matter who they are. Personal space represents comfort zones for people and not necessarily status.
Examples of tips and thing avoid in respect to other people’s personal space
–Avoid rifling through someone’s desk without his or her permission—some work should not be accessed without permission.
–Avoid being loud as you speak over the phone, shouting, dragging your feet or chair in an environment where other people are concentrating on something, eating food with a very strong smell, playing music loud etc.
Entering someone’s space usually means that you are defining a new relationship with them, which is mutually agreed.
Question
Identify situations in which it would be courteous for you to maintain a respectable distance as you interact with people.
–When queuing for services, in a bank, while voting, while waiting for an elevator, food etc.
–While sharing public facilities like transport, urinals and lifts
–When interacting with a stranger
–When interacting with elders, VIPs, leaders etc.
–When other people are being served in an office, when in consultation with a doctor etc.
–While interacting with people whose culture demands it. E.g. No shaking of hands.
–While talking on phone.
Stress on words
Stress is a force placed on a specific syllable in a word or on a specific word in a sentence to change its meaning. A syllable is a distinct sound in a word. A word can have one to several syllables. For example
Go—one syllable
Trans/fer—two syllables
Edu/ca/tion—three syllables
Change in stress within a word can lead to conversion. Conversion is a process of pronunciation which involve shift in stress to change a word from one category to another like from a noun to a verb or adjective to a verb and vice visor. For example
‘TRANSport (noun)—trans’PORT (verb)
‘REject (noun)—re’JECT (VERB)
Question
Using a dictionary show how stress changes in these words from noun to verb and adjective to verb where applicable.
Reject project conduct contest record invalid
Stress in Sentences
Stress can be used in a sentence for certain effects. Usually, when stress is placed on a word within a sentence, that word will be pronounced with a higher pitch than the rest. This automatically adds weight on it which in effect manipulates the meaning of that sentence. Consider the sentence below.
Carol stole my book and sold it to the hawkers.
We can use stress to manipulate the meaning of this sentence to achieve the following implications. The underlined word in each construction carries the stress.
Carol stole my book and sold it to the hawkers.
Carol stole my book and sold it to the hawkers.
Carol stole my book and sold it to the hawkers.
Carol stole my book and sold it to the hawkers.
Carol stole my book and sold it to the hawkers.
Question
Use stress in the following sentences to achieve the following implications in meaning. Rewrite the sentence with the stressed word(s) underlined in each case.
When Eunice died of malaria, all hopes that John had of marital bliss died with her.
Natural Stress
Natural stress would usually fall on the last word in a sentence. For example:
He talked of going abroad.
But if a sentence ends with a pronoun or a preposition we do not stress either, instead, we stress the word preceding either. E.g
Something came up. She told him. It is something to fight for. They killed her.
If a sentence ends with a preposition preceded by a pronoun or a pronoun preceded by a preposition, then we stress the word that comes before the two. E.g.
The stranger shouted at me. She led me on.
Intonation in Sentences
Intonation refers to the changing of pitch levels from low to high and high to low in a sentence.
Pitch is the intensity of the voice or sound when you utter a word.
Higher pitch implies louder sound and low pitch implies low sound.
We can use intonation to encourage someone to go on speaking or discourage him.
Rising intonation can be used to encourage someone to go on speaking or show that we are interested. E.g.
Speaker: One day
Listener: yes (rising)
Speaker: I met….
We can use falling intonation to discourage someone from speaking or show that we are not interested. E.g.
Speaker: Yesterday I saw a man…
Listener: Okay (falling)
Rising intonation is also used when you call for the attention of someone. E.g.
Sheila? (rising) Hey (rising)
–All statements and exclamations have a falling intonation.
I am coming home today. (falling)
What a match that was! (falling)
–Falling intonation also indicates finality. For example when denying accusations, you can say
I did not do it. (falling)
–All questions that require a Yes/No answer have a rising intonation. E.g.
Did you go home? (rising) Yes/No
Is your mom around? (rising) Yes/No
–All questions that do not require a yes/no answer have a falling intonation. Such questions would normally begin with h or wh element. E.g.
What is your name? (falling) My name is John Kimi.
How was your flight? When will she arrive? Etc
–Intonation can be used to manipulate statements; changing them into questions, expressing certainty, politeness, doubts etc.
Her name is Mary. (falling) certain
Her name is Mary. (rising) doubting.
Have you had your lunch? (falling) polite
Have you had your lunch? (rising) indifferent
–Falling intonation is also used in a list to show that you have reached your final item. E.g.
One (r) two(r) three(r) four(r) five(falling)
Question
Identify the intonation that is used in each of the following sentences and state whether it is a rising or falling intonation. Use a rising or falling arrow respectively.
Coordinating Conjunction
A coordinating conjunction such as and, or, and but joins clauses that are equal in importance together to form compound sentences.
We use and to show addition e.g. James and John are missing.
We use but to express contrast e.g. He is clever but arrogant.
We use or to show a choice or option e.g. Tell James or Carol to come.
Correlative Conjunctions
These conjunctions join clauses of equal importance. They usually occur in pairs and both receive the same attention. Examples.
She seldom eats when angry. He rarely goes to church when stressed.
Exercise
Combine the following sentences using an appropriate correlative conjunction.
Sarah was kind to her neighbours
The girls lost their match
We can do community work
We don’t know if tomorrow will be wet
Karendi refused to say a word
She wanted to be president
She died
It was not true
Subordinating Conjunctions
A subordinating conjunction joins a main clause within a sentence to a subordinate clause or dependent clause.
A dependent clause is a clause within a sentence that cannot make sense on its own. It therefore depends on the independent or main clause for meaning. E.g.
She came after four O’clock.
Main subordinate
She made it although she almost lost
Main dependent
The most common subordinating conjunctions are as, because, for, since, whereas, after, before, until, while, as if, as though, except, if, otherwise, unless, although etc.
–Sometimes dependent clauses appear at the end of sentences and other times at the beginning. E.g.
Since it is getting late, we have to walk faster.
Dependent main
When the dependent clause appears first, a comma must be used to separate it from the main clause.
–When a sentence has a subordinating conjunction, it immediately becomes a complex sentence. A complex sentence can have one or more than one subordinating conjunctions e.g.
While we were waiting for the bus, an old man came and joined us although we did not know him.
Compound sentences are made up of two or more main clauses joined together by a coordinating conjunction. E.g. He came home but did not see him.
–Sometimes a compound sentence can occur without the conjunction e.g. Her life was pure, her marriage calm.
A simple sentence has no conjunctions e.g. Joan is sick.
Sentence Structure
A sentence is a group of words usually composed of a subject, verb and object. A sentence can stand on its own as an independent thought.
Joseph wanted to buy the book.
Subj verb obj
–A sentence must name a person or thing that forms its topic (the subject) and make a comment about it (predicate). Thus the subject is the thing or person mentioned and the predicate is the comment made about it.
Ken is sick
Subj predi
A predicate contain a verb, object and sometime preposition in a sentence.
She came for you
–Sometimes the predicate comes at the beginning of a sentence e.g.
Here come the bus
–In some sentences , the subject can be assumed or left out e.g.
(You) sit down. Sit down.
Exercise
Identify the subject and the predicate in the following sentences.
Other types of sentences are
Statement—Most sentences start with a capital letter and end with a full stop. Statements can be
Declaratives if they declare something like I have won.
Affirmatives/Assertives if they emphasis something e.g. I will take you home for sure.
Commands/Imperatives if they order e.g. Be quiet.
Interrogatives/Questions if they ask e.g. What is your name?
Exclamatory if they end with an exclamation mark. E.g What a shame!
Negative statements if they have the word not or no/never e.g. You do not look tired.
FILLING IN FORMS
Forms help us to collect and give information. When filling in forms consider the following:
INTERJECTIONS
An interjection is a word or group of words that express strong feelings. It has no grammatical connection to any other words in the sentence. Interjections are often followed by exclamation marks.
The following are common interjections
| Word | Alternate/ Similar | Translation | Example | Meaning |
| aah! | aaah, aaaahh | “Help!” | “Aaaah! It’s eating my leg!” | Fright, shock. Sometimes it means “ahh” instead. |
| aha | a-ha | “I understand” | “Aha! So you took the money!” | Understanding, triumph (can also be used as “ahh”) |
| ahem | “Attention, please!” | “Ahem! Swearing is against office policy.” | The sound of clearing one’s throat. Used to get someone’s attention, especially if they don’t know (or apparently forgot) that you’re there. | |
| ahh | ahhh, ohh | “Ok, I see” | “Ahh, yes, I understand now” | Realisation, understanding. Sometimes it means “aaah” or “eh” instead. |
| ahh | ahhh.. | “So relaxing” | “Ahh… This hot tub is amazing” | Relief or relaxation |
| argh | augh | “Damn!” | “Argh, the car won’t work!” | Annoyance, anger, frustration |
| aww | aw, awww | “How sweet!” | “Aww, what an adorable puppy” | Shows sentimental approval (also see next entry) |
| aww | aw, ohh, ahh | “That’s too bad” | “Aww, it hit him right in the nuts!” | Feeling sorry or pity for someone |
| aw | oh | “Come on!” | “Aw, don’t be like that!” | Mild disappointment or protest |
| bah | “Whatever” | “Bah, I never liked him anyways.” | Dismissive, annoyed | |
| boo | booh | “That’s bad” | “Boo, get off the stage!” | Disapproval, contempt |
| boo! | booh! | “Scared you!” | I jumped out from the closet and yelled “boo!” | A noise used to scare people by surprise |
| boo-hoo | boohoo | “I’m crying!” | Your internet is slow? Boo-hoo, how sad for you. | Used, often sarcastically, to imitate crying. |
| brr | brrrr | “It’s cold” | “Brrr, it’s -20C outside” | Being cold, shivering |
| d’oh | doh | “That was stupid/bad!” | “I just deleted all my files. D’oh!” | Homer Simpson’s catchphrase when something bad happens. |
| duh | “That’s dumb” | “Duh, you didn’t plug it in.” | Expresses annoyance over something stupid or obvious | |
| eek | eeeek | “Help!” | “Eeek, a mouse!” | Girly scream. Surprised, scared. |
| eep | “Oh no!” | “Eep! I didn’t mean to say that!” | Surprise (female) | |
| eh? | huh? | “What?” | “Eh? I didn’t hear what you said.” | Misunderstanding. Also see “eh?” below |
| eh? | huh?, eyh? | “Is that right?” | “So she dumped you, eh?” | Stereotypically overused by Canadians |
| eww | ugh, ewww | “Disgusting” | “Ewww, this apple is rotten” | Disgust, dislike |
| gah | “This is hopeless” | “Gah, I give up” | Exasperation and despair | |
| gee | “Really?” | “Gee, that’s super!” | Surprise, enthusiasm, or just general emphasis. | |
| grr | grrrr | “I’m angry” | “Grrr, I’ll kick his ass” | Anger, snarling, growling. Often used for dogs and other animals. |
| hmm | hm, hmmmm | “I wonder” | “Hmm, I’m not sure about that” | Thinking, hesitation. |
| humph | harumph | “I don’t like this” | “There are kids on my lawn again, humph!” | A snort, to express dislike, disbelief or annoyance. |
| hah | heh | “Funny.” | “Heh, that’s clever” | The first syllable of “hahaha”, when something is just a little funny |
| haha | hehe, hahaha, bahaha | “Funny!” | “Haha, that’s hilarious!” | Regular laughter. |
| huh | “Really?” | “Huh, you were right” | Mild, indifferent surprise | |
| hurrah | hooray, huzzah | “Let’s celebrate!” | “Hurrah, we won!” | Generic exclaimation of joy |
| ick | yuck, ich, yak | “Disgusting” | “Ick, this milk has gone bad” | Disgust, dislike |
| meh | eh | “I don’t know” | “Meh, whatever you think is best” | Indifference |
| mhm | mmhm, uh-hu | “Yes” | “Do you think so too?” “Mhm” | Agreement, acknowledgement. |
| mm | mmm, mmh | “Lovely” | “Mmm, this ice cream is delicious” | Pleasure. Sometimes it means “hmm” instead. |
| muahaha | mwahaha, bwahaha | “I’m so evil!” | “I switched the sugar and the salt! Muahaha!” | Evil villain’s triumphant laugh |
| mwah | m-wah | “Kiss!” | “Thanks, you’re so sweet! Mwah!” | The sound of blowing a kiss |
| nah | “No” | “Want another beer?” “Nah, I’m good” | Informal no | |
| nuh-uh | nuh-hu, nu-huh | “No, it isn’t!”/”Did not!” | “I hit you!” “Nuh-uh!” “Yuh-uh!” “Nuh-uh!” | Childish negation or refusal |
| oh | “I see” | “Oh, you wanted sugar, not milk.” | Realisation | |
| ooh-la-la | oh-lala | “Fancy!” | “A seven layer wedding cake? Ooh-la-la!” | An often ironic (or just funny) way indicating that something is fancy or high class |
| ooh | oooh | “Wonderful!” | “Oooh, it’s shiny!” | Wonder, amazement (ohhh can also mean ahhh) |
| oomph | umph | “I’m exerting myself” | “Push on 3.. 1, 2, 3.. oomph!” | A grunt made on sudden exertion. Also used as a noun to mean “power” or “energy” (“This song needs more oomph!”) |
| oops | “I didn’t mean to do that” | “Oops, I knocked your cup over” | Being surprised at or acknowledging your own mistakes | |
| ow | oww, ouch, yeow | “That hurts” | “Oww, I hit my thumb” | Pain |
| oy | oi, oyh | “Hey, you!” | “Oy! You forgot your wallet!” | Mainly British: Used to get someone’s attention, similar to “hey!”. Also used disapprovingly (“Oy, you spilled your drink all over me!”). |
| oy | oy vay | “Oh no…” | “The bills are biling up. Oy…” | Mainly Jewish: Used to express self-pity, similar to “woe is me!” |
| pew | pee-yew | “It stinks!” | “Pew, that smells so gross!” | Used for foul odors |
| pff | pffh, pssh, pfft | “That’s nothing” | “Pff, I once caught a fish twice that size” | Unimpressed |
| phew | “That was close!” | “I didn’t do my homework, but the teacher didn’t check. Phew!” | Expressing relief | |
| psst | Whispering “Hey, you!” | “Psst. Let’s skip the next class!” | Used to quietly get someone’s attention, often to tell them a secret. | |
| sheesh | jeez | “I can’t believe this!” | “Sheesh, now he’s drunk again” | Exasperation, annoyance (corruption of “Jesus”) |
| shh | hush, shush | “Be quiet” | “Shh, I’m trying to hear what they’re saying!” | Used to make someone be quiet |
| shoo | “Go away” | “Get out of here! Shoo!” | Used to drive away animals or small children | |
| tsk-tsk | tut-tut | “Disappointing” | “Tsk-tsk, he is late for work again” | disappointment, contempt (this is a clicking sound. Clip from Futurama) |
| uh-huh | mhm, uh-hu | “Yes” | “Do you think so too?” “Uh-hu” | Agreement, acknowledgement (easily confused with uh-uh) |
| uh-oh | oh-oh | “Oh no!” | “Uh-oh, I think the bear is inside the house” | Concerned for indications that something will happen |
| uh-uh | unh-unh | “No” | “Eat your spinach!” “Uh-uh!” | Refusal, especially if your mouth is full or if you refuse to open it (easily confused with uh-huh) |
| uhh | uhm, err | “Wait, I’m thinking” | “Seven times eight is… uhh… 56” | Indicates a pause in, rather than the end of, a sentence |
| waah | waaaaah | “I’m crying!” | “I don’t want you to go! Waaah!” | Used, often sarcastically, for imitating crying or whining. |
| wee | whee, weee | “This is fun!” | “Weee! Faster!” | Used by children when doing something fun, and often ironically by adults when something is fun but childish |
| whoa | “Hold on.” | “Whoa, take it easy!” | Can be used to suggest caution as in here, and also stereotypically used by marijuana smokers to express dumbfounded amazement (“whoa, look at the colors!”). Originally a sound used to make horses stop. | |
| wow | “Amazing!” | “Wow, that’s incredible!” | Impressed, astonished | |
| yahoo | yippie | “Let’s celebrate!” | “Yippie! We won!” | Generic exclaimation of joy |
| yay | “Yes!” | “Yay! We won!” | All-purpose cheer. Approval, congratulations and triumph | |
| yeah | yeeeeaah! | “Yes!” | “Yeeeaah! Kick his butt!” | Common slang for “yes”, sometimes also used as an interjection. |
| yee-haw | yeehaw | “I’m excited!” | “Let’s gather some cattle! Yee-haw!” | Much like “yahoo”, but almost always associated with cowboys. |
| yikes | “That’s a bad surprise.” | “I found out I owed $5000 in back taxes. Yikes!” | Fear and alarm. | |
| yoo-hoo | yoohoo | “Hey you!” | “Yoo-hoo, sugercup! Come give me a hug!” | The often ironic/comical, seductive call of a woman to get someone’s attention |
| yuh-uh | yuh-hu, yu-huh | “Yes, it is!”/”Did so!” | “I hit you!” “Nuh-uh!” “Yuh-uh!” “Nuh-uh!” … | Childish affirmation, often used to counter “nuh-uh!” (not to be confused with yoo-hoo). |
| yuck | ick, ich, blech, bleh | “Disgusting!” | “Yuck, I wouldn’t want to touch that” | Disgust, dislike |
Exercise
Fill the blanks in the sentences below with an appropriate interjection in each case.
Reminders
A reminder is usually a list of things you want to do and appointments you want to remember. It is a personal document. E.g.
| Saturday 2 October 2016 –Complete English assignment –wash clothes –help dad trim the hedge –visit D. J. In hospital –Read chapter 4 of Caucasian Chalk Circle—must do. |
–Sometimes within an organisation, reminders are used to refresh specific people’s memory about impending responsibilities.
The secretary can be instructed to remind a certain worker or even the boss of an upcoming meeting e.g. in form of a memo.
LUGULU GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL
P.O. BOX PRIVATE BAG
WEBUYE
REMINDER
FROM: The principal
TO : the H.O.D languages
DATE : 20th May 2016
SUBJECT: Submission of records
You are reminded that on 3rd of June 2016, the county supervision of schools will be underway. Make sure you submit your departmental records in time.
Sign: -h__ysh
Reminders can also be in form of a formal letter e.g.
NZOIA SUGAR COMPANY
P.O. BOX 411
BUNGOMA
23RD MAY 2016
Joash Malo
P.O. BOX 468
MATUNDA
RE: A Reminder
You are reminded to report to work next month on 2nd of June 2016, at 9.00 AM.
Your personnel manager will be waiting with instructions. Be prompt.
The Secretary
Jane Wakoli
Writing a Dialogue
A dialogue is a conversation between two people or more. A dialogue can be written directly in two forms—play and prose.
Dialogue in composition or prose
When writing a dialogue in a composition observes the following:
–Use speech marks to enclose spoken words and separate them from commentary and description.
–Always start quotations with a capital letter; the opening quotation marks should be before the first letter and the closing quotations after the punctuation mark as shown below.
“Can I talk to him?” asked Moses. “Tom should go home,” Anne said.
–the commentary words coming after a quotation should always start with a small letter unless it is a name of a person.
“I love you,” he whispered. “Who are you?” she asked. “Go to hell!” he thundered.
–If a quotation starts with commentary words, then a comma must be used to separate them from the direct speech and the speech must end in a question mark, exclamation mark or full stop. E.g.
He asked, “Where are we going to meet?” She said, “I can’t cope any longer.”
Jane shouted, “I hate you!”
Writing dialogue in a composition can only be creative if you mix the dialogue with vivid description or dramatic situations. Always provide a context for the dialogue in terms of what was going through the mind of the speaker, body language, the weather, if he or she was nervous, how they said the words etc. e.g.
“Hi?” she whispered to him. She was trying hard to hide her embarrassment. The heat of the day was rising making the streets hostile and inhospitable. She regretted wearing the heavy cotton outfit that was absorbing the rising heat.
“Hey,” he answered drawing her close for a hug. They hugged for long moments before disengaging.
“You look different.”
“I do?” she hadn’t noticed the change he was talking about.
–When writing dialogue, always start the dialogue in a new paragraph. Make sure you space your dialogue by decongesting it from the general narration.
Writing dialogue in play form
When writing dialogue in play form, observe the following:
{Action takes place in a single room that looks like a living room commonplace in rich suburbs. A very comfortable couch is visible and on it a middle aged woman is sitting reading a novel. She is dressed in pyjamas and on the other side of the couch a man who looks visibly annoyed is sitting pensive and uncomfortable.}
KEN: How are you doing mom?
I: ME: HE: IS NOT ALLOWED.
SIMON: Tell me more about the problems you discussed yesterday with His Excellency the president at the function you wrote about.
KEN: (smiling) Hullo dear.
JANET: (blushing) I am fine Ken. Thanks. (While ransacking in her bag) I wanted to show you something. Can you spare me a few minutes?
KEN: (Visibly excited) Yes…er..huh. What is it my dear?
Poetry
Poetry is the study of poems and the poetic language. A poem is a creative composition usually written in verse and that uses diction, imagery and economy of words to communicate.
A poet is someone who writes poems. The voice speaking in a poem is called the persona. What the persona refers to or talks to in a poem would be the subject and the issue that is being talked about or being raised is the subject matter or theme.
In many cases the voice speaking in the poem or the persona is different from the poet. The persona can be a female voice denouncing men but the writer of the poem is male.
The girl next door by G.R. Lazarus
She was the girl next door
Beautiful booming and shy
Our interaction was measured
Our chemistry guarded
But she was curious and hideous
Then she was of age and I married
But more lustful and hideous
In the poem above the poet is Lazarus. The subject of the poem is the girl next door because the persona is referring to her. The subject matter or theme of the poem is love/lust because the persona is attracted to the girl next door and although he later gets married to someone else he still sees her. The persona in the poem is a man who neighbours the girl (she was the girl next door). Remember the persona is different from Lazarus, the poet.
Lapobo by Cliff Lumbwa
Lapobo,
Tall but not too tall
Short but not too short
She is of medium height
Lapobo
Her teeth are not as ash
Nor the colour of maize flour
Her teeth are as white as fresh milk
The whiteness of her teeth
When I think of her Lo!
Makes food drop from my hand
Lapobo
Black but not too black
Brown but not too brown
Her skin colour is just between black and brown
Lapobo
Her feet have no cracks
Her palms are smooth and tender to touch
Her eyes—Ho! They can destroy anybody
The structure of the poem refers to how the lines in a poem are arranged. For example, a poem can have four stanzas and each stanza can carry five lines. In some cases like in this poem by Lumbwa, the structure of the poem is made to resemble a picture of a beautiful woman whose features are well arranged.
In this poem the poet is Cliff Lumbwa, the persona is a lover who admires Lapobo (Lapobo, black but not too black), the subject is Lapobo (Lapobo, her teeth are white as fresh milk), subject matter is love—the persona loves Lapobo (Her eyes—ho! They can destroy anybody)
Clementine by Okot P’Bitek
Ocol is no longer in love with the old type
He is in love with a modern girl
The name of the beautiful one is Clementine
Brother when you see Clementine
The beautiful one aspires
To look like a white woman
Her lips are red-hot like glowing charcoal
She resembles the wild cat
That has dipped its mouth in blood
Her mouth is like raw meat
It looks like open ulcers
Like the mouth of an ogre
Tina dusts powder on her face
And it looks so pale
She resembles the wizard
Getting ready for the midnight dance
Questions
Identify the structure, the persona, the poet, the subject and the subject matter of the poem.
Rhythm in Poetry
Rhythm in poetry is achieved through repetition of words or sounds.
Rhyme is the repletion of sounds at the end of lines in a poem. This repetition can be in form of a scheme where it forms a pattern that runs across the poem or just in a few lines. E.g.
They said we should be honest
And taught us to be the best
In staying pure and chaste
But I feel and look like a guest
Because here, to be best
Is to be corrupt with zest
In this poem the end sounds /est/ has been repeated several times and therefore the poem has rhyme. When identifying rhyme only sounds shoud be considered not words. The last two sounds whether they constitute a syllable or not. E.g. –est in best, /eid / in made, /et/ in set. A long sound is considered as a single sound and must therefore be attached to another before deciding if it rhymes or not. E.g.
The words bee, see and tea do no rhyme although they all end with /i:/ but the words dear, seer, fear and tear rhyme because they end with two distinct sounds /ia/.
Sometimes words rhyme although they have different spellings, so it important to only consider how words are pronounced and not written. For example, the words day, weigh, grey and bouquet rhyme for they all end with the /ai/ sounds as in /dei/ /wei/ /grei/ and /bukei/ but they have different spellings at the end.
When a poem has a few words that rhyme then the style in the poem will be use of rhyming words e.g.
We suffer from normalcy
And ignorance in our diplomacy
We ought to find normal boring
Life should not get comfortable
Too much comfort kills
In this poem there is use of rhyming words i.e. diplomacy and normalcy but the poem has not rhyme scheme.
Internal rhyme refers to use of rhyming words within a line of a poem if the line is dived into two clauses and they all end with the same sound e.g.
Although they set a target, it was not met
So she devised a different structure, amidst the troubled future
Rhyme scheme is a pattern that is created by repetition of sounds at the end of lines to create rhythm. The scheme can be regular or irregular depending on whether the next set of sounds can be predicated or not. Letters of the alphabet are used to represent sounds in a rhyme scheme. A rhyme scheme is written in a flowing manner without uses of commas or any other punctuation.
This the debt I pay (a)
Just for one riotous day (a)
Year of regret and grief (b)
Sorrow without relief (b)
Pay it, I will to the end (c)
Until the grave, my friend (c)
Gives me a true release (d)
Gives me the clasp of peace (d)
Slight was the thing I bought (e)
Small was the debt I thought (e)
Poor was the loan at best (f)
God! But the interest (f)
The rhyme scheme in the poem above will be aabbccddeeff this rhyme scheme is a regular one because we can easily predict the next sound to be gg. This rhyme scheme creates musicality in the poem and also reinforces the meanings of the words that rhyme.
Alliteration involves the repetition of initial consonant sounds in close proximity in order to create rhythm, for example,
She sang a sad song or They lasted longer than they had last time
Consonance on the other hand involves repetition of consonant sounds present at the middle or at the end of words e.g.
He fought and thought about it or She had talked about it a lot
Exercise
Describe the use of alliteration and consonance in the poem below.
Hague
The gloomy gallant faces
Stare sadly at their fate
The silent voices so eloquent
Begging for justice as Jesus justified
‘No love between neighbours
Is the biggest sin on earth.’
Assonance in poetry
Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds in words that follow each other closely in a poem usually to create musicality.
Question
Describe assonance in the poem below.
Politics
All his life James had thanked her
Pleading heaving and leaning on false fortified force
Filth sickly and sinful to her hateful eyes
Booing him she looked good—sly fly and likely to puke
She had slept with him and borne him a boy
The boy was buoyant and young
I am their only son and they are rival politicians
Imagery in poetry is the use of Figurative language or language that create mental pictures of situations. Such mental pictures are created by the following styles:
Metaphor which is the direct reference to something using the quality of something else in order to show that they share such a trait. E.g. Joseph is a lion. To show that Joseph is as strong/dangerous/brave etc as a lion.
Simile is making a comparison of two things using words like as…as, like, akin to etc e.g. she sung like an angel.
Symbolism refers to the use of objects or things in a poem that have meaning outside the poem. For example a snake is generally considered to be an embodiment of evil and trickery; whiteness a symbol of purity, blood a symbol of violence and death etc. when such things are used in a poem they create symbolism.
Personification refers to giving human qualities to animals and things like plants or stones. A tree whispering, a stone crying, an elephant talking etc.
Exercise
Describe imagery in the poem below.
He toiled from dawn to dusk for a piece of silver
He was a lioness in the hunt for meat
Many days the needs grew as the muscles moaned
Six pack albs, triceps and biceps winked
His lean body mysterious like an aphrodisiac
Was a source of lustful admiration to the master’s wife
who wished her husband had such a body
Yet the husband was full of silver
She did not wish her husband to lose the silver
She wanted the lean body and the silver
But it seemed it was difficult to have both
The silver in the poem is used symbolically to represent wealth or money. The man is said to be a lioness which means he was very brave and determined as a lioness usually is when it wants o kill a big game. The six pack albs, biceps and triceps are said to wink which would be personification to show that they were tempting and charming. Also the muscles moaning is personification. His lean body mysterious like an aphrodisiac—this is a simile which shows how sexually attractive the man was.
Irony in Poetry
Irony in poetry occurs when there is a contradiction between what the reader expects and what happens in the poem.
Describe irony in the poem below.
They Ran Out of Mud by Miriam Were
There is a little hut
Built across from here
They’ve mudded two walls
And the rest stands unmade
For they ran out of mud
There is a deep gully
Running along the road
They have filled it halfway
And the rest is still gaping
For they ran out of mud
There is a pot y the alter
That they began to mould
They finished the base
But the neck remains undone
For they ran out of mud
Mud! Mud!
Who can find mud
Maybe if it were gold
Someone would
Answer
Mud is commonplace—it is ubiquitous and hence a lame excuse for not finishing to mud the walls, or fill the gully or complete moulding the alter. The persona suggests that if it was gold which is very expensive they could have found it but not mud. This shows that the workers are very lazy and give inexplicable excuses to hide their laziness. It is thus ironical that they have run out of mud but if it were gold they could have found it.
The Beard
In the pulpit he swayed and turned
Leant forward, backward,
To the right: to the left
His solemn voice echoed;
Lowly the congregation followed
“Do you love your neighbour?”
Meekly they bow at his keen eye.
Now examining a grey head
Heaving under her sobs
His heart leapt assured—
“Her sins weigh on her”
So with her he chat outside;
“Weep not child, you are pardoned.”
“But, Sir, your beard conjured up
The spirit of my dead goat!”
Question
Describe irony in the poem above.
The lady cries and the preacher thinks that it is because her sins weigh on her so he talks to her and thinks that by her repentance she has been pardoned. But in reality the woman was weeping because she saw the preacher’s beard which conjured up memories of her dead goat.
Satire in Poetry
Satire is a stylistic device where a persona uses a mocking language to criticise people, things or situations. The poet might create characters at whom we can laugh, especially by depicting them in a ridiculous way.
Satire is mainly used to expose the wrong or foolish deeds or beliefs of a person or society.
Spoiling Our Celebrations
When last Jamuhuri day
The ceremonial flag stuffs were laid in our streets
It was soon discovered
Twenty of the new flags had been stolen
“We fear,” said the council
that if the theft continue
the whole of the Jamuhuri celebrations
may be ruined
We only recently acquired this new set
Of one thousand from the government
Each cost sh1000, we spent sh 1,000,000 on all
Police are searching for the thieves
The flags which are six feet by four
Are not being stolen for display
They are probably used as rags
Or bedcovers by beggars
This is misusing a national emblem
In an undignified manner
What a shame that beggars in their beds
Are not dignified with their bedcovers
Question
Describe satire in the poem above.
The persona is mocking the government for putting so much emphasis on the dignity of the flag as a national emblem but ignoring the wants of the poor and beggars who have no beddings and have now resorted to stealing the flags for this purpose. It is funny that the government officials talk about indignity of the beggars when they actually have been abandoned with no self dignity by the government.
I Went to Church
I went to church today
Yes I went and prayed for all
Friends and foes alike
Dead and those alive
I also prayed hard
For the soul of that soldier
Who got shot
Fighting for our motherland
While I shot hot life into his wife
And I prayed to God too
That I live long
To go and pray again
Question
Describe satire in the poem above
The poet uses the poem to ridicule church goers. That some of them go there to cover up their sins and do not really go with an aim to repent and worship. The persona thinks of carrying on with his adulterer behaviour which will keep him coming to church. He says he prays for the soldier who got shot while the persona was shooting hot life into his wife.
Western Civilization
Sheets of tin nailed to post
Driven in the ground
Make up the house
Some rags complete
The intimate landscape
The sun slanting through the cracks
Welcome the owner
After twelve hours of slave
Labour
Breaking rock
Shifting rock
Breaking rock
Shifting rock
Fair weather
Wet weather
Breaking rock
Shifting rock
Old age comes early
A mat on the dark nights
Is enough when he dies
Gratefully
Of hunger
Question
Describe Satire in the above poem.
The poet mocks western civilisation. The received wisdom is that western civilisation is always associated with exotic modern things and ways of living but the persona in his quest for western civilisation experiences hardships working on hot and rainy days until he ages quickly living in a shanty house. This is the darker side of the civilisation that many people go through and that the persona knows well.
Mood Attitude and Tone in Poetry
Mood refers to the feelings you get when you read a poem or the atmosphere that surround events in a poem and that could influence how the reader or the audience feels after reading or listening to the poem.
A poem that centres on a funeral/death will certainly have a sorrowful or sad mood, whereas, one that centres on a wedding or any celebration of an achievement should have a happy, contented or jovial mood.
Attitude refers to the feelings that the persona has towards the subject the persona is talking about. For instance, in the poem the persona may describe someone who is corrupting children and oppressing people using words like disgusting, blemish, rogue etc. The attitude therefore would be resentful or hateful or even malicious. If the persona uses polite and loving terms to describe an event or a person like charming, amiable, kind etc. Then the attitude of the persona towards the subject is approving, welcoming, sympathetic etc. It is important to use the persona’s words in determining his or her attitude towards the subject.
Tone refers to the nature of the voice used in a poem. It is important to know what the poem is talking about in order to identify the tone of the persona. The tone of the persona is closely influenced by the attitude towards the subject and the general mood of the poem. For instance, if the persona loved the subject and his attitude towards it was loving; if the subject is dead, then the tone would be sad, if the subject is around it might be loving tone etc. If the persona is a father talking to a son in a polite way then the tone can be patronizing.
Adjectives for tone in poetry
Sarcastic remorseful obnoxious dull guilty alarmed fresh dreary light startled sadistic happy heavy horrified secular sad quizzical /inquisitive disgruntled political narcissistic sardonic/ mocking hurtful social devoted foolish loving liberal/democratic bitter/ sour sympathetic mysterious conservative angry intelligent/enlightened /clever religious resentful/hateful irritated despiteful prayerful annoyed suspicious/ doubtful melancholic
Attitude
Joyous angry sad cold Warm agreeable contemptuous calm delightful kind trustful sadistic cheerful playful appreciative fearful resentful
Mood
Serene/calm respectful happy fearful sorrowful sombre melancholic jovial reflective/meditative angry nostalgic thoughtful
Question
Read the poem below and establish its mood, tone and attitude.
A Pregnant School Girl
He paid her seat in the matatu
And walked away:
As he disappeared in the city crowd
All her dreams vanished
One more passenger squeezed in
And lit a cigarette
She opened the window
And spat cold saliva out
As the cigarette smoke intensified
She wanted to vomit
She remembered the warm nights
When she was her man’s pet
She remembered the promises
The gifts, the parties, the dances
She remembered her classmates at school
Who envied her expensive shoes
Lipstick, wrist watch, handbag
Which she brought to school
After a weekend with him
The future stood against her
Dark like a night without the moon
And silent like the end of the world
As the matatu sped away from the city
She began to tremble with fear
Wondering what her parents would say
With all hope gone
She felt like a corpse
Going home to be buried
The mood of this poem is sad because when you read you feel sad and a bit sympathetic for the pregnant school girl who has been used by her lover and dumped and who now feels like a corpse with no future.
The attitude of the persona towards the school girl is sympathetic. The persona feels sympathy for the girl and that is why he dwells on the consequences of her condition by saying the future stood against her; she began to tremble with fear etc.
The tone of the persona is calm/indifferent because the persona remains calm throughout the poem only showing a bit of sympathy for the girl’s condition but not getting emotionally involved in the life of the girl.
Dramatisation in Poetry
Introduction by Richard Ntiru
Perhaps it was his ugly shirt
The missing button
The unassertive collar;
Perhaps it was his knotty hair
That boasted little acquaintance with the comb
Or maybe it was his usualness
–one more impersonal handshake
Along the constant street—
That induced the functional smile
And operated the mechanical handshake.
His name didn’t help either;
Mugambo Mugenge—you’d hear the name
In the out-patient’s attendance queue;
Not in the current telephone directory
You certainly needed prompting
I said he was an old-time friend
But you continued to wave to passing cars;
I added that he was a high placed man
And you promptly too you cue
–“A university teacher, author of several works”—
“RE-E-E-ally? Er-um-oh!…”
And you became word and emotional perfect
Like a dog that mistakes a thief for a visitor
And remembers to bark at his mater’s coughing,
You renewed and pumped the handshake
–reshaped your mouth to a proper smile
–recalled his famous public talk
That you had regretfully missed…
And observed, thoughtfully,
How unlike his photograph he looked
You were tuned—
Delved deep into his latest novel
And wondered why his main characters
Do not walk on the solid earth
And fail to effect living communication
You’d have rambled on, no longer looking at him
But he quipped: “They are in good company!”
And was about to add when you knowledgeably interrupted
“Society is a market stall
And men goods on display
Where the label is more important than the labelled
And price more fascinating than the value.”
We parted hoping to meet again
You went away rehearsing his name
But probably unremembering his face
Questions
Pronouns
A pronoun is a word that can replace a noun in a sentence. E.g. Tom loves Mary but she doesn’t love him. She replaces Mary and him replaces Tom. Nouns that are replaced by pronoun in the same sentence are known as antecedents. To and Mary are antecedents in the sentence above because they are replaced by him and she respectively.
–A pronoun can occur as a subject (come before a verb in a sentence) or an object (come after a verb or preposition in a sentence). If a pronoun occurs as subject it will be in subjective form and if it occurs as an object, it will be in objective form.
Personal pronouns are pronouns that refer to people.
Subjective and objective forms
| Singular subjective | Singular objective | Plural subjective | Plural objective | |
| I | Me | WE | us | |
| YOU | You | YOU | You | |
| HE | Him | THEY | Them | |
| SHE | Her | THEY | Them | |
| IT | It | THEY | Them |
First person pronoun refers to a pronoun that is used as subjects or a speaker in a sentence both singular and plural. E.g.
(Subjective) I went home. We ate the mangoes etc.
(Objective) She gave me the book. Bring us the bottles.
Second person pronoun refers to the pronoun that is used as the listener or the person or thing being talked to in a sentence. E.g.
(Subjective) What do you want? You should go home.
(Objective) She came for you. The money was for all of you.
You is used in subjective and objective forms and again, both singular and plural forms in the second person pronouns.
The third person pronoun refers to the pronoun that is used as the person or thing being talked about but is not present. E.g.
(Subjective forms) He went home. She is not feeling well. It rained heavily last tight. In plural, they is used in all cases. They went home. They are not feeling well.
(Objective forms) They gave him the job. John came for her. Ken saw it run. In plural objective form , them is used in all cases. Anne gave them the money.
Possessive pronouns show possession. E.g. This is my book . This is mine. A possessive pronoun replaces not just a noun but an adjective plus a noun as seen in the above example where mine replaces ‘my book’.
–We use possessive pronouns when it is not necessary to use the possessive adjective and a noun.
Is this his book? No, it is yours.
—The possessive adjective, its, doesn’t take an apostrophe. E.g. The cat drunk its milk.
| POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES SINGULAR | POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES PLURAL | POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS SINGULAR | POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS PLURAL |
| MY | OUR | MINE | OURS |
| YOUR | YOUR | YOURS | YOURS |
| HIS | THEIR | HIS | THEIRS |
| HER | THEIR | HERS | THEIRS |
| ITS | THEIR |
Possessive adjective means the word occurs before a noun and at the same time shows possession. E.g. My book, your cow, his desk, its bone and in Plural our books, your cows, their desks, their bones etc.
Possessive pronoun means the one word that can replace the possessive adjective above plus the noun in a sentence. E.g. This is my book becomes This is mine, This is our books becomes These are ours.
Yours, his, hers respectively; in plural it would be, yours, theirs, theirs respectively
Reflective pronouns are pronouns that refer back to the subject or doer of the action. They always end with the suffix -self in singular and -selves in plural. They are used to show that action of the verb is performed on the doer or on the subject itself by the subject.
–Reflexive pronouns are used for emphasis and are sometimes called emphasis pronouns
—Reflexive pronouns can still be left out of the sentence and will make sense.
E.g. She, herself, escorted the boy.
Reflexive pronouns
| Singular | plural |
| Myself | Ourselves |
| Yourself | Yourselves |
| Himself | Themselves |
| Herself | Themselves |
| Itself | Themselves |
| One self | Themselves |
–Reflexive pronouns only occur in objective forms.
Subjective and Objective case of pronouns in a sentence
—When a pronoun occurs after a preposition, it should be in objective form. E.g.
She came for her/me/them/him/it. It is between him and me, between us and them.
—When a pronoun comes after a verb, in a sentence, it should be in objective form. E.g.
Sarah helped him/her/them/it/me
—When a pronoun occurs before a verb or as a subject in a sentence, it should be in subjective form e.g.
I/We/He/She/They/It will get it soon.
–A pronoun that comes after the phrase ‘It is’ will be is subjective form e.g.
It is I/they/ she/ he/ it/ that did it and not I/they/ she/ he/ it/ (that did it) although this last part is omitted and only implied.
It was he who came. It is she that is sick and not I.
–Pronouns after the request word ‘let’ always appear in objective case e.g.
Let us go home. Let me see what I can do.
Unlike pronouns after the word ’shall’ that take subjective case. E.g.
Shall I go home? Shall we see him?
–Pronouns after the word ‘than’ take subjective case e.g.
She is better than I am/ She is better than I
Other than he, who else showed up? You are better than I.
A demonstrative adjective refers to the words like this, that, those and these that indicate the position of a noun in a given context or demonstrates the manner of action. They occur before nouns they demonstrate in a sentence. E.g. This book, that house, those trees etc. These houses are mine.
A demonstrative pronoun on the other hand refers to words such as this, that, those and these that replace a noun in a sentence and that would only be valid in absence of the noun it refers to. E.g.
That is terrible This is mine I saw them.
Indefinite Pronouns
Indefinite pronouns refer to people, places or things in a unspecified way. They therefore do not have specific reference or antecedents.
–There are mainly two types of indefinite pronouns
Each of the boys has been fed.
We had had enough of her complaints.
All of my brothers are married.
Sometimes the ‘of’ phrase may be omitted if what it refers to is clear from the situation given e.g.
After paying for mangoes, we discovered that some were rotten.
Many (of the) problems we face can be solved through dialogue.
Although the boys were hungry, many continued walking.
| POSITIVE | NEGATIVE |
| Everyone | Anyone |
| Everybody | Anybody |
| Someone | No one |
| Somebody | No body |
| Something | Anything |
| Everything | Nothing |
Any is used negatively and some is used positively e.g.
Anyone can be defeated in a match. (Negative)
Someone is always watching. (Positive)
Everything will be fine. (Positive)
Nothing will ever work. (Negative)
Exercise
Fill in each blank space below with the correct indefinite pronoun.
The simple past
Simple past tense is used to describe events that took place in the past. Most verbs form their past tense by adding -d or -ed at the end. These are known as regular verbs. E.g.
Play—played. Pose—posed. Kiss—kissed. Cry—cried. Spit—spitted.
–Some regular verbs ending with ‘y’ take ‘ied’ in their simple past tense forms e.g.
Bury—buried. Study—studied. Hurry—hurried.
–Some regular verbs ending with a consonant preceded by a short vowel sound double their final consonants before adding ‘-ed’ to form simple past tense. E.g.
Nod—nodded. Stop—stopped. Step—stepped.
Irregular Verbs
These are verbs which do not follow a regular pattern when changing into simple past tense.
Spell—spelled or spelt. Spill—spilled or spilt. Dream—dreamed or dreamt. Dwell—dwelled or dwelt. Bless—blessed or blest.
Spit—spat, shrink—shrank etc.
Drive—drove, win—won
Find—found. Grind—ground.
Strike—struck. Sting—stung. Dig—dug.
Simple present tense
Simple present tense is an aspect of the verb in its present state and it is therefore used to express the following situations:
Perfect tense
A verb is said to be in a perfect tense if it shows that the action in the sentence was completed just before the speech or has been completed just before the speech or will be. To show this form, the word ‘have’ and its variants (had, has) is used. E.g.
He had finished the test when the teacher arrived.
She has arrived. They have given her the money.
The main verb in a perfect tense is usually a past participle e.g. given, taken, eaten, said etc or an –ing participle preceded by the word ‘been’. E.g. She has been eating ugali.
A participle is a form of a verb ending –ed for regular verbs but followed by has, had or have, e.g. kill—has killed, cry—had cried, box—had boxed etc but varies for irregular verbs e.g. has borne, had sought, has come, had seen etc.
Both regular and irregular verbs use –ing participles in perfect progressive tenses e.g.
She has been cooking rice. He had been giving her money. She is cleaning utensils. We are seeing them off.
Any helping verb apart from has, had and have can be used with an –ing participle.
Remember an –ing participle on its own can act as a noun in a sentence e.g.
Swimming is my hobby. I love singing.
If an –ing participle acts as a noun as shown above then we call the noun a gerund.
Weeping is a sign of weakness. Weeping is a gerund because it an –ing participle being used a s a noun.
An –ing participle again can be used as an adjective in a sentence e.g.
You shouldn’t say such annoying remarks or such remarks are annoying.
PUNCTUATION
A full stop, also known as a period, is used at the end of a sentence e.g.
Mary is sick.
–It is also used in abbreviations e.g. K.N.H.I.F N.S.S.F
A comma is used to indicate a short pause in a sentence especially in a list e.g.
She went to the market to buy bread, soap and sugar.
–It is used in writing dialogue to separate the speech from commentary e.g.
“I will see you tomorrow,” she said.
–In parenthesis (extra information in a sentence) e.g.
Daniel Arap Moi, the second president of Kenyan republic, is visiting Nakuru National library tomorrow.
A few of the student, by the way, will not attend the ceremony.
–After yes , no and please. Yes, I know the man. Please, let us discuss the matters. No, it is not possible.
–In question tags e.g. Adhiambo visited you, didn’t she?
–In separating introductory words of a sentence from the rest e.g. therefore, he was forced by the public pressure to resign.
–Before the name of the person being spoken to e.g. Come and help me push this car, John.
Colon and semi-colon are commonly used to connect parts of a sentence that are closely related.
A colon is used to introduce a list e.g. You should bring the following items tomorrow: bananas, spoons, cups, knives and plates.
–To introduce a long quotation or speech e.g. The employment acts states: Wages shall not be paid in a bar or at a place where intoxicating drinks are available for supply.
–To separate two clauses, if the second clarifies the first. E.g. Oginga Odinga played an important role in Kenyan politics: he agitated for the release of Jomo Kenyatta, participated in the writing of the first independent Kenya’s constitution and became the first vice president.
–To separate two parts of a sentence that compare and contrast. This creates a balanced and elegant effect. E.g. The boy who came in was short and light-skinned: the one who went out was tall and dark.
–To separate the hour from the minutes for example. 10:30 P.M.
Semi-colon is used to
–join two independent clauses that are related and that are not connected by a coordinating conjuction. E.g. This school is the oldest in Kenya; it was built in 1906.
–to join independent clauses connected by conjunctive adverb such as ‘otherwise’ and ‘however’ or transitional phrases such as ‘on the other hand’ or ‘as a consequence. E.g.
Don’t come late; otherwise, you will miss the party.
In some schools, classes are small; as a result, teachers can give students individual attention.
–to separate items in a series when one or more of these items are tagged to other definitions or subdivisions separated by commas. E.g. The Kenyan foreign minister visited several African capitals: Lusaka, Zambia; Harare, Zimbabwe; Abuja, Nigeria; Accra, Ghana and Cairo, Egypt.
A dash (—) is used as follows
–in a dialogue to introduce a clarification or further details. E.g.
I don’t know why she hasn’t arrived—I mean, she should have been here two hours ago!
–to indicate hesitation in a dialogue
Jo—John has gone—gone ho—home.
–to set of information that need emphasis e.g.
Boys can be sweet—when they want to be.
–Can replace a colon in a sentence for emphasis e.g.
You have two options—to shut up or raise your hand.
–can be used in parenthesis to show that the information in between dashes is extra and not part of the original structure of the sentence. E.g.
The four boxers—Ali, Joe,Oti and Tyson—won the gold medals.
An apostrophe (‘) is mainly used to show that some words have been left out, for example. Don’t—do not.
–It can also show possession e.g. Maina’s bag or Moses’ book..
–It can also show elision (where sounds are intentionally left out but the word still makes sense) e.g.
How are you doing—how’re you doin’
–Remember that in plural forms an apostrophe is removed from the possessive e.g.
Lugulu Girls’ High School—LUGULU GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL
–‘Of can be used with the possessive ‘s to show double possession e.g. He is a cousin of Ciru’s brother.
Hyphen is used to link words that form compound nouns but look confusing together e.g. Fatherinlaw—father-in-law.
–They are also used to show the difference in meaning of words that sound or seem similar e.g. re-cover/recover etc.
–Some prefix occur with a hyphen e.g. ant in anti-Christ etc.
Words that occur with a hyphen are said to be hyphenated.
PUNCTUATION IN TITLES OF PUBLICATIONS, QUOTATIONS AND HEADINGS
There are rules about how to write titles of publication such as book, short stories, oral narratives, essays, poems, magazines and newspapers. A crucial distinction is made between full length publication and parts of a publication.A novel, for example, exist on its own as a full length publication. These should therefore be underlined as follows 1. Coming to Birth 2. Adavanced Grammar
Short stories, oral narratives, essays and poems are usually part of a larger book. To show this difference, titles of these works are enclosed in quotation marks e.g.
“Tekayo” in Encounters from Africa—short story
“Beijing Beijing” in Echoes across the Valley—poem
“The Hare and the Leopard” in East African Oral Literature—oral narrative
–Magazines and newspapers are treated a full length publications and their titles are therefore underlined as follows:
She was reading the Daily Nation yesterday.
Buy me The Standard on the market.
In all cases, we capitalize the first letter of all important words in the title. Important words are content words or nouns, adjectives and adverbs. Articles and prepositions are not usually seen as content words and therefore they are not capitalized unless they appear at the beginning or end of the title. This rule also applies when writing all headings and sub-headings.
The River and the Source is a novel by Margaret Ogolla.
It is normal when writing to quote from various publications. This is meant to lend authority to our writings and reinforce our arguments. Of course, we should not overquote, and other people’s opinion should not overshadow ours. In quoting, however, we should observe the following rules:
–short quotations of no more than three lines are incorporated in the text of our writings and enclosed in quotation marks, for example:
In Things Fall Apart, Obirieka says: “The white man has put a knife in the things that held us together and we have fallen apart.”
–Longer quotations, that is, of more than three lines are set off from the rest of the text, for example:
In the book, How to Write and Speak Better, we are told:
Most writing is a private activity but a public service. You may dash off a protest letter in the solitude of your study, or compile a report in the office after everyone has gone home for the night, or scribbles a few secret paragraphs of your romantic novel at the kitchen table while the baby is sleeping but in each case your intention is the same—that eventually your writing will become the reading matter of someone else, that your private words will go public.
Minimal Pairs
Minimal pairs are words that are almost pronounced the same way but only differ by one sound as shown below:
Pin, kill, pit, cap, bag, load,
Bin, gill, bit, cup, bug, road
Adverbs
An adverb is a word that modifies the meaning of a verb, an adjective or another adverb.
An adverb can be replaced by an adverb phrase in a sentence e.g. He paid his debts fully.
He paid his debt down to the last penny.
–Adverbs that appear at the beginning of a sentence usually modify the whole sentence rather than any particular words e.g.
Probably, he is mistaken. Obviously, they don’t love each other.
Types of adverbs
Adverbs of time show when the action happened. E.g. Jane went home today.
Adverbs of frequency show how often something or the action happened. E.g. I have seen him twice.
Adverbs of place show where the action happened or is happening. E.g. stand here.
Adverbs of manner show how something happened or behaved. E.g. She was sitting awkwardly.
Adverbs of degree or quantity show how much, or to what degree or extent something occurred. E.g.
50 Cent was shot 9 times but he didn’t die or The marriage lasted for a long time.
Adverbs of reason show the cause, consequence or reason why something happened e.g.
He could not afford to pay so he left school.
When adverbs are used in asking questions, they are called interrogatives. E.g.
Where is that boy?
Some words are used as adjectives or adverbs, depending on where they appear in a sentence e.g.
He spoke in a loud voice. (adjective)
Don’t talk so loud. (adverb)
Others are enough, fast, next, well etc.
Some adverbs occur in two: with –ly and without e.g.
Roma works hard and Roma hardly works.
Some adverbs are used as nouns after a preposition e.g.
He stays far from here.
He comes from there.
Order of Adjectives
When a noun takes more than one adjective, it is important to note that the adjectives would have to take a specific order usually from more general opinions to specific factual description. The order is to begin from quantitative or number adjectives like twenty, hundreds, a pair etc. to controversial or subjective opinions like beauty, then general opinions like proud, then size and shape before facts as shown below.
Number—e.g. six, many, some
Less agreeable opinion—e.g. beautiful, ugly, charming, exciting
More agreeable opinions—e.g. proud, clever, mad, promiscuous
Size—e.g. Huge, small, tall
Shape—e.g. round, rectangular, square
Age—e.g. young, old, twelve-year old,
Colour—e.g. red, golden, greenish, brown
Nationality/Origin—e.g. Kenyan, Japanese, Chinese
Material—e.g. Metallic, plastic, china, sliver, steel
e.g. 20,beautiful, small, round, old, red, Kenyan balls.
5 ,ugly, huge, rectangular, Japanese tractors.
Predicative adjectives occur after the noun they modify, for example:
John is sick Joshua is supportive etc
Attributive adjectives occur before the noun they modify e.g.
He is a tall man. Beautiful women are tempting etc.
Public Notice
A notice is a small advertisement or announcement in a newspaper or magazine, or notice board; it can also be information or a warning given in advance of something that is going to happen e.g. one may want to announce an upcoming meeting, entertainment event, sports day etc. in such cases you issue a public notice.
Features of Public Notice
–Depending on the nature of the event, it may be necessary to give two items of time i.e. the arrival and departure time or starting and ending time. E.g.
Arrival—10.00 AM
Match Kick off—10.30 AM
–The notice should be captivating i.e. catch the attention of the intended reader.
–It should be written on white paper so that it can be sen clearly. You can use more than one colour to make it catchy but do not overdo it.
–A formal public notice should have a few decorations.
–It should be written in capital letters especially information on what, whom and where.
–Spellings and punctuations must be accurate.
–Once the notice is ready, place it in a strategic place where crowds tend to gather.
Example
LUGULU GIRLS DEBATING COMPETITION
SATURDAY 23 MARCH 2017
AT THE ASSEMBLY HALL
FROM 10 AM TO 1 PM
FORM 2 R VS FORM 3W
COME ONE COME ALL
Posters
A poster is a large printed picture or notice which you stick on the wall or board to advertise or communicate specific information.
When preparing a poster make note of the following:
NB
Advertisements are like posters but are usually smaller and put on newspapers. They are usually designed to persuade people to buy or use certain products. Warnings for side effects in adverts should be in small letters.
Question
Imagine the school administration would wish to enrol more students into your school in form one. As secretary to the language Club in your school, the principal asks you to write a notice to be posited in the local newspaper.
Write the notice and with it include the following:
–State the school’s geographical location
–In about 120 words describe the school
–In about 50 words describe the school’s environment
–Inform the public about the academic qualifications required for admission.
The deadline for application.
Inventories
An inventory is a detailed document of all the items in a place such as an office, a classroom, a church, a shop, a clinic and so on.
This document gives details of the quantity and condition of whatever is available in a place. An inventory contains columns that show
–Date when the record was entered
–Date of delivery of items
–Quantity of the item
–Description of a particular item
–Date of issue
–Signature of the person being issued with the item.
–Items remaining after issue.
It is an important document in an organisation because it contains information on all items that an institution has and therefore helps to keep records of the stock or stock-taking.
Glory Secondary School Inventory
| Date of record | Delivery date | Quantity | Description | Date of issue | Sign | Balance |
| 5/2/1017 | 4/2/2017 | 60 | Macmillan Bk4 English texts | 10/2/2017 | _gr | 33 |
| 13/2/2017 | 13/2/2017 | 20 | Reams of foolscaps | 15/2/2017 | Te_js | 15 |
Importance of an inventory
–Keep check on what is there in terms of stock
–To keep check on what needs to be replaced or repaired.
–To ease the job management
–To give information on items that need constant replacement
Question
You are the School Library assistant and you have received books from a supplier. Record the items in your inventory.
Facts and Opinions
Facts are statements that can be proved, verified and are considered to be true. Facts are indisputable e.g. The first president of Kenya was Jomo Kenyatta.
All humans die.
Opinions are feelings towards an idea. They are not reliable source of information and cannot be verified adequately. Opinions are therefore debatable and disputable.
Opinions can be identified from a speaker’s choice of phrases such as: it is believed, in my opinion, apparently, seemingly, I think, I feel, possibly, presumably, it should, quite etc.
–Some speakers mix facts and opinions without making a clear distinction e.g. You know that I was the best speaker in last year’s AGM.
Isn’t it a fact that I am the best placed person to represent the people of Bungoma?
Exercise
Pick out and explain five facts and five opinions in the passage below.
We teach students to be obedient, kind, religious and hardworking in order to succeed in life but the reality is that these virtues are not really required in the modern, cruel and materialistic world, especially, if someone is to succeed in getting wealth and power. Majority of rich Kenyans, for example, got their wealth from corrupt deals, grabbing public land or colluding with powerful politicians to get favours. There is evidence that until recently, when the new constitution was adopted, many rich Kenyans were barely paying taxes especially on imports. Another obvious example is those Kenyans who were accused of masterminding crimes against humanity were elected into office and are celebrated. Realistically, vices pay more handsomely than virtues and as Machiavelli once said, ‘the end will justify the means’. Maybe it is time to review what we teach in schools and sanctify any effort to get wealth.
Homophones
Homophones are words that have similar pronunciation but different meanings and different spellings.
331.rouse, rows 332.rung, wrung 333.rye, wry 334.saver, savour 335.spade, spayed 336.sale, sail 337.sane, seine 338.satire, satyr 339.sauce, source 340.saw, soar, sore 341.scene, seen 342.scull, skull 343.sea, see 344.seam, seem 345.sear, seer, sere 346.seas, sees, seize
sloe, slow sole, soul some, sum son, sun sort, sought spa, spar staid, stayed stair, stare stake, steak stalk, stork whirl, whorl whirled, world whit, wit white, wight who’s, whose woe, whoa wood, would yaw, yore, your, you’re yoke, yolk you’ll, yule swat, swot tacks, tax tale, tail talk, torque tare, tear taught, taut, tort te, tea, tee team, teem tear, tier teas, tease terce, terse tern, turn there, their, they’re threw, through throes, throws throne, thrown thyme, time tic, tick tide, tied 347.tire, tyre to, too, two toad, toed, towed told, tolled tole, toll ton, tun tor, tore tough, tuff troop, troupe tuba, tuber vain, vane, vein vale, veil vial, vile wail, wale, whale wain, wane waist, waste wait, weight waive, wave wall, waul war, wore ware, wear, where warn, worn wart, wort |
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348.sew, so, sow 349.shake, sheikh 350.shear, sheer shoe, shoo sic, sick side, sighed sign, sine sink, synch slay, sleigh sloe, slow sole, soul some, sum son, sun sort, sought spa, spar staid, stayed stair, stare stake, steak stalk, stork stationary, stationery steal, steel stile, style storey, story straight, strait sweet, suite watt, what wax, whacks way, weigh, whey we, wee, whee weak, week we’d, weed weal, we’ll, wheel wean, ween weather, whether weaver, weever weir, we’re were, whirr wet, whet wheald, wheeled which, witch whig, wig while, wile whine, wine whirl, whorl whirled, world whit, wit white, wight who’s, whose woe, whoa wood, would yaw, yore, your, you’re yoke, yolk you’ll, yule swat, swot tacks, tax tale, tail talk, torque tare, tear taught, taut, tort te, tea, tee team, teem tear, tier teas, tease terce, terse tern, turn there, their, they’re threw, through throes, throws throne, thrown
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Prepositions
A preposition is a word placed before a noun or a pronoun to show in what relationship the person or thing denoted by it stands in regard to something else.
–A preposition simply means that which is placed before.
–The preposition can join a noun to other nouns e.g. There is a cow in the field.
–The preposition can also join a noun to an adjective e.g. He is fond of tea.
–A preposition can join a noun to a verb e.g. The cat jumped off the chair.
–The noun or pronoun used with a preposition is called its object. It is the accusative case and is said to be governed by the preposition. E.g.
There is a dog in the house. Accusative case
–A preposition may have two or more objects as in: The road runs over the hills and plains.
–Sometimes a preposition is placed after an object. E.g. Here is the watch that you asked for.
That is the boy I was speaking of.
Simple prepositions are at, by, for, from, in, of, off, on, out, through, till to, up and with.
Complex prepositions consist of more than one word. They express different meanings as follows:
Most complex prepositions are made up of two words but some three words like ‘with regard to’
–Notice that the triple-worded prepositions begin with a simple preposition and end with one.
Exercise
Fill the blanks in sentences below with an appropriate preposition.
Antonyms and Synonyms
Antonyms are words with opposite meaning e.g. good—bad while Synonyms are words with similar meaning that can replace each other in a sentence e.g. get—acquire , run—scamper etc.
Note making
Note making entails picking out the most important points from a given piece of writing. The main aim of note making is to condense information in a passage into a brief and simple form and still retain clarity.
When making notes consider the following points
Summary Writing
If you are required to make summary of a piece of text observes the following:
Synopsis
A synopsis is a summary of a piece of writing. In order to write a synopsis, it is important to fully comprehend the theme and subject matter of the source material. Writing a synopsis will involve the same steps you would use to write a summary. A good synopsis should condense information without omitting any important points. A synopsis, unlike summary, should be expressed in your own words and should include your own voice or opinion. It is advisable to make a draft you can revise until you are satisfied before writing the final copy.
Occasionally, you might be required only to write a synopsis of a part of a text or be given word limit.
Question tags
A tag is a special construction in English. It is a statement followed by a mini-question. The whole sentence is a tag question and the mini-question at the end is called a question tag. A tag is something small we add to something larger. We usually tag a question at the end of a statement to ask for confirmation e.g. She is coming, isn’t she? Or to encourage a reply from someone.
The basic structure is
statement—question,
positive statement—negative tag, he has gone, hasn’t he?
Negative statement—positive tag, It wasn’t the boy, was it?
The question tag borrows the auxiliary or helping verb in the statement.
E.g. You might see him, mightn’t you?
Most question tags are formed from helping verbs used in the statement whether subordinate of main as follows:
We are here, aren’t we?
She does like him, doesn’t she? Etc.
When the verb in the main sentence is in the simple present or past tense without the helping verb, we form the question tag with ‘do’ ‘does’ or ‘did’
You play the guitar, don’t you?
Alison like tennis, doesn’t she?
They went to the cinema, didn’t they?
She studied in New Zealand, didn’t she?
He hardly ever speaks, does he?
When the statement contains a word with a negative meaning without ‘not’ the question tag would still need to be positive. E.g. They rarely eat in a restaurant, do they?
Some verbs have different question tags e.g.
I am attractive, aren’t I?
For commands, the tag ‘will you’ is used e.g.
Stop it, will you? Or Don’t make noise, will you?
Requests that begin with ‘let’ take the ‘shall we’ tag. E.g. Let us go home, shall we?
Irregular tags are those that have indefinite pronouns e.g.
No one is here, is there?
No one is unhappy, are they?/is he?
Somebody saw her, didn’t they?
ORAL LITERATURE
Oral literature, sometimes called orature, verbal arts or oral tradition is a spoken, acted or performed art whose medium is words. It is passed on from one generation to the other by word of mouth.
Functions of Oral Literature
Forms of oral literature
Oral literature is categorized into three main forms
1) Narratives.
2) Songs.
3) Short forms.
Narratives
A narrative is a story or prose account of people events and places that may be fictional or factual. A narrative is also called a tale or a folk tale.
Classification of Narratives
Classifying refers to grouping of stories basing on the shared features like the manner of action of main characters and setting.
Narratives are classified into myths, legends, dilemma, explanatory ogre and trickster.
Myths
Myths are stories of creation and always involve a supernatural character. Myths deal with supernatural phenomena and origin of people.
Characteristics of myths
Legends
These are stories about memorable historical events and people.
Characteristics of legends
Dilemma
These are stories which have a character or characters burdened with two moral choices which they must choose but such a decision is usually difficult to make. Sometimes the story ends with a debating question which the audience can debate on.
Explanatory or Etiological
These are stories that try to trace or explain the origin of behaviour, both physical and cultural in people and animals.
Characteristics
Ogre or Monster
These are stories that feature a non-human character that is usually grotesque, frightening and evil.
Characteristics
Trickster
These are stories that feature a character that plays tricks on others.
Characteristics
QUALITIES OF A GOOD STORYTELLER
ANALYSIS OF ORAL NARRATIVES
Plot
This is the order events in a story. Oral narratives often have simple straightforward plots. Events in a narrative would constitute three parts: a beginning, middle and an ending.
Beginning presents the audience with problems facing the main characters.
The middle shows the attempts by the characters to solve the problems.
The ending shows how the problems are finally solved.
Some stories have complex plots and therefore would not follow this order.
Consider the following questions when analyzing the plot:
Classification
Classify a narrative and give reasons for your classification. E.g. it is a trickster narrative since the story has or involves tricks; the hare tricks they hyena into killing his own mother.
Characterization
Characters are people or animals involved in a story. In oral narratives, characters include
—human beings —Animals —Birds
—Trees —Mountains —Spirits —gods —monsters
No distinction is made between animals, plants and man in oral literature. They can interact freely. This style of representation is known as personification.
Hence, narratives use symbolic characters as fictional masks so that narratives can actually mimic us, describe us and correct us without causing offence.
Character traits are used to refer to the uniqueness of characters in their speech, behaviour, actions and interactions with other beings.
We can tell the character trait of a character by
Character traits do not include the physical appearance of a person e.g. beautiful, fat deformed etc.
We use adjectives to describe character traits e.g. greedy, loving, grateful etc.
In identifying character traits
Do not use general adjectives like good or bad to describe characters. Use specific traits only like cruel. It is sometimes useful o identify the role each character has in the story in relation to their character traits. The role can provide context and limit your choice of character traits you can assign e.g. if someone who has been mistreated for a long time decides to kill the oppressor, the trait might be vengeful, cruel, brave or inhuman depending on the role and context.
Common roles are
Villain/ Antagonist — the evil character, or the anti-hero in a story.
Protagonist —the good character, or the hero in a story.
Symbolic character—characters that represent other people of concepts in real world.
Caricatures—exaggerated characters.
PARALINGUISTIC FEATURES IN ORAL PERFORMANCE
These are features that the narrator employs to effectively deliver the message in a specific piece of oral narration. These paralinguistic features add entertainment value to the performance. These features are
Mimicry
The narrator imitates the action and speech manners of the characters.
Improvisation
This is the ability of the narrator to incorporate in his narration, objects on sight, people and other things and involve them in the narration by pointing at them, inviting some on stage or putting available objects in use as musical instruments.
Facial Expression
They involve moment of face muscles to show contortion, frowning, grimacing, smiling, sneering and flinching. Facial expressions mainly show appropriate emotions at different stages of narration.
Tonal Variation or Intonation
This is the use of a rising and falling pitch in the voice of the narrator appropriately, when asking questions, making statements and for other dramatic purposes.
Pace of delivery
This is how fast the narrator speaks while narrating the story. The pace of delivery can vary depending on the nature of the story and the emotions to be impacted in the audience. For instance, to make the audience sad a slow torturous pace is appropriate.
Onomatopoeia and idiophones
Onomatopoeia is use of English words in a story that imitates sounds. Words like scratch, screech, whisper, hiss etc. are English words that imitate sound and if used in a story would constitute onomatopoeia. The effectiveness of Onomatopoeia is to create the originality of events.
Idiophones involve use of local or non-English words to imitate sounds in a story. Words such as Puff! Ndo ndo ndo, or Chubwi can be used to capture the sounds heard by a character in the story and would constitute use of idiophones as a style.
Gestures
Gestures can be used to illustrate movements and mimic action.
Body Movements
To show the movement of characters in terms of leaning, running, walking, jumping and sitting.
Accompanying instruments and costumes
Costumes can be used to make the narration more colourful and entertaining, while accompanying instruments like drums, arrows, placards etc help dramatize and mimic events in a story.
Dance
It is important to cultural dances in the narrative, that is, by use of songs to break the monotony of narration.
Dramatic Pauses
Pausing dramatically can be useful to let the point sink, draw attention to a major development in a story, create suspense or invite a reaction from the audience or applause.
Rhetorical Questions
Rhetorical questions are used to provoke the audience to think critically about something.
Repetition
Repetition of some words or segments to emphasis certain points or drum in more entertainment.
STYLE IDENTIFICATION IN ORAL NARRATIVES
Opening Formula
Common opening formulae include …long ago…once upon a time…long ago etc.
The opening formula has the following uses
Closing Formula
Common closing formulae are …since that day …and there ends my story.
Closing formula has the following uses
Allusions
This is where the narrator makes reference to familiar objects or historical figures known to the audience.
Personification
Non-human characters like animals or trees are given human qualities like talking, laughing, gossiping etc.
Hyperbole
Events within the story are exaggerated, for example, a stone shedding tears, a man changing into a snake etc. to make the story interesting.
Timelessness
Time is not defined in a tale by use of vague phrases such as once upon a time, one day, later etc. usually to create a mysterious past.
Direct Translation
The story as narrated doesn’t pay attention to the grammatical rules. E.g. He gave her a stomach.
Use of Vernacular
Non English words from a specific language, that often cannot be translated successfully, are used in a narrative.
Suspense
The narrator withholds information from the audience until the end to increase curiosity or interest.
Irony
Events in the story turn out contrary to our expectations. What happens at the end or within a given context is not what the audience would by and large expect to happen.
Social Economic Activities in Oral Narratives
Oral narratives reflect social economic activities of communities that tell them.
Social activities include circumcision, courtship, marriage monogamy and polygamy, worship and wars.
Economic activities include crop farming, livestock keeping, bee-keeping, fishing, pottery, hunting, trading, blacksmithing/iron smelting and weaving.
Moral lessons
The lessons we learn from oral narratives should be universal. If the question asks for a moral lesson, the lesson stated must be positive e.g. we should respect other people’s property.
All lessons identified must be illustrated to show the action of a character in the story and the consequences of that action.
Generally, oral narratives encourage virtues such as hard work, co-operation, bravery, honesty, wisdom etc.
Functions of Oral Narratives
ORAL POETRY/SONGS
An oral poem or a song is a composition in verse form expressing ideas and thoughts verbally. An oral poem can be sung, recited or chanted.
Types of Songs/Oral Poems
Birth/Cradle
These are songs performed when a baby is born or sung to encourage a woman in labour.
Child Naming
Songs sung during naming of newborns. Such names are given in several ways:
Lullabies
Songs sung to comfort a baby to sleep. Lullabies also
–educate on social values and culture,
–tell more about the social organization of the people, their food and work,
–have simple and repetitive words,
–are sung softly and slowly,
-have a rocking rhythm.
Children’s Songs and Games
Songs performed by children during their playtime. They keep children busy and entertain them.
Circumcision
These are songs sung during the season or ceremony of circumcision to encourage the initiates and ridicule the cowards. They are usually full of obscenities in the direct use of sexual language or talk about relationship between men and women.
Courtship Songs
Songs sung by those in love to express emotions of happiness, praise lovers and express romance. Sometimes they are sung by jilted lovers to express sadness or deal with marital problems or unrequited love.
Wedding/Marriage/Nuptial
These are songs performed during marriage ceremonies. They are often sung to praise the bride and groom. They also express the sorrow of leaving home and parting with friends. Some of the marriage songs warm about the problems of living among strangers or in-laws. Some advise on how to cope with married life. These songs also may be sung as farewell to the bride’s beloved siblings and parents.
They may tend to scorn but generally, they are happy songs.
Work Songs
Work songs are sung as accompaniment to some chores like pounding, ploughing etc. They are sung in unison to make strenuous work more bearable. They also sung to discourage laziness and extol the value of working hard.
Some work songs are specific, like hunting songs, fishing songs etc.
Sacred / Religious
These are songs sung during religious activities like worship, sacrifice etc. They include hymns, praise and lamentations that make reference to supernatural beings.
Political/Patriotic Songs
They are performed during public holiday and political rallies. They are usually sung to create political awareness, promote propaganda, conformity or to protest against injustice and oppression. But mostly they are sung to praise good leaders and satirize bad ones.
War Songs
These are songs sung or performed during war. They are meant to inspire warriors to fight bravery. They are also sung to honour heroes and glorify the achievement of war.
Beer Party Songs
These are songs sung by drinkers together with brewers at a drinking party. They are sung by revellers to express enjoyment, praise the brewers and satirize the lazy or the poor.
Dirges/Funeral Songs
These are songs sung during funerals or memorial ceremonies usually accompanied, in some communities, with loud wailings and sobs. They are sung to mourn the dead, share grief with the bereaved and console the relatives of the dead. Dirges are sometimes sung to satirize the benefactors of the deceased’s wealth.
Characteristics of Songs
Styles in Oral Poetry
When discussing styles in oral poetry, we base on the following aspects
a] The patter of the poem
The pattern f the poem refers to the structure and layout. How many stanzas does the poem or song have an d how many lines per stanza?
b] Diction
Diction refers to the choice of words used in a song. When composing a song, the poet must choose words carefully, by using poetic licence, so as to make sure there is rhythm in the song as well as the message.
c] Imagery
Imagery refers to figures of speech like Metaphor, simile and symbolism that create mental images in the mind of the audience.
Metaphor refers to direct comparison of qualities of two things by referring to one thing using another. E.g. Your father is a lion.
Simile refers to direct comparison of the qualities of two things using words like, like and as e.g. She is as fat as a pig.
Symbolism refers to using objects in a song that have a metaphorical sense or extended meaning and runs throughout the song. E.g. A song that talks about a snake but the snake in the song represents a corrupt leader in a given society.
d] Satire/Humour
Satire is the use of mocking language in a song which in essence creates humour. The subject in the song may be mocked and ridiculed by the persona as being like an elephant that is scared of fighting a hare, or describing the physical features of the subject in a ridiculous manner e.g. his head has the shape of a mango fruit, his hands resemble long sticks and his stomach, like a tube of toothpaste.
Humour is any use of language that is funny or creates comic relief. Humour can be serious or light.
Sarcasm is another tool that helps creates satire and humour at the same time. Sarcasm is saying something to someone while you mean the opposite of what you say in order to hurt his feeling and create humour. For instance, one can tell a very short man, a pigmy,
”My girlfriend loves tall men; I am afraid of you because you are going to make her fall in love with you.”
Of course what he means is that she will not even notice him because he is a short man.
Any song that has sarcastic statements can be said to have a sarcastic or satirical tone.
e] Irony
Irony occurs when events in a song or a story goes contrary to the expectations of the audience or reader. Like in a situation where the child in a family is the breadwinner and his parents depend on him for everything. This would be contrary to our expectations that parents provide for their families and children.
Situational Irony occurs in situations where events go contrary to expectations or the outcome is not expected as in the example above.
Dramatic Irony occurs in plays mostly where the audience know something that surprisingly some the characters in the play do not know. For instance if character A steals goods from character B, and later character B, unaware of who the thief is, goes to seek help from character A in searching for the goods when clearly the audience is aware who stole the goods.
Verbal Irony occurs when someone says something while doing the opposite of what he says. E.g.” I am coming,” when he is going away. Verbal Irony is different from sarcasm because it is not meant to hurt the feelings of the addressee.
Suspense
Suspense involve withholding information from the reader or audience as a performer or narrator to arouse their curiosity and enhance their concentration, or even the dilemma situations in a song where no conclusive ending is present to make the audience second guess on the controversial situation presented.
Allusion
Occurs when a song borrows a pattern from another famous song; or makes reference to a famous historical situation. A song can be sung in the same structure say a famous song like Hallelujah was structured or borrow words from famous songs such as Desiderata. That would be use of allusion.
Rhyme
Rhyme is the repetition of syllables or end sounds of lines in a song to create rhythm. The last sounds the song below carry a rhyme scheme.
e.g . She went away
and saw life
Running the say
she was a wife
with the pay
Sometimes songs have internal rhyme in lines as shown below
He said, he was made
They said, they made
Alliteration
Alliteration involves repetition of the initial consonant sound in lines of a poem or song as shown below, usually to create musicality or rhythm in the song.
Peter paid their pending salaries
Assonance
Assonance involves repetition of the vowel sounds in lines of a song or poem usually to create musicality or rhythm in the poem as shown below.
She sits around silent and sickly
Consonance
This is the repetition of consonant sounds in lines of a song located either in the middle or at the end of words as shown below to create musicality or rhythm in the poem.
He sat straight and let pets met around him
Idiophones and Onomatopoeia
Idiophones are local or non-English words that describe sounds like tuff! And onomatopoeia are English words that describe sounds like scratch, that are used in songs to create originality of experience and to make the songs more enjoyable and interesting.
How to Analyse an Oral Poem/Song
Analysing a song involves the following:
Classification
–Who would best perform the song?
–What kind of an audience would be suitable for the song?
–What would be the best occasion for the performance of the song?
–Which accompaniments and paralinguistic features/non verbal cues would suit the song?
–Which mode of performance (recitation, chant, choral, solo, etc) would best fit the song?
Exercise
Consider the song below and answer questions that follow.
Mama really loves chicken
Mama throws down the pot pwa!
Like a scared dog
She runs after our cat
It runs swiftly swaying and swerving
She emerges in the court
Mama throws aside her clothes fwa!
She is a mad cow
Shouting, she giggles and laughs
It had eaten the chicken stew
Mama kills all its young ones
Questions
Question 2
Read the song below and answer questions that follow.
Shaka Honours Muzilikazi
The hills echoed with the laughter of the Zulu army.
At the southernmost point the army rested,
Shaka addressed them:”My brothers, our journey is now pointless.
Everywhere we go we find only those who acknowledge our authority,
Zulu power no longer issues from conquest
But from a bond of an all-embracing nationhood,
We must turn back to our homes.
Perhaps in the north Soshangane and his lot need a lesson.”
At Bulawayo they sang and danced for the returning army.
Shaka was still eager to consolidate the nation’s boundaries.
He said to his war councillors,” Our easy life
Shall soon undermine our fighting spirit
I want you Muzilikazi, to head to the north
And there establish peace among the quarrelling nations
And subdue the troublesome people of Ranisi
Who have caused endless wars among friendly nations,
You shall seize from them the loot of cattle
And return it to its original owners.”
The king spoke to Muzilikazi with great warmth and friendliness,
He said:”I give you my own axe, Muzilikazi,
So that when you pass the ruins of your native country
You raise it and pray for guidance of your ancestors.
I give you this so that wherever you are
You may know I shall always honour those who are our heroes.”
Muzilikazi of Mashoba was moved by this act,
He said, his eyes wet with tears;
“My lord, I do not know what great things I have done,
What great heroism I have displayed,
That I should deserve a gift most coveted by all heroes of Zululand?
Long ago you sheltered me when I was orphaned
And now you honour me.”
A] What kind of an oral poem do you think this is?
–Epic; because it is narrated and it is about renown figures such as Shaka Zulu.
–Historical poem because people like Muzilikazi who are subjects in the poem are historical figures.
–Narrative poem because it narrates to us the story of Shaka Zulu honouring Muzilikazi.
–Legendary/heroic/ode/praise/war song because it celebrates the heroic deeds of the Zulu army and its leaders Shaka and Muzilikazi.
B] Briefly describe the culture of the Zulu as reflected in the poem.
–Nationalist/patriotic—they have a strong kinship bond, “Zulu power…issues from an all-embracing nationhood.”
–Warlike/warriors e.g. “the hills echoed with the laughter of the Zulu army”
Pastoralists/kept cattle e.g. “You shall seize from them all the loot of cattle.”
–They are religious e.g. they have a traditional religion in which ancestors are revered/they practise ancestor-worship; pray for guidance from your ancestors.”
–They have a sense of justice; returned cattle to original owners.
–They are artistic e.g. their art includes song and dances, “At Bulawayo they sang and danced for the returning army.”
–They recognise and honour heroism e.g. “Shall always honour those who are our brave heroes.”
–Peace lovers e.g. Shaka Zulu tells Muzilikazi to establish peace in the north.
C] Identify and explain two images from the poem.
–“The hills echoed with the laughter of the Zulu army” this describe how happy the Zulu were for victory in war.
–“Our easy life shall soon undermine our fighting spirit”: meaning that if we relax or concentrate too much on celebrating our victory we might become complacent or lose our power in war.
–“..The ruins of your native country” describe how Mzilikazi’s native country has been ravaged by war.
–“his eyes wet with tears: gives a visual picture to describe the extent to which Mzilikazi was moved by the way Shaka honoured him.
–Battle axe: power or authority symbol.
–An all-embracing nationhood: a symbol of unity.
D] What do you learn about Shaka’s character from this poem?
–Authoritative/dictatorial: the way he addresses his army and his councillors. For example to Muzilikazi, “I want you Muzilikazi, to head to the north.”
–Power-hungry: “Zulu power no longer issues from conquest”
–He is just: he gives Muzilikazi an axe as an illustration of his readiness to honour those who exhibit courage.
Cunning/Manipulative/tactical/wise/intelligent/; the gesture of giving Muzilikazi the axe is just a cunning way of getting him to undertake the difficult mission on which he sends him.
Friendly/Warm: He spoke to Muzilikazi with great warmth and friendliness.
–An orator; the way he talks is creative and seductive e.g. “Our easy life shall soon undermine our fighting spirit.”
–Ambitious: the way he cautions against complacency and then sends Muzilikazi on another mission.
–Warlike: even when they have won the war, he still looks for opportunities to fight.
–Charismatic: the army and the councillors obey him, for example, Muzilikazi is moved to tears when Shaka gives his axe, yet the main reason for the axe is to persuade Muzilikazi to subdue The troublesome people of Ranisi.
–Patriotic—He solicits for “an all embracing nationhood” and tells the army, “We must get back to our homes.”
–Peace-loving: “establish peace among the quarrelling nations”
–Religious: tells Muzilikazi to pray.
–Kind/Caring; took Muzilikazi in as an orphan and cared for him.
E] State and explain a proverb which could be used to warn/caution the people of Ranisi.
–You reap what you sow. They terrorized friendly nations, now they will experience similar/worse terror from Shaka’s warriors.
–Those who live in glass houses should not throw stones.
–Those that live by the sword perish by the sword.
–Every dog has its day.
Question 3
Read the oral poem below and answer the questions that follow.
The poor man knows not how to eat with the rich man.
When they eat fish, he eats the head.
Invite a poor man and he rushes in
Licking his lips and upsetting the plates.
The poor man has no manners, he comes along
With the blood of lice under his nails
The face of the poor man is lined
From hunger and thirst in his belly
Poverty is no state for any mortal man
It makes him a beast to be fed on grass
Poverty is unjust. If it befalls on a man
Though he is nobly born, he has no power with God.
A] What evidence is there to show that this is an oral poem? Identify and illustrate such features.
–Repetition e.g. the poor man/ poverty
–hyperbole/ exaggeration e.g. “it makes him a beast to be fed on grass”
–striking characterization e.g. the poor man cast in extreme terms.
B] Describe a probable situation in which such a poem could be performed.
–A beer party where cheap local brew is consumed by poor people.
–A traditional baraza where the conduct of a poor man is being castigated or ridiculed.
C} If you were to do a solo performance of this oral poem, what elements would you emphasize?
–Dramatisation e.g. eating the fish clumsily/ rushing in and licking one’s lips/upsetting the plates on a table/paint finger nails (blood of lice) walk on all fours to impersonate a beasts being fed on grass.
–Facial expressions e.g. to show hunger and thirst.
–Tonal variation e.g. vary one’s pitch to put special emphasis on words ‘poverty is unjust’.
D} What does the phrase “..with the blood of lice under his nails” reveal about the poor man?
The poor man lives in unsanitary or unhygienic conditions.
E] Describe with illustrations the tone of this poem.
–Compassionate: talks about the injustices of poverty towards the poor
–contemptuous/critical/satirical the poor man is described in contemptuous terms e.g. rushes in licking his lips, upsetting plates etc.
SHORT FORMS
Riddles
A riddle is a question, statement or description in a figurative language that is intended to test the listener’s ability to use their wits to unravel the meaning. Riddles are words puzzles in which familiar objects or situation are referred to in a figurative terms for us to decipher what is actually meant.
Characteristics
–Riddles are word puzzles: a game where you have to think about carefully in order to answer.
–They have an opening formula ‘riddle riddle’
–Riddles are short witty statements usually clever and amusing.
–Riddles use the question—answer format e.g. q..I have a riddle?
Ans… Say it.
Riddles have a hypothetical prize—riddles are based on situations or ideas which are imagined or possible rather than real and true.
Classification of Riddles
The four-legged sitting on the four-legged waiting for the four-legged. Ans. A cat sitting on a table waiting for a rat.
6.Riddles on people e.g. Best food for a baby. Ans. Sleep.
7.Riddles on plants. E.g. What tree has only one thorn? Ans. A sisal plant.
8.Riddles on parts of the body. E.g. Thirty-two seated, one lady dancing. Ans. Teeth and the tongue.
Four gates that produce water. Ans. A cow’s udder.
Functions of Riddles
–for entertainment or fun and humour
–for sharpening wit/ to enlarge our imagination
–to expand our knowledge of the environment
–To enhance our figurative use of language or creativity e.g. describing things without naming them
–to teach values and morals
–to pass a secret message by old people
Stages in a Riddling Session
e.g. Riddle riddle/ I throw a riddle/ I have a riddle
If they are unable to find the solution or if all guesses are wrong then the riddle will have stage 5.
She is given a prize, usually a town, a city etc, which he rejects until given the city or prize of choice that she would accept. She will then say she has gone and visited the city and brought the greeting from the people there. The audience would acknowledge the greetings.
Proverbs and Sayings
Proverbs are wise sayings that hide meaning in metaphors or similes that they employ, Proverbs are slightly different from sayings because sayings do not employ metaphors and similes.
Characteristics
–They are short and fixed
–they have a summative function
–they are incorporated in speech
–they are sometimes used to introduce a story
–they are common within a particular language or community or they are communal
Functions of Proverbs
–They are used to flower one’s speech
–They act as a mirror to society
–They summarize situations
–Can be used for entertainment
When analysing proverbs, you should be able to identify
–the type of the proverb
–objects of reference
–the communal philosophy in the proverb or the general message conveyed
–a similar proverb that can replace it
Types of Proverbs
— Accidents will happen.
–Absence makes the heart grow fonder.
–Action speaks louder than words.
–Advice is least heeded when it is most needed.
–A chain is no stronger than its weakest link.
–A fool and his money are soon parted.
–Easy come, easy go.
— He who steals with a woman will live in fear till he dies.
–An apple a day keeps the doctor away.
–An empty purse frightens away friends
–An idle mind is a devil’s workshop.
–A bird in hand is worth two in the bush.
–Unity is strength.
–A problem shared is a problem half-solved.
–If you fall for me and I fall for you we can call it a game.
–On the way to one’s beloved there no hills.
— A man who marries a beautiful wife is like another who plants maize near the road in a poor neighbourhood.
–A man stung by a bee doesn’t go around smashing all bee-hives.
–If a gut allows a knife to be swallowed, the anus must wonder how it will get out.
–When trouble knocks at your door and you tell it you have no extra seat, it will tell you not to worry because it had brought its own stool.
–When a rat smiles at a nearby cat, just know that its hole is nearby.
–Beauty is only skin deep.
Change is as good as rest.
–A friend to all is a friend to none.
–A good example is the best sermon.
A new broom sweeps clean.
–A stitch in time saves nine.
–A watched pot never boils
–A man who causes trouble for others also causes trouble for himself.
–A man roasting maize doesn’t wander away from the fireplace for too long.
–A young bull mounts the cow from the head.
–A drum is heavier on the return journey.
However long it takes, a stammerer will call ‘baba’.
–Staring at water doesn’t quench your thirst.
–The pen is mightier than a sword.
–When in Rome, do as the Romans.
–The squeaky wheel gets the greese.
–When the going gets tough, the tough get going.
–No man is island.
–Fortune favours the bold.
–People who live in glass houses should not throw stones.
–Hope for the best but prepare for the worst.
–Birds of a feather flock together.
–Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
–A picture is worth a thousand words.
–There is no such a thing as free lunch.
Similarities between riddles and proverbs
–Both are brief
–Both employ figurative language
–Both are fixed—a riddle has a fixed response while a proverb has a fixed wording.
Differences
–Riddles have an opening formula
–Riddles require at least two performers while a proverb just one to say it.
–Riddles are common with children while proverbs common with adults.
–Riddles are used as preludes to storytelling sessions while proverbs are used in conversation.
–Riddles are witty statements or word puzzles while proverbs are sayings of wisdom.
Tongue Twisters
A tongue twister is a word game that is intended to test a speaker’s fluency to utter without hesitation or faltering a sequence of words with particular problems of articulation.
Characteristics
— A tongue twister is a word game that plays on words with problems of articulation
–It employs alliteration, assonance and consonance
–They are mostly ungrammatical or they need not make sense.
–they are brief
Functions of Tongue twisters
–They entertain or create fun
–They aid in learning pronunciation
–Enhances confidence by helping one overcome shyness and enjoy communication
–they help train concentration and memorization
–they promote creativity
–they help develop one’s ability to recite
–They help one to learn a foreign language with particular problems of articulation
Examples of Tongue twisters
–She sells sea shells on the sea shore
–A disorganised organizer cannot organize a disorganized organization
–The red long lorry rolled down the long Limuru road
–Four hundred and forty four frightened fools fought for food
–Peter Piper picked a peck of speckled pepper
–How high up has he heaved his heavy hoe?
–Kantai can tie a tie, untie a tie and dye a tie like Dyre who can tie a tie, untie a tie and dye a tie; so, if Kantai can tie a tie, untie a tie and dye a tie, why can’t I tie a tie, untie a tie and dye a tie like dyre?
Exercise
Read the text below and answer questions that follow.
Betty Botter bought a bit of butter
But he said the butter’s bitter
“If I put a bit of bitter butter in my butter
It’ll make my better butter bitter
But a bit of better butter will make the bitter butter better.”
So she bought a bit of butter
Better than her bitter butter
She put it in her butter
And her butter wasn’t bitter
‘twas better Betty Botter bought a bit of better butter
Butter’s—butter was
It’ll—it will
‘twas—it was
It is a tongue twister because it has words following each other that are challenging in terms of pronunciation and employs alliteration and assonance.
–Reading the tongue twister would entertain him
–It would help the student learn the pronunciation of /b/ in difficulty situations
–It would sharpen the student’s fluency
–It would promote creativity in the student
–It would develop the student’s ability to recite
–it would enhance the student’s concentration
–Alliteration e.g. Betty Botter bought
Rhyme e.g. butter
Bitter
Butter
–Repetition of words e.g. bitter, butter
–The effects of sound, especially /b/ and /t/ would be lost. One may end up with a sequence of words which may not be recognized as of the same kind as the item above.
Puns
A pun is a wordplay which involve words that have similar spellings but different meaning or homonyms e.g. can(a container), can(auxiliary verb and homophones (words with same pronunciation but different spellings and often different meanings) e.g. some and sum. Puns thrive on ambiguity of words to create fun within a sentence. Puns also employ metaphors and literal meaning of words.
A person who is fond of using puns is called a punster.
Examples
Oral Literature Research/Field Work
Field work is the act and process of going out to a community to collect oral literature materials and related information for study and analysis. Field work is necessary for
Key Stages in Field Work
It involves stating the purpose and scope of study and objectives or research to guard against digression. It also involves identifying the location for the research, familiarization with earlier works on the study or literature review, establishing contact with useful people like informants, deciding on the key methods to be used in collecting data e.g. questionnaires or interviews, securing permissions to conduct research from relevant authorities, buying or hiring of recording materials and budgeting for accommodation and transport.
This is done through various methods of collecting date e.g. interviews, questionnaires, observation etc.
Recording is done through writing, typing, using tape recorders etc.
This involves scrutinising of information collected in preparation for interpretation and documentation, transcription, interpretation, classifying into genres, themes, styles and making a conclusion.
This is the spreading the information gathered through media.
Common Problems Encountered During Field Work
Field work should be carried out in relevant and appropriate places like rural areas where there is ethnically authentic information and performance; elders would give detailed oral testimony or material, display great experience and skill while children would easily perform riddles, singing games and tongue twisters.
Nouns
A noun is a name of anything or simply, a naming word. Nouns are categorized into
–Proper nouns—names of specific people, places or things. Proper nouns always start with a capital letter e.g. Kenya, Peter, Lake Victoria, Nairobi etc.
–Common noun—these are names of people, places and things that are not specific. E.g. desk, boy, river, plate etc.
–Concrete Nouns—names of things, people etc that can be touched. E.g. book desk, water, James, bottle etc.
–Abstract nouns—names of things or concepts that cannot be touched or seen. E.g. wind, corruption, love, hate, God etc.
–Collective nouns—names of group of things. These kinds of names usually take a singular verb.
Count and non-count Nouns
Count nouns are names of things that can be counted. They thus occur in singular and plural forms.
e.g. boy—boys one boy—20 boys.
–Most singular count nouns that end in the sound /s/, /ch/ and /sh/ take –es in plural e.g. bus—buses, church—churches, bush—bushes.
–If a singular count noun ends with ‘y’, the ‘y’ is usually dropped in plural and replaced with ‘ies’ unless the ‘y’ comes after a vowel. E.g. Lady—ladies, cry—cries.
–If the word ends with ‘y’ but the ‘y’ is preceded by a vowel then only ‘s’ is added in plural. E.g. Day—days, Key—keys.
–If the word ends with /f/ we drop the f and replace it with –ves. E.g. Life—lives, Hoof—hooves.
Non-count nouns refer no things that cannot be counted. Things like
–substance—food, sand, dust
–qualities—happiness, kindness
–ideas—knowledge, knowledge
–Liquids—water, milk
–objects—furniture, hair, luggage
Most countable nouns do not have singular and plural forms; they merely occur in their respective nature or quantities.
Water—singular, Water—plural. A lot of water. 20 gallons of water.
Sometimes due to specifications some non-countable nouns are gives the plural ‘s’ to mean different large quantities like waters in reference to oceans.
Irregular and Regular Nouns
Regular nouns are nouns that take a predictable plural form in relation to singular forms. For example cup—cups, toy—toys, shirt—shirts, Church—churches, bus–buses. Most regular nouns therefore take ‘s’ or ‘es’ in plural.
–Nouns ending with ‘o’ with a vowel before the ‘o’ usually take ‘s’ in plural. E.g. Ratio—Ratios, but if it ends with ‘o’ with a consonant before the ‘o’ then it would take ‘-es’ in plural. E.g. Bufallo—Buffalloes.
–Still a few nouns are an exception, in that they end with ‘o’ preceded by a consonant but still takes just ‘s’ in plural like dynamo—dynamos.
–Nouns that end in /f/ take /s/ in plural like chief—chiefs, gulf—gulfs but others like dwarf, hoof and scarf can take both ‘s’ in plural or ‘-ves’ that is dwarf—dwarfs or dwarf—dwarves; hoof—hoofs or hoof—hooves and scarf—scarfs or scarf—scarves.
Irregular nouns are nouns that do not take ‘s’ or ‘es’ in plural form. E.g. man—men, woman—women, mouse—mice, child—children.
–There are those that change from singular to plural like man—men, goose—geese etc.
–There are those that do not change from singular to plural like swine—swine, sheep—sheep, deer—deer, species—species, series—series.
–Some of them are used only in plural forms like scissors, tongs, spectacles, trousers, jeans, shorts, pyjamas and news.
–There are those that seem plural but are actually singular e.g. Mathematics, physics, measles etc.
Collective Nouns
These are nouns which in their singular forms refer to a set or group of people, animals or things. E.g.
A crowd—a group of people without order
A band—a group of musicians
Choir—a group of singers
Sometimes collective nouns occur in phrases. When a phrase is used to indicate a collective noun we call it a phrasal quantifier because it shows the quantity of the noun present. For example a piece of cake,
A cup of tea—two cups of tea etc.
Some phrasal quantifiers can be used with both count and non-count nouns e.g. a lot of students, a lot of water, a pile of books, a pile of wood etc.
Other examples are
Collective nouns denote singularity in character; that is why they tend to take a singular verb e.g. a crowd has been gathering since morning. But sometimes members within a collective noun might have divergent opinions e.g. The crew have different duties and responsibilities.
Compound nouns
A compound noun is a noun that is made up of more than one word. The noun formed from combining two words can be written as
–In most compound nouns the plural ending is added to the last word e.g. boyfriends, deputy heads, commanders-in-chief etc.
However, the plural ending in others is added to the first word e.g. passers-by, fathers-in-law etc.
–Some words take plural endings on either the first word or second e.g. Attorneys-general or attorney-generals.
–Compound nouns can take a noun +noun e.g. bookshop, noun+verb e.g. tea break, adjective+noun e.g. Hot dog, etc.
Conjunctions
Packing List
When packing remember the following
| Serial no. | Items | Type of items | Quantity | Description |
| 1 | Clothes | a)shirts
| 3
| –New yellow –Old blue –White—short sleeved |
| b)trousers | 2 | –black official –blue jeans | ||
| 2 | Shoes | a)rubbers | 1 pair | Black and white |
| b)leather | 1 pair | Brown | ||
| c)sandals | 1 pair | Red | ||
| 3 | Bathroom accessories | a)towel | 1 | Brown |
| b)soap | 1 | Geisha medium | ||
| 4 | Beddings | a)Sleeping bag | 1 | Manta medium |
| b)Sheets | 2 | Red and white | ||
| c)blankets | 1 | Black dotted | ||
| 5 | Camera | Sony | 1 | Digital, 20 megapixels |
| 6. | Toiletries | a)toothpaste | 1 | Colgate medium |
| b)toothbrush | 1 | Colgate medium | ||
| 7 | Body oil | Vaseline | 1 | Small |
Before writing a packing list, one must consider
–Where he is going. The location determines the items. E.g. the coast of Mombasa would need light clothes and MT Kenya region heavy ones.
–Means of transport—aeroplanes can limit the amount of luggage to be carried along.
–Length of stay—this will determine the quantity of each item you carry.
–Purpose—e.g. if you are going to swim you will have to carry costumes.
Question
You are a member of the Wildlife Club. The club has organised for a three day camp in the Maasai Mara Park. Write the packing list of the items you would need during the camp.
Etiquette
Etiquette is a set of rules and norms that govern our polite and acceptable way of interaction especially through greetings, requests and commands.
Greetings
It is important to greet people according to their a)age b)position c)relationships.
–An older person should be greeted in a formal way. E.g Good morning Mr. Kinuthia.
–A person in a more senior position than you are should also be greeted in a formal way even when they are younger than you. E.g. How do you do Mrs. Kendi?
–Your age mates can be greeted in an informal way if you are friends or relatives, or if they are not your seniors. E.g. Hi Jackie, or Hi bro. Again members of your extended family can be greeted in an informal way. E.g. Hi uncle, Hullo dad. But people that are not related to you and are not your friends should be greeted in a formal way, unless they are younger/age mates and not your seniors in positions.
Introduction
When introducing someone important or titled, mention their respective titles in the greetings as shown below.
–Start by their titles if you want to introduce them to someone else
Your Excellency, may I introduce you to Mrs. Wanjala. (For presidents)
Your honour, meet Mr. Omori, the manager KCB bank.
When introducing an ordinary person to a titled person, mention the lay person then introduce by mentioning the name of the titled person before giving the title. E.g.
Mom, meet Ms. Anne Waiguru, the Cabinet Secretary, Ministry of Interior Government.
Common titles are
–prime Minister—The Right Honourable
–Member of parliament—Honourable
–Judge/magistrate—Your Honour, Your Lord/Lady, Your Lordship/Ladyship
–Mayor—Your Worship
King/queen—You Majesty
Members of the royal family e.g. grand duke, duke, duchess—Royal Highness
–Prince, Princes – Your grace
–Other royals—Lady/Lord
Sir—nights
Sir/Madam—any important person or professional
Professor—Highest University title for a teacher
Mr.—respectful title for any man
Mrs.—Respectful title for a married woman followed by her husband’s Sir Name or her full marital name.
Ms.—a respectful title for a woman whose marital status isn’t clear or known.
Miss.—a respectful title for a lady who isn’t married.
Arrmy titles
Officer cadet—lieutenant—captain—major—colonel—brigadier—major—field marshall.
Semi-formal situations
Sometimes you can introduce or refer to a titled person in an informal occasion. In such a circumstance, avoid the formal titles.
Dear Mr. President, meet Kenneth Owour, Member of Parliament Kanduyi constituency.
–When introducing someone as a guest, it is important to include information about their interests and achievements at the tail end. E.g. Mr. John Kamau, MD Kenya Seed Company. He is the founder of Salima Electronics Company and a senior member of the Catholic church.
Self Introduction
When introducing yourself, do not start with any title, just greetings then your full name before other details follow. Examples:
Good morning gentlemen; I am James Barasa, Professor of Mathematics at the University of Nairobi.
Do not start with Mr. or Miss.
Requests
When making requests use polite language. The following phrases would help someone sound more polite:
Please—please tell me the truth.
Excuse me—excuse me lady, have you seen my bag?
Sorry—sorry madam, I am late.
Pardon—pardon me Jane, I didn’t get your instructions.
I am afraid—used when you want to give a disappointing statement or answer to someone who is probably expecting something positive. E.g. I am afraid I do not have the book you wanted to borrow. ]
Acknowledgement
When someone gives you something you say ‘thank you’ and then he can answer in acknowledgement ‘you are welcome’ or ‘it is nothing’ or ‘don’t mention it’. The goal here is to sound as modest as possible.
Telephone Etiquette
When making or answering a telephone call, the person on the other end of the line obviously cannot see you. You will therefore be judged solely by what you say and how you say it.
Points to note
Receiving a personal call
Hallo
—good morning/afternoon/evening (choose according to time of the day)
This is John speaking ( it is considered rude to give yourself a title like Mr/Mrs/ms but professional titles like dr/prof are allowed)
e.g. This is Eng. Wekesa.
Receiving a business call
Greetings—Good morning/afternoon/ evening
You have reached Paradise Hotel or Lugulu Girls High School
It is rude to respond by asking the caller ‘What do you want?’ or ‘Who are you’
Making a call
Your first words are said after the recipient’s opening remarks
–The greetings will depend much on how well you know the caller
Hi Peter, What is up?
This is Christine, how are you doing?
This is Indimuli speaking…
Business call
When making a business call, follow the procedure below
Ending a call
At the end of both personal and business calls, it is customary for the recipient to thank the caller for calling.
When taking a call message in the office follow these steps.
–Note down the message
–Write the name of the caller or his behalf and the institution the caller represents
–note down the date when the call was made
–note down the phone number so that it is easier to call back
–Indicate whether your boss or you, ought to call back and whether urgently
DIARIES
A diary is a private document in which you record activities, events and appointments you want to remember. I t acts as an aid to memory. Many people find diary keeping very useful because it helps them honour appointments.
A diary contains a calendar for a whole year with a space provided for each day of the week and month. The space is usually small, so, you have to be selective and brief. Many diaries also contain spaces where you can record personal information like your name, address, blood group and the person to be contacted in case of an emergency. At the back of a diary, there is usually space for names address and telephone numbers of people you contact frequently.
In offices, you may find desk diaries where dates of meetings or other important activities of an organisation are recorded.
There are two types of diaries which are also known as personal journals.
Appointment diary is used to record specific time and date of the daily schedule e.g.
Sunday, 1st June 2017
| 8:00 AM | Meet mom at the Afya Centre |
| 10:00 AM | Watch the Vampire movie |
| 2:00 PM | Visit auntie Jane in Buruburu |
| 4:00 PM | Return the borrowed book ‘Sinbad misadventures’ |
A personal diary or journal differs from an appointment diary because a personal journal is a record of events that have already happened and is usually in narrative form. The title must always be the date in full when the events happened. E.g. Day one, Monday, 23rd October 2016. When wring a personal journal, capture the feelings and opinions that you experienced because they help the writer relive those often exciting moments. Each day should be in one paragraph whether long or short. Be detailed and imaginative when recounting past episodes. E.g.
Tuesday, 4th February, 2017
First day in high school. I am excited and frightened at the same time. I pray that my fears do not show. I have too many questions but I don’t want to appear stupid. So, I keep them to myself. It is the end of the first day and I haven’t made even one friend. I will have to change my tactics. One of the things I have to learn is how to eat hot food quickly. Today, I had barely eaten a quarter of my food when the teacher on duty said it was time to clear from the dining hall. I felt so helpless and sad.
You can use the present perfect tense mixed with present simple tenses as in this example or just simple past tense mixed with past perfect tenses.
CLOZE TEST
A Cloze Test requires one to fill gaps left in a given passage and context so as to make it complete using the most appropriate or suitable words. The best way to complete a cloze test is by first reading through the passage to establish the context then trying the fill the easier blank spaces as you read through the second time before completing the whole test the third or even fourth time of reading. Filling the blank spaces would involve testing words in their respective spaces to see whether they fit in the context until you pick on the best synonym. It is crucial to be aware of the punctuation marks because any space after a full stop, an exclamation mark or a question mark must be filled with a word beginning with a capital letter. Similarly, spaces that are part of proper nouns—that require you to complete the noun would require a word that begins with a capital letter. It is necessary to check the tense of the sentence where you have to fill the blank space to make sure you use the word in its proper tense that would fit. A cloze test only takes one word per blank space.
Exercise
Fill in each of the blank spaces below with the most appropriate word. 10 marks
The Israel—Arab conflicts in the Middle East __ caused by a number of factors, central among them was the Belfast Declaration __ the British government that it wanted to help the Zionists return the Jews who were __persecuted in Europe back to their ‘ancestral’ land. Of course the British were sure that Palatine land was not Jewish land to be returned or repossessed but they __ the Jews, who had vast resources in Europe, to support the empire and fill indebted to the empire for helping them create their own __ of Israel.
Many of the British politicians did not even like the __ and their presence in Palestine land was obviously to exploit those lands for whatever recourses they could get. __ the fall of the Ottoman Empire, Britain wanted to get a piece of the Middle East and had succeeded __ to some degree. Controlling the Arabs was becoming a difficult task __ the British wished that by establish a Jewish state in Palestine they would have a better ally. __ did they know that the very Jewish state would turn against the empire and declare its own independence forcing the British soldiers out and pushing the Arabs backwards into their own countries; thereby creating a conflict that would only end with an apocalypse of the Middle East especially by Iran nukes.
Silent Consonants and Vowels
These are consonants and vowels that form part of a word structure but are not pronounced.
A: aesthetic, bread B: bdellium, debt, and plumber
C: indictment, muscle, science D: djinn, handkerchief, Wednesday
E: give, like, name (the ‘e’ here is also known as the ‘magic e’)
F: halfpenny G: gnat, gnaw, gneiss, gnu, high, phlegm, sign, though
H: daughter, echo, heir, honest, hour, orchid I: friend, business J: marijuana
K: knee, knife, knight, knot, know L: calf, could, talk, yolk
M: mnemonic N: autumn, column, damn, hymn, solemn
O: colonel, leopard, people P: corps, coup, pneumonia, psalm, psyche, receipt
Q: Colquhoun (Scottish name), lacquer R: forecastle, sarsaparilla (GA)
S: aisle, bourgeois, debris, island T: ballet, castle, rapport, listen
U: colleague, guard, guesses, tongue V: Milngavie (Scottish town)
W: answer, gunwale, sword, two, wrist, wrong X: billet-doux, faux pas, Sioux
Y: Islay (Scottish island), Pepys Z: chez, laissez-faire, rendezvous
Commonly Misspelled words
Maneuver –foolscap –myopia –diarrhea –wry –surprise –Endeavour –awry –occasion –convenient –occurrence –recommendation –committee –necessary –dormitory –pneumonia –exercise –abbreviate –abundant –abysmal –acquiesce –aggressive abstinence allegiance –privilege –annoyance –entrepreneur –apostrophe –argument –urge –attorney –auxiliary –bargain –bureaucratic –cheetah –curriculum –syllabus –etiquette –grateful –absenteeism –enmity –intelligence –pronunciation –contemptuous –laboratory –liquor –messiah –mediocre –medieval –nuisance –onomatopoeia –paraphernalia –personnel rendezvous –gradable satellite –souvenir –chauvinism –silhouette –tomorrow –wrestle –sellotape –hierarchy –lieutenant –drunkenness –sergeant rhythm
accidentally/accidently accommodate – achieve – acknowledge acquaintance – acquire acquit acreage address – adultery – advisable affect – effect Aggression aggressive – allegiance almost a lot amateur – annually apparent arctic – becoming beginning buoy/buoyant – camouflage – capitol – capital (both words exist, but are distinct) Caribbean category caught cemetery – changeable chief colleague collectible – collectable column coming – committed concede congratulate conscientious – conscious consensus controversy coolly deceive definite –defiantly desperate – difference – dilemma – disappoint – disastrous – embarrass – exhilarate existence – experience – extreme – fascinating – fiery – fluorescent foreign – friend gauge – grateful – guarantee – guidance harass – hierarchy – humorous hygiene – ignorance – imitate – immediately independent indispensable – indispensible inoculate intelligence jewelry leisure liaison – library – license lightning – lightening lose maintenance – medieval memento – millennium – miniature minuscule – miniscule mischievous – misspell – occurrence – occurred – omission – original outrageous –parliament – pastime – perceive – perseverance – plagiarize playwright – precede – presence principle – principal
Prophecy (as noun) – prophesy (valid as verb) quarantine – queue – questionnaire
Receipt recommend – referred reference –vacuum
Informal Letters
These are letters written to friends and relatives. They usually ignore the element of formality.
The salutation in these letters should be semi-formal e.g. Dear Mr/Mrs/Miss/Ms/Dr/Prof. For people you barely know and such letters should end with ‘Yours Sincerely’ plus the initials and the name. E.g.
Yours Sincerely
K.l. Wafula.
–Such letters have only a single address—the one that belongs to the writer.
–It is always better to end with your name and just start the address with your box office number e.g.
P.O. BOX 77
KISUMU
For people that are close to you like friends, only use their first name in the salutation. For example
Dear Mercy, or Dear John, or even a shorn version like Dear bro.
–always has the date after the address. Skip a line when moving from one item to another.
Example
Write a letter to your friend in another school. In the letter inform her about life in your school, your ambition and the happy memories you shared in the past.
LUGULU GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL
P.O. BOX 33
NAIVASHA
31st January 2017
Dear Sasha,
How are you doing? I hope you are as fine as I am or even better.
Life here at school is Ok. I have come to like the school and made many friends. The weather is a bit warmer than what we are used to in Eldoret but I am adapting well. The meals are sometimes delicious and other times bad but that is to be expected.
I want to concentrate on my studies and come the end of my four years here in school; I should get a strong grade. I hope you are working hard too. We used to be competitors in primary school, remember?
I still remember our moments together, how we would skip the rope together, how we would go singing the Christmas chorals in church. Do you remember how you forgot the lines in the middle of your performance? And I cut in and rescued the situation; everyone thought we had planned that move and praised our genius ha! It was lovely.
Anyway, I miss you so much and yearn to see you when schools close. In the meantime I will be awaiting your reply with eagerness. Pass my greetings to your friends.
Your Friend
Daph
Formal Letters
Formal letters must be clear concise and complete. The effectiveness of a formal letter determines the kind of response the writer is likely to receive. Good formal letters should have the following qualities:
–They should reflect clarity of thought. Before writing a letter think about the subject matter and make sure you understand what you want to communicate.
–Use a variety of sentences—mix short sentences with relatively long ones to give your writing flavour.
–The right words should be selected carefully to convey the precise meaning required.
–Ideas should be expressed logically.
–Use formal language—avoid using slang.
–Any irrelevant information should be omitted.
–Formal letters should have a polite tone.
Address
Addresses should be written in capital letter. A formal letter has got two addresses. The first address should be the sender’s or writer’s the followed by the addressee’s. Do not start the sender’s address with the sender’s name but you can use the name of the institution the sender belongs to.
–Always skip a line after writing the address before you write the date or salutation. It is advisable to use the block format when writing letter.
Salutation
Formal letters use formal salutations like Dear Sir or Dear Madam and sometimes Dear Mr/Mrs/Ms.
–When you salute using Dear Sir/Madam, always sign off with Yours Faithfully. But if you salute with Dear Mr/Mrs. Always sign off with Yours Sincerely.
RE:____________________________
For Re: or reason for writing do not write ref: only RE: and then write a very brief and summative reason for writing. The statement should summarize what the letter is all about. Always skip a line after and before RE.
Body
The introductory paragraph should clearly state the objective of the letter. It prepares the reader for the main points. The body should be specific; devoid of unnecessary details. A good body should have at least three paragraphs expounding on the introduction and explaining clearly and briefly what is at stake. The last paragraph should conclude the letter by showing optimism or stating the main message.
Letters of Application
When applying for a job consider the following
Question
You graduated as certified accountant, four years ago and you have been working several accounting jobs. You see on The Standard newspaper of 7th January 2017, an advertisement for a qualified accountant to fill the vacancy of senior bursar Strathmore College. Write a letter applying for the job.
P.O. BOX 66
NANDI
10TH JANUARY 2017
MANAGER
STRATHMORE COLLEGE
P.O. BOX 101
NAIROBI—CODE OO1
Dear Sir/Madam,
RE: Applying for the vacancy of senior bursar Strathmore College
Following the advertisement appearing on The Standard of 7th January 2017, I would like to apply to fill the vacancy of a senior bursar.
I am a graduate of Kenyatta University where I studied a bachelor’s degree in commerce—accounting option and I am also a certified accountant, holder of CPA section 5 from Kenya School of Monetary studies. I have a wealth of accounting experience, having worked at Lugulu Girls as an accountant for two years then Kibabii University in the office of Finance for a year. Currently am working in the county government of Bungoma as a procurement officer.
I am a very hardworking individual, punctual and dedicated to my work and this can be verified by the referees that are provided on my CV. If I get an opportunity to work in your institution, I will bring a wealth of experience, freshness and enthusiasm in your accounting department, as my track record shows.
My main motivation for choosing to work in your institution is the good reputation your institution has cultivated in its treatment of clients, workers and the public. I would feel proud to be part of the Strathmore community that prides itself on excellence of service.
Please find attached my full resume and other documents that attest to my profile as befitting your institution.
I am looking forward to a positive response from you.
Yours Faithfully
Sign
Denis K. Barasa
Letters of Invitation
Letters of invitations are written to invite people for an event or social occasion. Some letters of invitation can be formal, inviting an applicant to an interview but majority of such letters are semi-formal inviting people formally to a social event like a wedding.
Question
As the secretary of Kalamu Writers Club, write to the Editor-in Chief of a local publication, inviting him to be your guest speaker during your annual party.
–Introduction—State directly the message that you are inviting him to be the guest speaker during the club’s annual party.
–In the body state what the club is all about, its membership and why he would be relevant to the members and the objectives of the party. Also state what he should address in his speech.
–in the conclusion, look forward to a reply soon and give contact details like phone number that he can reach quickly.
–As a secretary, write in third person—detach yourself from the group and say, ‘the group would…’
KALAMU WRITER’S CLUB
P.O. BOX 2433
NAIROBI
12TH JANUARY 2017
THE EDITOR IN CHIEF
EAST AFRICAN MAGAZINE
P.O. BOX 6664
NAIROBI
Dear Sir,
RE: Invitation to be our guest speaker on our annual party
Members of Kalamu Writers would be grateful if you agreed to be their guest speaker during their annual party which will be held at the Sagret Hotel on Friday 16th January 2017 from 7PM.
Kalamu writers club has a membership of 100. These are people who are interested in writing and would like to improve their skills and knowledge by listening to lectures, attending workshops and writing articles for their club’s monthly magazine. The club has been in existence for five years.
At our last general meeting members selected you to be this year’s guest speaker for the annual party. Members have been impressed by the high quality of your magazine for some time now. It is an objective magazine which has always stood for truth.
The club takes care of the travelling, accommodation and appearance costs at a fixed cash amount of ksh 10,000 for every invited chief guest.
The club is looking forward to hearing from you soon. You can reach the secretary or the chair directly on a call: 0722767889 or email kalamuclub@yahoo.com.
Yours Faithfully
Sign
Muthoni Otieno
Club Secretary
Exercise
As the secretary of Lugulu Girls Journalism Club, write to a famous radio presenter, inviting her to be your guest speaker during your annual party.
Letter of Apology
A letter of apology is a way of telling someone that you are sorry for doing something wrong or causing a problem. The language therefore should be apologetic.
What sets apart the letter of apology from other types of letters is the language used.
Features of a Letter of Apology
S
Steps
–Admit or accept the wrong done
–If you accept responsibility, offer compensation
–Promise not to repeat the mistake
Question
You are a chief accountant of Lolian Flower Limited, you were spotted by the manager coming late to work despite the laid down rules which prohibit lateness. Apologise for your behaviour.
LOLIAN FLOWERS LIMITED
P.O. BOX 33
NAIVASHA
10TH JANUARY 2017
THE MANAGER
LOLIAN FLOWERS LIMITED
Dear Mr. Obudho,
RE: Apology
I would like to apologise for being late for work today morning contrary to the laid down rules on lateness.
I have taken this early opportunity to correct the impression my behaviour might have portrayed. While my behaviour today was inexcusable, I was delayed by a niggling family matter concerning my wife which is now under control.
I would like to assure you that this will not happen again.
Yours Sincerely
Sign
Kiprop Songok
Chief Accountant
Letters of Requests and Inquiry
As in other business or official letters, letters of requests contain the following information
You need to sell yourself and demonstrate that you deserve what you are asking for. Give good reasons. You need to state that the person who is to grant you the request stands to benefit. Appeal to the addressee’s sense of fairness and indicate that you have faith in him.
Letters of Inquiry, on the other hand, are written when you want to find out or verify information from a certain institution or ask if a certain firm has specific goods or provide certain services.
Example of Letter of Request
You are in form four. You have not completed paying your school fees although the principal has allowed you to stay on so that your studies in this crucial year are not interrupted. Fortunately, you have read about a nongovernmental organisation that helps intelligent but needy high school students. Write a letter to them requesting for a bursary.
FROM
CHARITY KARIMI—REG. NO. 2345
SKYWAYS HIGH SCHOOL
P.O. BOX 234
VIHIGA
THROUGH
THE PRINCIPAL
SKYWAYS HIGH SCHOOL
30TH January 2017
TO
MANAGING DIRECTOR
EDUCATION SUPPORT FOUNDATION
P.O. BOX 465
NAIROBI
Dear Mrs. Indimuli,
RE: Request for financial assistance
I am writing to request your esteemed foundation to grant me a bursary to enable me clear my fees balance of ksh 98,000.
I am a form four student at Skyways high school. I owe the school this amount but my parents are unable to pay because of the prolonged drought that has hit our Kakamega county and destroyed crops and animals. My family has no money and they are barely surviving.
My performance in exams has been good. I have topped our candidate class for the last two terms with a mean grade of A minus. I am a very hardworking and humble student and I am hoping to get your help so that I can realise my dream of studying Civil Engineering in the university.
I am writing to you because your interest in the education of the disadvantaged Kenya is well known. I know some of the benefactors of your program and they are ever grateful to Education Support Foundation. I will be honoured to be one of them.
I would be happy if you granted me a bursary of ksh 98000. If you decide to help please write the cheque in the name of the school and if you need further details you could email the principal on skywayrs@gmail.com or call her on 0732456665.
Yours Sincerely
Sign
Student
Letter of inquiry
You are the procurement manager of Carnivore Club; write a letter to Keroche Industries Limited to inquire if they have the three types of alcoholic drinks that they have been advertising on the major television stations; their wholesale prices, quantities they can supply and the respective discounts.
THE PROCUREMENT OFFICE
CARNIVORE CLUB
P.O. BOX 764
NAIROBI
23RD JANUARY 2017
THE SALES MANAGER
KEROCHE INDUSTRIES LIMITED
P.O. BOX 66
NAIVASHA
Dear Sir/Madam,
RE: INQUIRY ON THE NEW DRINKS
I would like to find out information on the new drinks being advertised by your company on NTV,KTN and Citizen television channels. According to the adverts, the names of the new drinks are Cesta, Guarana and Zem. Kindly let me know the prices of these drinks at the wholesale price and the discounts attached to each load. Also furnish me with details on alcoholic content of these drinks and their classifications.
We are the leading entertainment house in Nairobi, therefore, we would be glad to get these new drinks the soonest possible so that we can introduce them as part of the many options we have to our patrons.
Please respond the soonest possible by email on carnires@yahoo.com or call me on 0791875262.
Yours Faithfully
Sign
George Maina
The Procurement officer
Recommendation letter/Confidential Report
A confidential report is sometimes referred to as reference or recommendation letter. This type of report requires the writer to comment in confidence or give an assessment of the suitability of someone or something for a given task or activity. Such reports are expected to mention the strengths and weaknesses truthfully. They are therefore not meant for public readership but for the person requesting for them.
When writing a confidential report consider the following:
–The writer’s address –date –recipient address –reference number or registration number
–The name of the person being recommended –strengths and weaknesses of the subject
–In the closing tag include name, signature and your title
Example
EXCELL HIGH SCHOOL
P.O. BOX 78
MOMBASA
11TH FEBURUARY 2017
THE CO-ORDINATOR
P.O. BOX 46
NAKURU
Dear Sir,
RE: Peter Baraka—Admission Numbers 4121
The above named was a student in the school from 2003—2006. While here, he displayed exemplary leadership qualities and served as games captain for two years. Under his leadership, the school was well represented in ball games to the national level. It was in recognition of this that he was voted the outstanding prefect of the year (2005).
Academically, he was of average ability. This saw him score a mean grade of B minus in the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Exams of 2006. In addition, Baraka’s spoken and written English is good, his Swahili even better. He is also good in simple arithmetic and his strongest point is his useful habit of taking down important information for later reference.
Apart from his tendency to keep to himself when ignored, Baraka is reliable, co-operative and industrious.
I recommend him with full confidence that he will not disappoint you if offered a job in your association.
Yours Faithfully
Sign
James Situma
Principal
Exercise
Imagine your name has been given as a referee by Miss Jane Watate who has applied for a job as a receptionist and typist at Mombasa Tourist Office because you were her class teacher. Email a confidential report on her suitability for the position to Mombasa Tourist Office.
Consider the following details:
–Academic ability –performance of her duties relationship with clients –other relevant qualities
Idioms
An idiom is an expression whose meaning is different from all the meaning of its constituent words and that is used to summarize situations. Idioms are unique in a given language and community and might not make sense in other languages.
Common idioms
A hot potato
Speak of an issue (mostly current) which many people are talking about and which is usually disputed
A penny for your thoughts
A way of asking what someone is thinking
Actions speak louder than words
People’s intentions can be judged better by what they do than what they say.
Add insult to injury
To further a loss with mockery or indignity; to worsen an unfavorable situation.
An arm and a leg
Very expensive or costly. A large amount of money.
At the drop of a hat
Meaning: without any hesitation; instantly.
Back to the drawing board
When an attempt fails and it’s time to start all over.
Ball is in your court
It is up to you to make the next decision or step
Barking up the wrong tree
Looking in the wrong place. Accusing the wrong person
Be glad to see the back of
Be happy when a person leaves.
Beat around the bush
Avoiding the main topic. Not speaking directly about the issue.
Best of both worlds
Meaning: All the advantages.
Best thing since sliced bread
A good invention or innovation. A good idea or plan.
Bite off more than you can chew
To take on a task that is way to big.
Blessing in disguise
Something good that isn’t recognized at first.
Burn the midnight oil
To work late into the night, alluding to the time before electric lighting.
Can’t judge a book by its cover
Cannot judge something primarily on appearance.
Caught between two stools
When someone finds it difficult to choose between two alternatives.
Costs an arm and a leg
This idiom is used when something is very expensive.
Cross that bridge when you come to it
Deal with a problem if and when it becomes necessary, not before.
Cry over spilt milk
When you complain about a loss from the past.
Curiosity killed the cat
Being Inquisitive can lead you into an unpleasant situation.
Cut corners
When something is done badly to save money.
Cut the mustard [possibly derived from “cut the muster”]
To succeed; to come up to expectations; adequate enough to compete or participate
Devil’s Advocate
To present a counter argument
Don’t count your chickens before the eggs have hatched
This idiom is used to express “Don’t make plans for something that might not happen”.
Don’t give up the day job
You are not very good at something. You could definitely not do it professionally.
Don’t put all your eggs in one basket
Do not put all your resources in one possibility.
Drastic times call for drastic measures
When you are extremely desperate you need to take drastic actions.
Elvis has left the building
The show has come to an end. It’s all over.
Every cloud has a silver lining
Be optimistic, even difficult times will lead to better days.
Far cry from
Very different from.
Feel a bit under the weather
Meaning: Feeling slightly ill.
Give the benefit of the doubt
Believe someone’s statement, without proof.
Hear it on the grapevine
This idiom means ‘to hear rumors’ about something or someone.
Hit the nail on the head
Do or say something exactly right
Hit the sack / sheets / hay
To go to bed.
In the heat of the moment
Overwhelmed by what is happening in the moment.
It takes two to tango
Actions or communications need more than one person
Jump on the bandwagon
Join a popular trend or activity.
Keep something at bay
Keep something away.
Kill two birds with one stone
This idiom means, to accomplish two different things at the same time.
Last straw
The final problem in a series of problems.
Let sleeping dogs lie
Meaning – do not disturb a situation as it is – since it would result in trouble or complications.
Let the cat out of the bag
To share information that was previously concealed
Make a long story short
Come to the point – leave out details
Method to my madness
An assertion that, despite one’s approach seeming random, there actually is structure to it.
Miss the boat
This idiom is used to say that someone missed his or her chance
Not a spark of decency
Meaning: No manners
Not playing with a full deck
Someone who lacks intelligence.
Off one’s rocker
Crazy, demented, out of one’s mind, in a confused or befuddled state of mind, senile.
On the ball
When someone understands the situation well.
Once in a blue moon
Meaning: Happens very rarely.
Picture paints a thousand words
A visual presentation is far more descriptive than words.
Piece of cake
A job, task or other activity that is easy or simple.
Put wool over other people’s eyes
This means to deceive someone into thinking well of them.
See eye to eye
This idiom is used to say that two (or more people) agree on something.
Sit on the fence
This is used when someone does not want to choose or make a decision.
Speak of the devil!
This expression is used when the person you have just been talking about arrives.
Steal someone’s thunder
To take the credit for something someone else did.
Take with a grain of salt
This means not to take what someone says too seriously.
Taste of your own medicine
Means that something happens to you, or is done to you, that you have done to someone else
To hear something straight from the horse’s mouth
To hear something from the authoritative source.
Whole nine yards
Everything. All of it.
Wouldn’t be caught dead
Would never like to do something
Your guess is as good as mine
To have no idea, do not know the answer to a question
Phrasal Verbs
| phrasal verb | Meaning | example sentence |
| ask sby out | invite on a date | Brian asked Judy out to dinner and a movie. |
| ask around | ask many people the same question | I asked around but nobody has seen my wallet. |
| add up to sthg | Equal | Your purchases add up to $205.32. |
| back sthg up | Reverse | You’ll have to back up your car so that I can get out. |
| back sby up | Support | My wife backed me up over my decision to quit my job. |
| blow up | Explode | The racing car blew up after it crashed into the fence. |
| blow sthg up | add air | We have to blow 50 balloons up for the party. |
| break down | stop functioning (vehicle, machine) | Our car broke down at the side of the highway in the snowstorm. |
| break down | get upset | The woman broke down when the police told her that her son had died. |
| break sthg down | divide into smaller parts | Our teacher broke the final project down into three separate parts. |
| break in | force entry to a building | Somebody broke in last night and stole our stereo. |
| break into sthg | enter forcibly | The firemen had to break into the room to rescue the children. |
| break sthg in | wear sthg a few times so that it doesn’t look/feel new | I need to break these shoes in before we run next week. |
| break in | Interrupt | The TV station broke in to report the news of the president’s death. |
| break up | end a relationship | My boyfriend and I broke up before I moved to America. |
| break up | start laughing (informal) | The kids just broke up as soon as the clown started talking. |
| break out | Escape | The prisoners broke out of jail when the guards weren’t looking. |
| break out in sthg | develop a skin condition | I broke out in a rash after our camping trip. |
| bring sby down | make unhappy | This sad music is bringing me down. |
| bring sby up | raise a child | My grandparents brought me up after my parents died. |
| bring sthg up | start talking about a subject | My mother walks out of the room when my father brings up sports. |
| bring sthg up | Vomit | He drank so much that he brought his dinner up in the toilet. |
| call around | phone many different places/people | We called around but we weren’t able to find the car part we needed. |
| call sby back | return a phone call | I called the company back but the offices were closed for the weekend. |
| call sthg off | Cancel | Jason called the wedding off because he wasn’t in love with his fiancé. |
| call on sby | ask for an answer or opinion | The professor called on me for question 1. |
| call on sby | visit sby | We called on you last night but you weren’t home. |
| call sby up | Phone | Give me your phone number and I will call you up when we are in town. |
| calm down | relax after being angry | You are still mad. You need to calm down before you drive the car. |
| not care for sby/ sthg | not like (formal) | I don’t care for his behaviour. |
| catch up | get to the same point as sby else | You’ll have to run faster than that if you want to catch up with Marty. |
| check in | arrive and register at a hotel or airport | We will get the hotel keys when we check in. |
| check out | leave a hotel | You have to check out of the hotel before 11:00 AM. |
| check sby/ sthg out | look at carefully, investigate | The company checks out all new employees. |
| check out sby/ sthg | look at (informal) | Check out the crazy hair on that guy! |
| cheer up | become happier | She cheered up when she heard the good news. |
| cheer sby up | make happier | I brought you some flowers to cheer you up. |
| chip in | Help | If everyone chips in we can get the kitchen painted by noon. |
| clean sthg up | tidy, clean | Please clean up your bedroom before you go outside. |
| come across sthg | find unexpectedly | I came across these old photos when I was tidying the closet. |
| come apart | Separate | The top and bottom come apart if you pull hard enough. |
| come down with sthg | become sick | My nephew came down with chicken pox this weekend. |
| come forward | volunteer for a task or to give evidence | The woman came forward with her husband’s finger prints. |
| come from some place | originate in | The art of origami comes from Asia. |
| count on sby/ sthg | rely on | I am counting on you to make dinner while I am out. |
| cross sthg out | draw a line through | Please cross out your old address and write your new one. |
| cut back on sthg | consume less | My doctor wants me to cut back on sweets and fatty foods. |
| cut sthg down | make sthg fall to the ground | We had to cut the old tree in our yard down after the storm. |
| cut in | Interrupt | Your father cut in while I was dancing with your uncle. |
| cut in | pull in too closely in front of another vehicle | The bus driver got angry when that car cut in. |
| cut in | start operating (of an engine or electrical device) | The air conditioner cuts in when the temperature gets to 22°C. |
| cut sthg off | remove with sthg sharp | The doctors cut off his leg because it was severely injured. |
| cut sthg off | stop providing | The phone company cut off our phone because we didn’t pay the bill. |
| cut sby off | take out of a will | My grandparents cut my father off when he remarried. |
| cut sthg out | remove part of sthg (usually with scissors and paper) | I cut this ad out of the newspaper. |
| do sby/ sthg over | beat up, ransack (BrE, informal) | He’s lucky to be alive. His shop was done over by a street gang. |
| do sthg over | do again (AmE) | My teacher wants me to do my essay over because she doesn’t like my topic. |
| do away with sthg | Discard | It’s time to do away with all of these old tax records. |
| do sthg up | fasten, close | Do your coat up before you go outside. It’s snowing! |
| dress up | wear nice clothing | It’s a fancy restaurant so we have to dress up. |
| drop back | move back in a position/group | Andrea dropped back to third place when she fell off her bike. |
| drop in/ by/ over | come without an appointment | I might drop in/by/over for tea sometime this week. |
| drop sby/ sthg off | take sby/ sthg somewhere and leave them/it there | I have to drop my sister off at work before I come over. |
| drop out | quit a class, school etc | I dropped out of Science because it was too difficult. |
| eat out | eat at a restaurant | I don’t feel like cooking tonight. Let’s eat out. |
| end up | eventually reach/do/decide | We ended up renting a movie instead of going to the theatre. |
| fall apart | break into pieces | My new dress fell apart in the washing machine. |
| fall down | fall to the ground | The picture that you hung up last night fell down this morning. |
| fall out | separate from an interior | The money must have fallen out of my pocket. |
| fall out | (of hair, teeth) become loose and unattached | His hair started to fall out when he was only 35. |
| figure sthg out | understand, find the answer | I need to figure out how to fit the piano and the bookshelf in this room. |
| fill sthg in | to write information in blanks, as on a form (BrE) | Please fill in the form with your name, address, and phone number. |
| fill sthg out | to write information in blanks, as on a form (AmE) | The form must be filled out in capital letters. |
| fill sthg up | fill to the top | I always fill the water jug up when it is empty. |
| find out | Discover | We don’t know where he lives. How can we find out? |
| find sthg out | Discover | We tried to keep the time of the party a secret, but Samantha found it out. |
| get sthg across/ over | communicate, make understandable | I tried to get my point across/over to the judge but she wouldn’t listen. |
| get along/on | like each other | I was surprised how well my new girlfriend and my sister got along/on. |
| get around | have mobility | My grandfather can get around fine in his new wheelchair. |
| get away | go on a vacation | We worked so hard this year that we had to get away for a week. |
| get away with sthg | do without being noticed or punished | Jason always gets away with cheating in his maths tests. |
| get back | Return | We got back from our vacation last week. |
| get sthg back | receive sthg you had before | Liz finally got her Science notes back from my room-mate. |
| get back at sby | retaliate, take revenge | My sister got back at me for stealing her shoes. She stole my favourite hat. |
| get back into sthg | become interested in sthg again | I finally got back into my novel and finished it. |
| get on sthg | step onto a vehicle | We’re going to freeze out here if you don’t let us get on the bus. |
| get over sthg | recover from an illness, loss, difficulty | I just got over the flu and now my sister has it. |
| get over sthg | overcome a problem | The company will have to close if it can’t get over the new regulations. |
| get round to sthg | finally find time to do (AmE: get around to sthg) | I don’t know when I am going to get round to writing the thank you cards. |
| get together | meet (usually for social reasons) | Let’s get together for a BBQ this weekend. |
| get up | get out of bed | I got up early today to study for my exam. |
| get up | Stand | You should get up and give the elderly man your seat. |
| give sby away | reveal hidden information about sby | His wife gave him away to the police. |
| give sby away | take the bride to the altar | My father gave me away at my wedding. |
| give sthg away | ruin a secret | My little sister gave the surprise party away by accident. |
| give sthg away | give sthg to sby for free | The library was giving away old books on Friday. |
| give sthg back | return a borrowed item | I have to give these skates back to Franz before his hockey game. |
| give in | reluctantly stop fighting or arguing | My boyfriend didn’t want to go to the ballet, but he finally gave in. |
| give sthg out | give to many people (usually at no cost) | They were giving out free perfume samples at the department store. |
| give sthg up | quit a habit | I am giving up smoking as of January 1st. |
| give up | stop trying | My maths homework was too difficult so I gave up. |
| go after sby | follow sby | My brother tried to go after the thief in his car. |
| go after sthg | try to achieve sthg | I went after my dream and now I am a published writer. |
| go against sby | compete, oppose | We are going against the best soccer team in the city tonight. |
| go ahead | start, proceed | Please go ahead and eat before the food gets cold. |
| go back | return to a place | I have to go back home and get my lunch. |
| go out | leave home to go on a social event | We’re going out for dinner tonight. |
| go out with sby | Date | Jesse has been going out with Luke since they met last winter. |
| go over sthg | Review | Please go over your answers before you submit your test. |
| go over | visit sby nearby | I haven’t seen Tina for a long time. I think I’ll go over for an hour or two. |
| go without sthg | suffer lack or deprivation | When I was young, we went without winter boots. |
| grow apart | stop being friends over time | My best friend and I grew apart after she changed schools. |
| grow back | Regrow | My roses grew back this summer. |
| grow into sthg | grow big enough to fit | This bike is too big for him now, but he should grow into it by next year. |
| grow out of sthg | get too big for | Elizabeth needs a new pair of shoes because she has grown out of her old ones. |
| grow up | become an adult | When Jack grows up he wants to be a fireman. |
| hand sthg down | give sthg used to sby else | I handed my old comic books down to my little cousin. |
| hand sthg in | Submit | I have to hand in my essay by Friday. |
| hand sthg out | to distribute to a group of people | We will hand out the invitations at the door. |
| hand sthg over | give (usually unwillingly) | The police asked the man to hand over his wallet and his weapons. |
| hang in | stay positive (informal) | Hang in there. I’m sure you’ll find a job very soon. |
| hang on | wait a short time (informal) | Hang on while I grab my coat and shoes! |
| hang out | spend time relaxing (informal) | Instead of going to the party we are just going to hang out at my place. |
| hang up | end a phone call | He didn’t say goodbye before he hung up. |
| hold sby/ sthg back | prevent from doing/going | I had to hold my dog back because there was a cat in the park. |
| hold sthg back | hide an emotion | Jamie held back his tears at his grandfather’s funeral. |
| hold on | wait a short time | Please hold on while I transfer you to the Sales Department. |
| hold onto sby/ sthg | hold firmly using your hands or arms | Hold onto your hat because it’s very windy outside. |
| hold sby/ sthgup | Rob | A man in a black mask held the bank up this morning. |
| keep on doing sthg | continue doing | Keep on stirring until the liquid comes to a boil. |
| keep sthg from sby | not tell | We kept our relationship from our parents for two years. |
| keep sby/ sthg out | stop from entering | Try to keep the wet dog out of the living room. |
| keep sthg up | continue at the same rate | If you keep those results up you will get into a great college. |
| let sby down | fail to support or help, disappoint | I need you to be on time. Don’t let me down this time. |
| let sby in | allow to enter | Can you let the cat in before you go to school? |
| log in (or on) | sign in (to a website, database etc) | I can’t log in to Facebook because I’ve forgotten my password. |
| log out (or off) | sign out (of a website, database etc) | If you don’t log off somebody could get into your account. |
| look after sby/ sthg | take care of | I have to look after my sick grandmother. |
| look down on sby | think less of, consider inferior | Ever since we stole that chocolate bar your dad has looked down on me. |
| look for sby/ sthg | try to find | I’m looking for a red dress for the wedding. |
| look forward to sthg | be excited about the future | I’m looking forward to the Christmas break. |
| look into sthg | Investigate | We are going to look into the price of snowboards today. |
| look out | be careful, vigilant, and take notice | Look out! That car’s going to hit you! |
| look out for sby/ sthg | be especially vigilant for | Don’t forget to look out for snakes on the hiking trail. |
| look sthg over | check, examine | Can you look over my essay for spelling mistakes? |
| look sthg up | search and find information in a reference book or database | We can look her phone number up on the Internet. |
| look up to sby | have a lot of respect for | My little sister has always looked up to me. |
| make sthg up | invent, lie about sthg | Josie made up a story about why we were late. |
| make up | forgive each other | We were angry last night, but we made up at breakfast. |
| make sby up | apply cosmetics to | My sisters made me up for my graduation party. |
| mix sthg up | confuse two or more things | I mixed up the twins’ names again! |
| pass away | Die | His uncle passed away last night after a long illness. |
| pass out | Faint | It was so hot in the church that an elderly lady passed out. |
| pass sthg out | give the same thing to many people | The professor passed the textbooks out before class. |
| pass sthg up | decline (usually sthg good) | I passed up the job because I am afraid of change. |
| pay sby back | return owed money | Thanks for buying my ticket. I’ll pay you back on Friday. |
| pay for sthg | be punished for doing sthg bad | That bully will pay for being mean to my little brother. |
| pick sthg out | Choose | I picked out three sweaters for you to try on. |
| point sby/ sthg out | indicate with your finger | I’ll point my boyfriend out when he runs by. |
| put sthg down | put what you are holding on a surface or floor | You can put the groceries down on the kitchen counter. |
| put sby down | insult, make sby feel stupid | The students put the substitute teacher down because his pants were too short. |
| put sthg off | Postpone | We are putting off our trip until January because of the hurricane. |
| put sthg out | Extinguish | The neighbours put the fire out before the firemen arrived. |
| put sthg together | Assemble | I have to put the crib together before the baby arrives. |
| put up with sby/ sthg | Tolerate | I don’t think I can put up with three small children in the car. |
| put sthg on | put clothing/ accessories on your body | Don’t forget to put on your new earrings for the party. |
| run into sby/ sthg | meet unexpectedly | I ran into an old school-friend at the mall. |
| run over sby/ sthg | drive a vehicle over a person or thing | I accidentally ran over your bicycle in the driveway. |
| run over/ through sthg | rehearse, review | Let’s run over/through these lines one more time before the show. |
| run away | leave unexpectedly, escape | The child ran away from home and has been missing for three days. |
| run out | have none left | We ran out of shampoo so I had to wash my hair with soap. |
| send sthg back | return (usually by mail) | My letter got sent back to me because I used the wrong stamp. |
| set sthg up | arrange, organize | Our boss set a meeting up with the president of the company. |
| set sby up | trick, trap | The police set up the car thief by using a hidden camera. |
| shop around | compare prices | I want to shop around a little before I decide on these boots. |
| show off | act extra special for people watching (usually boastfully) | He always shows off on his skateboard |
| sleep over | stay somewhere for the night (informal) | You should sleep over tonight if the weather is too bad to drive home. |
| sort sthg out | organize, resolve a problem | We need to sort the bills out before the first of the month. |
| stick to sthg | continue doing sthg, limit yourself to one particular thing | You will lose weight if you stick to the diet. |
| switch sthg off | stop the energy flow, turn off | The light’s too bright. Could you switch it off. |
| switch sthg on | start the energy flow, turn on | We heard the news as soon as we switched on the car radio. |
| take after sby | resemble a family member | I take after my mother. We are both impatient. |
| take sthg apart | purposely break into pieces | He took the car brakes apart and found the problem. |
| take sthg back | return an item | I have to take our new TV back because it doesn’t work. |
| take off | start to fly | My plane takes off in five minutes. |
| take sthg off | remove sthg (usually clothing) | Take off your socks and shoes and come in the lake! |
| take sthg out | remove from a place or thing | Can you take the garbage out to the street for me? |
| take sby out | pay for sby to go somewhere with you | My grandparents took us out for dinner and a movie. |
| tear sthg up | rip into pieces | I tore up my ex-boyfriend’s letters and gave them back to him. |
| think back | remember (often + to, sometimes + on) | When I think back on my youth, I wish I had studied harder. |
| think sthg over | Consider | I’ll have to think this job offer over before I make my final decision. |
| throw sthg away | dispose of | We threw our old furniture away when we won the lottery. |
| turn sthg down | decrease the volume or strength (heat, light etc) | Please turn the TV down while the guests are here. |
| turn sthg down | Refuse | I turned the job down because I don’t want to move. |
| turn sthg off | stop the energy flow, switch off | Your mother wants you to turn the TV off and come for dinner. |
| turn sthg on | start the energy, switch on | It’s too dark in here. Let’s turn some lights on. |
| turn sthg up | increase the volume or strength (heat, light etc) | Can you turn the music up? This is my favourite song. |
| turn up | appear suddenly | Our cat turned up after we put posters up all over the neighbourhood. |
| try sthg on | sample clothing | I’m going to try these jeans on, but I don’t think they will fit. |
| try sthg out | Test | I am going to try this new brand of detergent out. |
| use sthg up | finish the supply | The kids used all of the toothpaste up so we need to buy some more. |
| wake up | stop sleeping | We have to wake up early for work on Monday. |
| warm sby/ sthg up | increase the temperature | You can warm your feet up in front of the fireplace. |
| warm up | prepare body for exercise | I always warm up by doing sit-ups before I go for a run. |
| wear off | fade away | Most of my make-up wore off before I got to the party. |
| work out | Exercise | I work out at the gym three times a week. |
| work out | be successful | Our plan worked out fine. |
| work sthg out | make a calculation | We have to work out the total cost before we buy the house. |
Bowing and Curtsying
People show respect to those who are senior to them in age or position by among other ways bowing and curtsying.
Bowing is done by men and it involves bending part of your body forward especially the neck and head.
You should bow
–When standing before a person you respect or when walking past him or her as a formal way of showing respect.
–An actor may take a bow to appreciate the audience’s applause.
–When praying, or to show respect to someone who has died, or show that you are ashamed in a formal way.
–In a courtroom to show respect to the chambers as representative of the law of the land.
–In parliament when entering as an honourable house that make laws of the land.
–when you are being sworn into office to show respect to the laws and the process.
–During graduation ceremony, when receiving acknowledgement or a certificate.
–When being introduced to an important guest or the guest can bow to acknowledge the hosts.
During festivals, when introducing items on stage.
A girl or a lady can curtsy by slightly bending their knees and holding, very quickly, up their dress or skirt on both sides of their thighs as a sign of respect for an important person.
Curtsying applies in the following situations:
English Sounds
Sounds in English are divided into consonants and vowels. A sound composed of two vowel sounds in a word is called a diphthong e.g. dear /ia/ or say/ei/ and a sound made up of three vowel sounds is known as a triphthong e.g. flour/aua/.
| IPA | examples | listen | |
| ʌ | cup, luck | AM | |
| ɑ: | arm, father | AM BR | |
| æ | cat, black | AM | |
| e | met, bed | AM | 1 |
| ə | away, cinema | AM | 2 |
| ɜ:ʳ | turn, learn | AM BR | 2 |
| ɪ | hit, sitting | AM | |
| i: | see, heat | AM | |
| ɒ | hot, rock | AM BR | 3 |
| ɔ: | call, four | AM BR | 4 5 |
| ʊ | put, could | AM | |
| u: | blue, food | AM | |
| aɪ | five, eye | AM | |
| aʊ | now, out | AM | |
| eɪ | say, eight | AM | |
| oʊ | go, home | AM | 6 |
| ɔɪ | boy, join | AM | |
| eəʳ | where, air | AM BR | 1 7 |
| ɪəʳ | near, here | AM BR | 7 |
| ʊəʳ | pure, tourist | AM BR | 7 |
| Consonants | IPA | examples | listen | ||||
| b | bad, lab | AM | |||||
| d | did, lady | AM | |||||
| f | find, if | AM | |||||
| g | give, flag | AM | |||||
| h | how, hello | AM | |||||
| j | yes, yellow | AM | |||||
| k | cat, back | AM | |||||
| l | leg, little | AM | |||||
| m | man, lemon | AM | |||||
| n | no, ten | AM | |||||
| ŋ | sing, finger | AM | |||||
| p | pet, map | AM | |||||
| r | red, try | AM | 8 | ||||
| s | sun, miss | AM | |||||
| ʃ | she, crash | AM | |||||
| t | tea, getting | AM | 9 | ||||
| tʃ | check, church | AM | |||||
| θ | think, both | AM | |||||
| ð | this, mother | AM | |||||
| v | voice, five | AM | |||||
| w | wet, window | AM | |||||
| z | zoo, lazy | ||||||
| pleasure, vision | |||||||
| dʒ | just, large | ||||||
Adjectives
Adjectives are words that modify or provide more information about nouns.
Adjectives of quality refer to words that show the nature of nouns in terms of beauty, ugliness, morals and shapes. For example: She is a nice girl. He is heavy. John is a thin boy. This job is difficult.
Usually such an adjective has a variety of synonyms e.g. Huge—big, enormous, gigantic, vast etc.
Adjectives of quantity are words that describe a noun by showing how many or how much of the noun is there or shows the number of the items. E.g. thirty books, both girls, all students etc.
Gradable adjectives describe qualities that can be measured or graded in some way. For example, something can be less interesting, interesting, quite interesting or very interesting. Therefore interesting is a gradable adjective because it can be graded. Gradable adjectives are usually used with intensifiers like very, quite, fairly, terribly, rather, completely, absolutely and really.
Very sorry, really disappointed, quite sick, terribly happy, fairly ashamed etc
Non gradable adjectives describe either extreme qualities like furious, starving, mad or absolute qualities such as correct, alive, dead, square, round, vast etc.
Non gradable adjectives thus cannot be used with intensifiers like very. You cannot be very correct or quite dead or even absolutely round.
Comparative forms of adjectives are used when we want to compare two people, things or situations mainly by adding –er at the end of the adjective e.g. This is smaller than that. Go higher than she went.
Sometimes the word more is more suitable especially when the adjective is a word with more than two syllables and it cannot take the suffix –er. E.g. Rita is more attractive than Eunice.
–Comparative forms always occur with the word ‘than’ to bring out the comparison.
She is brighter than I. He is more confused than I. Etc.
–Adjectives that end with ‘y’ usually drop the ‘y’ in comparative form before taking on –er. E.g. Ken is happy—Ken is happier than Jennifer.
Superlative forms of adjectives are used to compare more than two items, people or situations and show the most dominant or the best of the lot. E.g. Njeri is the tallest of the four girls.
The word ‘than’ is not used with superlatives. Superlatives are formed by adding –est to the adjective and introducing the article ‘the’ before it. E.g. She is the cleverest girl in class.
Some adjectives form their superlative forms by doubling the last consonants and adding –est but this only occurs when a word with one syllable ends with a single consonant preceded by a single vowel. E.g.
Big—bigger—biggest, Fat—fatter—fattest. Hot—hotter—hottest.
When an adjective has more than two syllables, we form the superlative by adding the word ‘most’ before it and the article ‘the’ e.g. The most disgusting book. She is the most hardworking boy in class.
The superlative form ‘most’ is also used with adjectives that end with the suffix –ful. E.g.
Beautiful—more beautiful—the most beautiful
Careful—more careful—the most careful
Irregular adjectives do not have a predictable pattern of forming comparatives and superlatives. E.g.
Much—more—most
Bad—worse—worst
Good—better—best
Little—less—least
Far—further—furthest
Old—elder—eldest
Some adjectives can take both –est and most /er and more in superlative and comparative forms. E.g.
Luke is heavier/ more heavy than Jacob.
Silas is the smartest/most smart boy in school.
Others are brave and pretty. But it would wrong to use both versions in the same sentence. For example saying John is more smarter than Joyce would be wrong. You would have to choose one version.
Impromptu Speeches
An impromptu speech is a speech one makes without prior preparations. Speeches made on many occasions involve planning beforehand. For example a political speech to be delivered to a target audience will be written a couple of days before the material day and the speaker would rehearse it several times. But in some situations, especially informal ones, people are required to say something, give a speech, because of their positions and influence in society or relation to the guest of honour.
To effectively give an impromptu speech, observe the following:
–When called upon to deliver an impromptu speech
Primary Axillaries
Auxiliary verbs are helping verbs. They help the main verbs in a sentence to show tense and mood. E.g.
I am cooking food. (Present tense) I had gone home. (past perfect tense) He must go home. (Imperative mood)
The following primary auxiliaries act as helping verbs:
–Forms of be i.e. am, is, are, was, were, being
–Forms of have i.e. has, have and had
–Forms of do i.e. do, does, did, done
Auxiliary verbs can be use to form questions e.g.
Have you seen him? Did she travel? Etc
Auxiliaries do, did, done and does are used for emphasis e.g.
I did win the encounter. I do like him. She does cry a lot. Etc
–Sometimes primary auxiliaries act as main verbs e.g.
She has a book She had a knife John is a good boy The Wafulas are rich.
Modal Auxiliaries
Modal auxiliaries are verbs which help other verbs to express mood in a sentence which include doubt, certainty, possibility, permission etc.
Mood is usually in form of
May I talk to your dad? Shall we go.
Phrases
A phrase is a word or a group of words within a sentence that plays a particular function e.g. as a verb, preposition, adverb etc.
A verb phrase is headed by or contains a verb—usually a verb and an auxiliary verb as shown.
She is going home. Auxiliary verb is and the main verb ‘going’.
I can see you. I could have died. We would laugh a lot in those days. You should sing.
An adverb phrase acts as an adverb in a sentence; that is, giving more information about the verb or adjective. E.g.
She sat near the door. Cover the table with a piece of cloth.
She came last year. He is handsome like Brad Pitt.
He played quite well. We made it by sheer luck. I was utterly disgusted. He came forthwith when I called.
A prepositional phrase is headed by a preposition or acts as a preposition in a sentence. E.g.
He lowered the bag to the ground. He jumped over the fence.
—Most prepositional phrases are actually adverb phrases.
An adjective phrase consist of one or more words one which must be an adjective. E.g.
Most girls like bright clothes.
–If there are more words then the most important is the adjective and the rest would be modifiers (provide more information about the adjective). E.g.
Our classroom is very clean. Is this too high?
The modifier is usually an adverb of degree such as very, quite, too etc.
Clauses
A clause is a group of words that can pass of a sentence but usually part of a longer sentence.
A conditional clause is made up of a subordinate clause starting with the word ‘if’ and a main clause separated from the subordinate clause with a comma. E.g.
If you eat unripe fruits, you will suffer from stomach ache.
However, if the sentence begins with a main clause then the comma is not used. E.g.
You will suffer from stomach ache if you eat unripe fruits.
You will suffocate if you sleep in a stuffy room.
–Conditional clauses are usually used to persuade, warn and advice people.
A noun clause performs the same function as a noun or pronoun in a sentence. E.g.
What he is telling us is very interesting.
The underlined words can be replaced by a single noun or pronoun.
–Noun clauses usually begin with words such as that, whether, if, what, who and which.
I was angry that he had lost my key
He did not know whether to go or remain behind.
A relative clause is usually a noun clause headed by a relative pronoun. E.g.
The boy who was the top in national exams is here
The cat which was found dead was mine.
Gender Nouns
Gender nouns are nouns that portray discrimination or bias in ones language. When we use language, we must be careful not to exclude or discriminate against a certain section of people either male or female. In most cases it is the female sex that is affected by the bias which occurs through the use of pronouns. E.g.
A candidate should be provided with everything he needs.
A good leader is one who respects himself.
These examples have a gender bias towards them. To alleviate this problem we can rewrite them as follows:
A candidate should be provided with everything he or she needs.
A good leader is one who respects himself or herself.
But this arrangement is usually deemed clumsy or repetitive. The best way is usually to rewrite the sentence in plural; for example:
Candidates should be provided with everything they need.
Good leaders are those who respect themselves.
–Yet another way is the use of the second person pronoun ‘you’ which is gender neutral. E.g.
As candidates, you should be provided with everything you need.
As good leaders, you should respect yourselves.
In spoken or informal language, people tend to use the plural pronouns ‘their’ and ‘them’ as shown.
If anybody rings, tell them I am in a meeting.
But this is ungrammatical because it lacks subject—pronoun number agreement. To avoid this complication, one can rewrite this sentence as follows:
If anybody rings, say I am in a meeting.
–Apart from pronouns, there are also words that tend to be sexist. If the context includes both men and women, it is best to replace such terms with gender-neutral ones as shown below.
| Sexist Foreman Fireman Manned Chairman Lay man Spokesperson Businessman Mankind | Neutral Supervisor Fire-fighter Run by Chair Lay person Spokesperson Business person Humankind
|
To accommodate both men and women, some nouns have male/Female contrast in their forms. The feminine forms normally ends in –ess. Note that some people object to use of feminine forms. For example they prefer using hero for both male and female.
| Male Waiter Host Actor Headmaster Hero | Female Waitress Hostess Actress Headmistress Heroine |
Exercise
Successful business __ work very hard. Their firms are __by very competent people. For example, they only employ a sales __ who is qualified. The chair __ is normally a very good spokes __ for the firm.
1) Whoever did it will pay for his or her actions.
2) Each cashier paid himself or herself.
3) A worker may injure himself or herself on the job.
4) If anyone wants to pass his or her exam, he or she must work hard in his or her studies.
Active Voice
A verb is said to be in active voice when it form shows that the person or thing acting as the subject does something or is the doer of the action. E.g. Silas loves Mary. Ken gives offering.
A passive voice refers to the verb when it form shows that something is done to the subject: that the subject is not active and suffers or receives the action. E.g. Mary is loved by Silas. Offering is given by Ken.
–When you change an active voice into a passive one, the subject of the verb becomes the object of the verb and often the word ‘by’ is used to show this relationship. Tom kicked the ball. (active) The ball was kicked by Tom. (passive).
–The ‘by’ word sometimes is not used in active voice when only one agent is known especially if the subject was indefinite pronoun. E.g. someone kicked the ball (active). The ball was kicked (passive).
Someone stole my pen—My pen was stolen.
–Sometimes obvious objects are omitted in passive voice e.g.
He handed her the chair—the chair was handed to her. The phrase ‘by him’ is obvious and can be left out but the sentence would retain its meaning.
Somebody hit the dog with a stick—The dog was hit with a stick.
Exercise
Write the following sentences in the passive voice.
Negotiation Skills
Negotiation skills involve holding an amicable discussion with an aim of reaching a favourable agreement over a disagreeable matter or varying opinion.
To negotiate effectively
–be patient
–use polite language
–listen to the other party carefully so as to advance a sound argument
–do not interrupt.
–be pleasant and convincing; if you want something then the reason behind it must be valid and reasonable.
–Compromise in case you don’t get what you want but state clearly your stand.
–Look for win-win situations for both parties or aim to meet halfway.
–Appreciate the other party’s views and let them know this as much.
Exercise
BUYER: How are you this morning?
SELLER: I’m okay.
BUYER: My name is Musimbi.
SELLER: My name is Karani. Welcome.
BUYER: I’m looking for good chickens but your don’t look so good. I’m going to have visitors and this being the Christmas season; I really must give them a feast.
SELLER: These are the right kind of chickens for your visitors. They’re healthy and well fed.
BUYER: On the contrary, they look underfed anyway; what is your price?
SELLER: It depends. I charge more for cocks; they have more meat, you know. (Points at a red cock) This one, for instance, goes for Ksh 400.00. As for the hens, I charge Ksh 250 each.
BUYER: You are not serious! Much of the weight is a bundle of bones. I’m giving you Ksh 150.00 for each hen and Ksh 300.00 for each cock. I’m buying three of each—three hens for Ksh 450 and three cocks for Ksh900. This will give us a total of Ksh 1,350.00.
SELLER: You know I buy and sell. I don’t get them from my shamba. Your figure doesn’t give me any profit at all.
BUYER: But you also know that money is hard to come by and especially during this Christmas season. Give me a reasonable price unless you prefer I go to another seller.
SELLER: Let me make it Ksh 225.00 for a hen and Ksh 375.00 for a cock.
BUYER: It looks like you’re not interested in selling your chickens.
SELLER: No I’m. Otherwise, why would I be here? My children’s fees come from this business.
BUYER: Okay, take Ksh 175 for each hen and 325 for each cock.
SELLER: No. There would be no profit for me. You can do better than that. You can surely promote my small business. Just give me 350 per cock and 225 per hen. This will be 625 for the three hens and 1,050 for the three cocks.
BUYER: (Doing his mental arithmetic) that is a total of Ksh 1,725.00. Okay. At least I’ll be able to feed my visitors (handing him the money) here you are.
SELLER: Thank you (as he ties the chickens together) You’re a good customer. Please come again.
BUYER: See you.
Questions
SPEECH WRITING
A speech is a formal talk, presentation or delivery of information to a defined audience with a specific purpose. Most speeches are meant to convince, sway and motivate the audience. Sometimes a speech can be made to refute allegations, reveal a secret or condemn specific people.
Before writing a speech, one should prepare adequately.
A proper speech should have the following:
—A relevant title that reflects on the content.
–A speech must acknowledge the guests in attendance by observing the protocol. A protocol should be observed in its own paragraph and should start from the senior most guest to the general audience. Relevant formal titles of guests should be said.
–Start the speech on the second paragraph by either quoting a relevant philosopher, a past speaker or any relevant book; or by giving statistics, a short story, a proverb, a riddle,a thought provoking question etc. E.g.
“Educate a woman and you educate a nation.”
“Recent statistics show that in every ten 9 Kenyans 2 are HIV positive. “
–The body should occur naturally from the introduction. Involve the audience and the chief guest in your speech by referring to them from time to time. E.g. Ladies and gentlemen…or Mr. Principal…etc
–Emphasise on important points by providing good examples so that each issue occurs in its own paragraph.
–Space your speech by skipping lines after every paragraph.
–A good speech should have several short paragraphs tackling different issues.
–The conclusion should re-emphasise your motive and direct the audience attention to the main points. Therefore, a short passing summary of the most important points mentioned would do. A conclusion can also include stating the way forward, providing a solution etc.
–After drafting the speech, go over it or proof-read it aloud to correct mistakes and establish the tone and rhythm that you would use by altering punctuation to achieve the desired effect.
–A creative speech would involve simple and complex sentences, simple and complex phrases like nevertheless, at any rate, however; use of verbal cues like firstly, secondly; use of gestures and other paralinguistic features etc.
–When writing the speech start with opening quotation marks to show that it is meant to be spoken and then end with closing speech marks.
Example
The Big Picture
“The principal, deputy principal, teachers and students
Today I will talk to you about seeing the big picture. I am aware, and I hope you are too, that my title resonates with a published inspirational book by the famous Neurosurgeon, Ben Carson. Well, we have the same message. It is the message Jesus gave to His faithful, prophet Mohammed gave to His followers and Buddha gave to His pupils: that there is something bigger and better beyond the daily occurrences, that following the road to self actualization and harmony is the ultimate path of an enlightened human being.
Students, the message is simple: sacrifice and Invest now for the future. Sleep less now because you will eventually sleep more comfortably in future.
Buddha’s life was short, Jesus ministry was short, Mohammed’s teachings were short-lived but their messages live on. 2000 years later these messages have gained bigger followings than envisioned. Why? Because they saw the bigger picture and sacrificed their lives, they lived what they preached; they avoided a life full of comfort, preached love, patience and brotherhood—the people listened.
So, students as you study know that you have to be the change you want to see in the world as voiced by the famous Mahatma Gandhi. You have to believe in yourself, set goals and believe you can achieve them. Do not worry if things don’t work out as you had expected. There are always false starts everywhere; in business, in athletics, politics and even academics. What matters is—Are you able to persevere to the end? Are you willing to keep trying, again and again till you succeed? Are you willing to suffer now and achieve what you need later?
Madam Principal here will tell you that it is not easy rising to the top. It requires time and patience. It requires sacrifice. But you can’t sacrifice if you can’t see the big picture. So, first see the big picture which in your case is what you want to be in future and the grades you need in the national exams in order to achieve your dream. Again the big picture can be the mark you want to leave behind when you die, the legacy; how do you want to be remembered?
Students, let us stay focussed. Keep your eyes on the prize. Be like those great three: Jesus, Buddha and Mohammed who lived lives full of sacrifices and left a big legacy in our world.
Thank you all and may God bless you.
Prefixes and Suffixes
A prefix is part of a word (a morpheme) that is attached to a word at the beginning to create a different meaning of that word e.g. Fore-word, Re-cur, pre-empt etc.
A suffix, on the other hand, is a morpheme that is attached at the end of a word for the same purpose. E.g. educa-tion, govern-ment etc.
–Pre- means before and fix means attach.
–Uusally the words combined do not change their spellings and pronunciation except when using all and well e.g. All-so—also, Well-fare—Welfare.
–Common prefixes are non- un- dis- ir- im- in- il- ab- ig- mis-
–Adverbs can also be used as prefixes e.g. out- over- up- down-
–Prefixes be- en- em- usually indicates to make or create something mentioned e.g.
Bedevil (create problems for) encase (put in a case) empower (give power to) embitter entangle
–Prefix re- indicates repetition e.g. re-organise, reverse etc.
–Suffixes are used to create nouns. Common suffixes are
-acy -ee -ette -ion -let -ship -eer -ery -hood -ism -ment -tion -ar -ence -ess -ian -ist -ness -ure -dom -ency -et -ics -ity
e.g. Cigarette etiquette kitchenette leatherette facet etc.
–Adjectives can be derived by the following suffixes -able -al -esque -ify -ful -ic -ish -en -less -ly -ous
–Suffixes can also be used to create adverbs. –ly is the most common e.g. beautifully, automatically etc.
–Suffixes are also used in the formation of new words by the derivational method e.g.
Anthropology (society) astrology (stars) gynaecology (fertility) zoology archaeology (ruins) pathology (diseases) biology geology psychology immunology etymology speleology (caves) theology criminology ornithology (birds) technology cosmology (universe) paleontology (rock) chronology (order) physiology
Transitional Words and Phrases
These are words and phrases used to link sentences together in the development of a paragraph. Sometimes they are known as connectors.
This transitional words and phrases can be used to show
–Contrast
On the contrary, on the other hand, nevertheless, unlike, there are some exceptions
–To show addition
Besides, moreover, again, and, furthermore, also, in addition
–To show comparison
In the same manner, in the same way, similarly, likewise, corresponds
–To indicate concession or compromise
Even though, despite this, in spite of this, in spite of though, although, albeit
–To indicate emphasis
Actually, in fact, indeed, certainly , as a matter of fact
–To introduce an example
For example, that is, for instance, in particular, in other words
–To introduce a sequence
First, firstly, second, next finally etc
–To introduce a reason
Therefore, then, consequently, so, accordingly, hence, for this reason , thus
–To introduce a conclusion
In summary, In conclusion, to conclude, in short, to sum up, finally
–To link specific sentences
And, but, then
Thank You Note
A thank you note is written to acknowledge a favour done by a friend or any other people. E.g.
P.O BOX 10
WEBUYE
23RD JULY 2017
Dear Karen,
I am very happy that you made it to my wedding. I felt proud and happy seeing you around. You have always been nice to me and I appreciate that. My husband and I loved your gift (pressure cooker) and we will make good use of it. That was very thoughtful of you.
Thank you for coming and my God bless you.
Best wishes
Eunice.
A congratulatory note is written by friends or family to give credit or acknowledge excellence in performance by an individual. E.g.
P.O. BOX 66
KISII
26TH MAY 2017
Dear Lim,
Hearty congratulations on your promotion to the position of sales manager. To me the news did not really come as a surprise for I have always believed you have what it takes. If anyone deserved the post, you surely did. Knowing you, I am sure you will not rest on your laurels and will soon climb a notch higher.
Best of luck in your new duties.
Your friend
Janet
A Note of Condolence is written to console the family of the deceased and share in their grief. Notes of condolences should be
–handwritten to give them a personal and caring touch
–say something in praise of the deceased
–be sincere
–be brief
–be sent as soon as the news is received. In fact all notes should be prompt to the news.
For example
P.O. BOX 45
NAIVASHA
21ST OCTOBER 2017
Dear Mr and Mrs Kamau,
My wife and I were terribly saddened by the death of your daughter. She will really be missed by us and all who knew her.
It is hard to picture our neighbourhood without her as she was very friendly, funny and generous.
Your family is in our thoughts at this trying moment and if there is anything we can do to help, please do let us know.
With deep sympathy
Mr and Mrs. Ochieng
If the family of the deceased is familiar with yours, there is no need for the inclusion of other formal details like the return address and the subject, but if you only knew the deceased and the parents do not know you; it would be paramount to include the formal details as shown below. Again, some condolences are more formal and can be read on behalf of the sender who is unable to attend the funeral service especially someone like the president.
Question
A classmate of yours has died in a road accident. You have met the parents several times during visiting days and have even been to their home. Write a letter of condolences to them.
P.O. BOX 321
NAIROBI
24TH FEBURUARY 2017
WAFULA FAMILY
P.O. BOX 11
NAKURU
Dear Mr and Mrs. Wafula,
It was with great shock that I received the news of the passing away of your daughter. Allow me to share in your grief although you barely know me.
Your daughter and I were close. She was a great friend. I will remember her particularly for her dedication to education. Her warmth and friendliness will be missed dearly.
Do let me know if there is anything I can do to help.
With Deep Sorrow
Jane Wakoli
0700337766
–Thank you, congratulatory and notes of condolences should be written as soon as possible after the event.
Transitive and Intransitive Verbs
Transitive verbs are verbs that are usually followed by an object. E.g. She admires her aunt. The verb admire is transitive because you must say what is admired for the sentence to make sense. Other transitive verbs are kick, discover, receive, see, like etc
–Some transitive verbs have a limited range of objects they occur with; for example, the verb kill must occur with an object that is alive or a concept that is alive. You can’t kill a stone.
Intransitive verbs do not really need objects to make sense in a sentence. The subject does the action but doesn’t affect anybody or anything else. E.g. I slept. Others are arrive, squeak, bark, yawn etc.
–Most intransitive nouns are followed by adverbs e.g. It happened yesterday. I slept soundly.
–A few verbs can be used transitively and intransitively e.g. ate—she ate. She ate Ugali. Others are write, read, drink and play.
–Ditransitive verbs are verbs that can take direct and indirect objects.
An indirect object is usually the benefactor of the action of the verb and the direct object suffers from the action. E.g. John kicked the ball to James. The ball is direct object because it suffers from the action of the verb and James is the indirect object because he is the benefactor of the action of the verb.
Infinitives
An infinitive is the simplest form of a verb. The verb is said to be in its infinitive form when it does not show or form part of the tense in a sentence.
Bare infinitive—sing
To infinitive—to sing
-ing infinitive—singing
All these forms can occur in all tenses as follows:
She is going to sing, she was going to sing, she will be going to sing.
She is singing, she was singing, she will be singing.
She sings, she could sing, she will sing.
–An infinitive can be used as an object of a sentence e.g.
To eat lots of chocolate would be unwise if you want to be slim.
–If the ‘to’ infinitive is used interchangeably with the –ing infinitive the sentence would not retain the meaning e.g.
She was to score—she was scoring. She was to eat—she was eating.
Newspaper Reports
To write a good newspaper report observe the following:
Example
By JOHN NJAGI
More by this Author
MPs have tried to disassociate themselves from a report showing that the Constituency Development Fund lost Sh4 billion in one year.
However, officers from the Auditor-General’s office, who appeared before the National Government Constituency Development Fund committee, said the report had not mentioned names.
“The reports are not meant to blame anybody but lead to a dialogue on how the issues raised can be fixed,” Deputy Auditor-General Alex Ringera said.
Committee Chairman Moses Lesonet questioned the method used by Auditor-General Edward Ouko to conduct the audits, accusing him of including projects in schools and police stations as CDF assets.
“Once the CDF gives out money, it should not answer as to whether the school or police station undertook the work. It is up to your office to audit such institutions,” he said.
Another Deputy Auditor-General, Mr David Gichana, said the CDF structure provided that the committees were responsible for prudent use of funds given to institutions, since project committees in schools, dispensaries and others funded from the kitty report to the CDF teams.
FORMAL REPORTS
A report is an account given or opinion formally expressed after investigation. Reports perform an important function in large organisations. They enable the administrators to keep track of normal operations, to learn about unexpected developments and to judge whether there is satisfactory progress on a new project. In the science and social fields, reports form the link between research and practical use of discoveries. They present a series of facts which enable someone to make a decision based on reliable information. Most formal reports are as a result of a project, an investigation or a commission.
Format of a formal report
Title
The report should have a title which should indicate the content of the report and should be brief e.g.
A REPORT ON THE STUDENTS ATTITUDE TOWARDS PHYSICAL EDUCATION PROGRAMME
Introduction
The introduction to a report should set out clearly the
–specific purpose of the report
–circumstances or events that necessitated the report
The terms of reference of the report which include
–who authorized the report
–if a committee was appointed to carry out investigation and its nature
–when the report is due
–who is to receive the report when ready
Procedure
The procedure should outline how the information was collected mainly through interviews, scrutiny of information, observation, examination, questionnaires and other methods like spying, traps etc.
Findings
This part presents facts, views, illustrations, statistics, experiments and other observations derived from or in accordance to the respective procedures used
–The evidence should be presented in a logical sequence
–Names, places and quotations should be given here
Conclusion
This deals with what can be deduced from the findings, logical conclusions or inferences should be made in a paragraph.
Recommendations
This emanates from the conclusion. This contains means or ways of improving the situation, solving a problem and or the way forward as seen and evidenced from the research.
A good report should have a fairly good number of recommendations, at least four.
–After recommendations, the following ending is appropriate
Report written and compiled by:
NAME:_____ SIGN________ TITLE_______
QUESTION
You are the head of a committee commissioned by the principal of Uzima Secondary School to investigate the serious water wastage and the resulting shortage. The committee is required to come up with solutions to the problem. Write the report.
WAYS TO CONSERVE WATER AT UZIMA SECONDARY SCHOOL: WATER COMMITTEE PRELIMARY REPORT
INTRODUCTION
Following the frequent cases of water shortage in school, the principal of Uzima Secondary School, Mr. John Kamau, formed a committee to investigate the problem and recommend solutions.
Terms of Reference
The committee was to begin work on 3rd of October 2016 and finalise the report by the end of October 2016. The report was to be handed to the principal on 2nd of November 2016 at 10.00 AM.
The following were members of the committee
PROCEDURE
The committee developed a questionnaire which was used to gather information from the students and workers on how water is used in school. Forty students were sampled from all classes and dormitories to respond to the questionnaires. Ten workers in the dormitories and kitchen were interviewed by members of the committee. The committee also visited the school kitchen and the boarding areas to observe the state of the water facilities.
FINDINGS
After analysing the information, the committee found that:
1) Leaking taps
There is a great deal of water going to waste through leaking taps and broken water pipes. The leaking taps are those next to the dining hall and the broken pipes are mainly at the pigsty.
2) Negligence
Most students interviewed admitted to forgetting to turn off taps after tapping water especially when they are in a hurry or late to class.
3) Poor management of taps
When the tanks are empty and water isn’t running from taps, many students who investigate if the taps are running open them and leave and when water is pumped especially at night, usually, there is no one to close the open taps so the water can fill tanks.
4) More tanks
The four tanks currently serving the school population are not enough. The school has a population of 1300 and water gets exhausted fast.
CONCLUSION
The committee concluded that the water shortage is caused mainly by water wastages and that this situation can be solved effectively by the following recommendations.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The committee came up with the following recommendations:
The report was written and compiled by
Obunga Ratemo
Sign
The committee secretary
Exercise
The electricity bill in your school is very high. Your principal has appointed you the secretary to a team commissioned to investigate the matter. Write a report of the proceedings, findings, conclusion and recommendations of the team.
NOTIFICATION OF MEETING
A notice of a meeting specifies the following details
2) The nature of the meeting
3) The date and time of the meeting
4) The venue
5) The name and title of the person calling the meeting
6) The agenda of the meeting
Example
Lugulu Girls’ High School
P.O. Private Bag
Webuye
Notice
End Term Staff Meeting
A meeting of all teaching members of staff will be held on 2nd November 2017 from 9.30 AM to 2.30 PM in the School Board Room.
The full agenda will be as follows
Mrs. Lunani
The Principal
Sign__
MINUTES
Minutes are records of proceedings in a meeting. They serve the following purpose:
–As a proof of a meeting taking place and the decisions arrived at.
–They provide a record that can be referred to by those unable to attend the meeting and as a reminder to those who were present.
–They hold members accountable for the decisions and commitments made during the meeting.
–They are legal documents which are admissible in a court of law.
–Minutes give a summary of the main points discussed and the decisions reached. As you take minutes ensure you put down all important points and that you understand resolutions reached before recording.
Minutes are usually written informally, short hand, in order to keep pace with the proceedings and later rewritten as a final official draft as soon as possible. Minutes should be written in a passive voice using formal language. Minutes should also be written in the third person e.g. it was agreed that… members discussed… etc
Structure of Minutes
Heading
There must be a heading containing the name of the group meeting; there must be time, date and the venue of the meeting within the title. E.g.
MINUTES OF THE LUGULU GIRLS END TERM MEETING HELD ON 2ND NOVEMBER 1017 IN THE SCHOOL’S BOARD ROOM FROM 9.00 AM TO 2.00 PM
List of Members
A list of members present is given against their titles first; then a list of apologies against their titles; a list of members absent against their titles before mentioning the gust in attendance.
–Any guest available is listed under the subtitle ‘in attendance’.
–Items in minutes are numbered as Min 1/11/2017 where the word min stands for minute then the serial number of the item then month and year.
–This would apply for the first meeting where the first minute would have the serial number ‘1’ but subsequent minutes would have respective serial numbers.
QUESTION
You are the secretary of the Talanta Self Help Group. Write minutes of the proceedings of the meeting held on 10th September 2016 from 10.00 AM in Kendum Social hall. The agenda of the meeting had the following items:
–Issuing of loans
–office space and furniture
–office telephone
–A.O.B
–Matters arising
Two members sent their apologies and Mr. John Sikuku the county director attended as a guest.
MINUTES OF THE MONTHLY MEETING OF TALANTA SELF HELP GROUP HELD ON 10TH SEPTEMBER 2016 FROM 10.00 TO 3.00 PM IN KENDUM SOCIAL HALL
Members Present
Members Absent
Apologies
In attendance
John Sikuku—Bungoma county Director (administration)
Min 14/9/2016: Preliminaries
The chairperson welcomed members to the meeting. The meeting was opened by a prayer from Anita Seme. The chair received apologies from two members listed above. The chair thanked members for coming and acknowledged the presence of the Bungoma county director of administration Mr. John Sikuku.
Min 15/9/2016: Reading and Confirmation of previous Minutes
The minutes of the meeting held on 10th August 2016 were read through by the secretary. They were proposed by Ruth Kerubo and seconded by Daisy Matete to be a true record.
Min 16/9/2016 Matters Arising
Min 5/8/2016 payment of Dues—the treasurer reported that members had been paying the dues as agreed and promptly and the total shares were at Ksh 250,000. He said the funds were in the joint bank account awaiting a project receipts were tabled as proof. Min 7/8/2016 Group Tour—Mr. Wafula, who been tasked with the responsibility of organising the group tour reported that he had already booked a hotel in Mombasa at Ksh 90,000 and the tour would commence of 2nd December 2016. He added that the tour would be for four days.
Min 17/9/2016: Issuing of Loans
It was discussed that loans given are too small and the processing of loan application takes too long. It was resoled that members be given loans three times their number of shares and the emergency loans be disbursed within a week; normal loans would be disbursed within a month from the application date.
Min 18/9/2016: Office Space and Furniture
It was discussed that with the increasing membership, office space is inadequate and the office furniture is scarcely enough. It was resolved that bigger premises be rented with at least six spacious rooms and that tables, seats and cabinets be purchased by the treasurer working with Ms Matete within a month.
Min 19/9/2016: Office Telephone
It was discussed that there is need to install office telephone to ease communication. It was resolved that it will be installed the soonest possible and that the secretary, working with the treasurer will apply for telephone tools and network on behalf of the group on 23rd of September 2016.
Min 20/9/2016: Emerging Issues (A.O.B)
The county director promised to help the group get a stationary supply tender to all county offices in December 2016.
It was also noted that the new office secretary is a vast improvement upon the last one who was inefficient.
Min 21/9/2016: Adjournment
There being no other business, the meeting ended with a prayer from Daisy Matete at 43.30 PM. The next meeting will be held on 3rd of January 2017 from 10.00 AM TO 2.00 PM in Kendum Social Hall.
Confirmed by: Secretary____Date_________
Chairperson_____ Date____________
Remember that minutes are signed in the next meeting so the signing spaces are usually left blank till then.
Exercise
As the secretary of the Evergreen Environmental Club, write minutes of a meeting held on 15th December 2017, whose agenda was as follows:
Agenda
RECIPE
A recipe is a set of instruction that tells you how to cook something and the items of food you need for it. A good recipe should be as precise as possible because a vague one will not help one produce a proper dish. All the ingredients must be given as well as their respective quantities. The amounts of different items would, of course, depend on the number of people to be served.
It is important to explain how the items are mixed, for how long they should be cooked and, if possible, at what temperatures. Every step should be explained and every detail included. Any omission could be disastrous.
BAKE:
To cook by dry heat, usually in the oven.
BARBECUE:
Usually used generally to refer to grilling done outdoors or over an open charcoal or wood fire. More specifically, barbecue refers to long, slow direct- heat cooking, including liberal basting with a barbecue sauce.
BATTER:
A mixture containing flour and liquid, thin enough to pour.
BEAT:
To mix rapidly in order to make a mixture smooth and light by incorporating as much air as possible..
BLEND:
To incorporate two or more ingredients thoroughly.
BOIL:
To heat a liquid until bubbles break continually on the surface.
BROIL:
To cook on a grill under strong, direct heat.
CARAMELIZE:
To heat sugar in order to turn it brown and give it a special taste.
CHOP:
To cut solids into pieces with a sharp knife or other chopping device.
CLARIFY:
To separate and remove solids from a liquid, thus making it clear.
CREAM:
To soften a fat, especially butter, by beating it at room temperature. Butter and sugar are often creamed together, making a smooth, soft paste.
CURE:
To preserve meats by drying and salting and/or smoking.
DEGLAZE:
To dissolve the thin glaze of juices and brown bits on the surface of a pan in which food has been fried, sauteed or roasted. To do this, add liquid and stir and scrape over high heat, thereby adding flavor to the liquid for use as a sauce.
DEGREASE:
To remove fat from the surface of stews, soups, or stock. Usually cooled in the refrigerator so that fat hardens and is easily removed.
DICE:
To cut food in small cubes of uniform size and shape.
DISSOLVE:
To cause a dry substance to pass into solution in a liquid.
DREDGE:
To sprinkle or coat with flour or other fine substance.
DRIZZLE:
To sprinkle drops of liquid lightly over food in a casual manner.
DUST:
To sprinkle food with dry ingredients. Use a strainer or a jar with a perforated cover, or try the good, old-fashioned way of shaking things together in a paper bag.
FILLET:
As a verb, to remove the bones from meat or fish. A fillet (or filet) is the piece of flesh after it has been boned.
FLAKE:
To break lightly into small pieces.
FLAMBE’:
To flame foods by dousing in some form of potable alcohol and setting alight.
FOLD:
To incorporate a delicate substance, such as whipped cream or beaten egg whites, into another substance without releasing air bubbles. Cut down through mixture with spoon, whisk, or fork; go across bottom of bowl, up and over, close to surface. The process is repeated, while slowing rotating the bowl, until the ingredients are thoroughly blended.
FRICASSEE:
To cook by braising; usually applied to fowl or rabbit.
FRY:
To cook in hot fat. To cook in a fat is called pan-frying or sauteing; to cook in a one-to-two inch layer of hot fat is called shallow-fat frying; to cook in a deep layer of hot fat is called deep-fat frying.
GARNISH:
To decorate a dish both to enhance its appearance and to provide a flavorful foil. Parsley, lemon slices, raw vegetables, chopped chives, and other herbs are all forms of garnishes.
GLAZE:
To cook with a thin sugar syrup cooked to crack stage; mixture may be thickened slightly. Also, to cover with a thin, glossy icing.
GRATE:
To rub on a grater that separates the food in various sizes of bits or shreds.
GRATIN:
From the French word for “crust.” Term used to describe any oven-baked dish–usually cooked in a shallow oval gratin dish–on which a golden brown crust of bread crumbs, cheese or creamy sauce is form.
GRILL:
To cook on a grill over intense heat.
GRIND:
To process solids by hand or mechanically to reduce them to tiny particles.
JULIENNE:
To cut vegetables, fruits, or cheeses into thin strips.
KNEAD:
To work and press dough with the palms of the hands or mechanically, to develop the gluten in the flour.
LUKEWARM:
Neither cool nor warm; approximately body temperature.
MARINATE:
To flavor and moisturize pieces of meat, poultry, seafood or vegetable by soaking them in or brushing them with a liquid mixture of seasonings known as a marinade. Dry marinade mixtures composed of salt, pepper, herbs or spices may also be rubbed into meat, poultry or seafood.
MEUNIERE:
Dredged with flour and sauteed in butter.
MINCE:
To cut or chop food into extremely small pieces.
MIX:
To combine ingredients usually by stirring.
PAN-BROIL:
To cook uncovered in a hot fry pan, pouring off fat as it accumulates.
PAN-FRY:
To cook in small amounts of fat.
PARBOIL:
To boil until partially cooked; to blanch. Usually this procedure is followed by final cooking in a seasoned sauce.
PARE:
To remove the outermost skin of a fruit or vegetable.
PEEL:
To remove the peels from vegetables or fruits.
PICKLE:
To preserve meats, vegetables, and fruits in brine.
PINCH:
A pinch is the trifling amount you can hold between your thumb and forefinger.
PUREE:
To mash foods until perfectly smooth by hand, by rubbing through a sieve or food mill, or by whirling in a blender or food processor..
REFRESH:
To run cold water over food that has been parboiled, to stop the cooking process quickly.
RENDER:
To make solid fat into liquid by melting it slowly.
ROAST:
To cook by dry heat in an oven.
SAUTE:
To cook and/or brown food in a small amount of hot fat.
SHRED:
To cut or tear in small, long, narrow pieces.
SIFT:
To put one or more dry ingredients through a sieve or sifter.
SIMMER:
To cook slowly in liquid over low heat at a temperature of about 180°. The surface of the liquid should be barely moving, broken from time to time by slowly rising bubbles.
SKIM:
To remove impurities, whether scum or fat, from the surface of a liquid during cooking, thereby resulting in a clear, cleaner-tasting final produce.
STEAM:
To cook in steam in a pressure cooker, deep well cooker, double boiler, or a steamer made by fitting a rack in a kettle with a tight cover. A small amount of boiling water is used, more water being added during steaming process, if necessary.
STEEP:
To extract color, flavor, or other qualities from a substance by leaving it in water just below the boiling point.
STERILIZE:
To destroy micro organisms by boiling, dry heat, or steam.
STEW:
To simmer slowly in a small amount of liquid for a long time.
STIR:
To mix ingredients with a circular motion until well blended or of uniform consistency.
TOSS:
To combine ingredients with a lifting motion.
QUESTION
A friend of yours visited you recently and thoroughly enjoyed the meal you prepared. He has requested you for its recipe to prepare a similar meal for four people. Write the recipe.
Stewed Beef to serve Four People
Introduction
Meat is one of the commonest foods worldwide. Stewed beef is a common meal in Kenya especially served during lunch and supper or any dinner. The meal should not be eaten frequently in large quantities because of health concerns but at most twice a week. In small quantities it can be eaten every day.
Ingredients
500 grams beef
1 large onion
3 medium sized tomatoes
I bunch coriander leaves
Half a teaspoon royco
1 dessert spoon cooking fat
Salt to taste
Two teaspoonfuls of gravy
Procedure
The stewed beef can be served while hot with Chapati
Argumentative Essay
In life there are issues such as abortion, alcoholism and sex that require one to form an opinion. And for one to win others over to his side, he needs to argue out or form an argument to persuade others to his side. An argumentative essay is therefore meant to persuade other people or woo them to be part of a certain belief or opinion.
The Structure
TITLE
Just like in speech writing, an argumentative essay should carry a title that summarises its argument.
INTRODUCTION
The introduction should appeal to the emotions of the reader. The tone should be sincere because it is important for the reader to trust what you are saying.
BODY
In the body, you need to emphasise your appeal to reason rather than feelings. Give specific facts, examples and ideas that are logical.
–List advantages and disadvantages
–Include statistics if possible
–Do not exaggerate facts, for example by overgeneralization like all men are unfaithful
–Be prepared to make concessions or compromises if the opposite side has valid points e.g. We acknowledge the fact that politics favours the rich but revolutions do not solve…
–Refer to authority and give references to support your arguments so that it doesn’t look like you rae the only one advocating for something.
–Organise your points from the least to the most important.
CONCLUSION
A good conclusion restates in a memorable way what the argument is about
Essays Based on Set Texts
When writing essays based on set books
Write an essay to show the evils of corruption in a society as brought out in the play Betrayal in the City by Francis Imbuga.
In the above essay question the key words are underlined.
Societies suffer rising unemployment and lack of development among other evils when individuals charged with managing public funds and resources embezzle or misappropriate the funds for personal use. This situation is evident in the play Betrayal in the City by Francis Imbuga as argued below:
–Avoid using the same words used in the question when writing an introduction
Unemployment (represents the key word evil) is rampant in Kafira because of corruption.
This sentence will run across the essay with four different issues that represent evil under discussion being highlighted. The topic sentence must be a sentence and not a subtitle like ‘unemployment. E.g.
Unemployment is rampant in Kafira because of corruption. Then three illustrations to show this
Inefficiency in government is brought about by corruption. Then three illustrations
Some killings in Kafira are as a consequence of corruption. Explanations…
Under-development is caused by corruption…….
— Full (well explained)
–Fair (Fairly explained)
— Thin (Not well explained but there is an attempt)
–Unpointed (misunderstood the question)
— Narration (Key words not captured in the answer)
–T.E (You cannot remember details from the story well so you quote or use details that are not in the book)
—Vague (whatever is written is not clear or is confusing)
In conclusion… To conclude… In summary… To sum up… etc
The conclusion should agree with the key argument of the question and mention two or three points discussed as evidence. The conclusion should be less than five lines. E.g.
To conclude, it is true that corruption is the source of evils like lack of development and unemployment in societies. A good conclusion just like a good introduction would score a full ( 2 marks) a fair one will score one mark.
QUANTIFIES
The words few, a few, little and a little are known as quantifiers.
Few and a few are used with count nouns like a few desks, few boys etc while a little and little are used with no count nouns or mass nouns like a little water, little milk etc.
–Few and little have negative meaning and usage. Few means not many or not enough; little means not much or not enough as well. A few and a little have a positive meaning and they do not have comparatives and superlatives. These words are also used as comparatives and superlatives e.g.
Few—fewer—fewest
Little—less—least /littlest
There are few girls in class. (not enough to be taught)
There are a few students in class. (they are enough for a lesson)
There is little water in the cup. (not enough to quench thirst)
There is a little tea in the flask; you can take. (it is enough)
–Few and little can be used with intensifiers such as quite, too and very but a little and a few cannot. e.g.
The crops dried up because there was too little water in the soil.
We have very little money left.
The matatus that are back on the road are quite few.
Taking Part in an Interview
Question
Imagine that an NGO in your area is looking for a form four leaver to educate the local community on ways of combating Malaria. Briefly explain how you would behave in an interview room.
As an interviewer
–Be friendly and prepared to ask questions
–research on the topic
–Be tactful, especially when asking simple questions.
–Listen to the interviewee—do not talk to much or carry prejudices be open minded and fair.
QUESTION
Your school is recruiting a new school captain. The principal and the prefect body are conducting interviews for this recruitment. You are interested in the post. Write an interview that may take place in the interview room.
Marking scheme
–the interviewee should say something about herself
–the body will have questions and answers concerning duties of a school captain and the role of prefects in the school
–She will be asked how she can deal with specific tricky situations if appointed e.g. a strike.
–She will be asked about why she is interested in leadership and her motivation to apply
–She will answer why she thinks she is the best person and not others
–She will answer what challenges she will be expecting and how to handle them like how to balance academics and leadership
–She will be asked, supposed she is not given the post she wanted but given a lesser one?
— In conclusion, one interviewer can thank the interviewee for coming
–The lead interviewer would inform the interviewee how she would receive communication if successful or not.
An e-mail is an electronic mail or letter. These letters are passed electronically by the use of computer network. Unlike the postal mail, e-mails are faster and can be accessed by the recipient at different geographical locations.
To write an email one needs the following:
When you write an email
Regards
Joseph
CC is carbon copies and is meant to show that the very copy of the email has been sent to other email addresses listed under the title cc. If the email is only one copy the title cc is left blank.
Example
TO: wekulo@yahoo.com
FROM: bwanya@gmail.com
CC:
SUBJECT: Annual Reports
DATE: October 1st 2017
Dear Wekulo,
This is to inform you that our annual marketing report will be due in the Director’s office by the end of the month. I will be grateful if you forwarded your regional reports to reach my office not later than Wednesday 5th 2017.
Thank you for your co-operation.
Regards
Kamau
QUESTION
You have seen an advertisement for several vacancies in the ministry of medical services. Those interested are supposed to submit their applications via email to the head of human resource in the ministry whose email address is mfsmm@gmail.com . You are a qualified nurse and interested. Apply for the job.
Questionnaire
A questionnaire is a set of printed questions systematically arranged for the purpose of obtaining information from respondents.
FEATURES
HIV AMONG THE YOUTHS—KABATI SUBLOCATION (FIDA)
Please tick the appropriate box
Gender: Female □ Male □
Married: Yes □ No □
School uniform should be made compulsory for all learning institutions (Tick one)
Strongly Agree □
Agree □
Disagree □
Strongly disagree □
Doesn’t matter □
QUESTION
Imagine you have been asked to look into the effects of romantic relationships on high school students. Prepare a questionnaire that will help you collect information you require.
CURRICULUM VITAE
Curriculum vitae, sometimes called a resume, is a brief account of your education and career. It is a document that gives a potential employer a picture of a prospective employee. It is therefore meant to sell you as a worthy product. To achieve this, it must be planned carefully.
Normally, a CV organises information into the following headlines: Personal details, contact details, education, work experience, special skills and referees.
These headings should be highlighted, for example, by underlining, capitalization or bolding so that they stand out. Whether you place education or work experience first depends on which one is stronger for you. For example, if you have just finished school, put education first. Note that while some people arrange educational qualification and employment experience in the order in which they were acquired, many others prefer to put the most recent ones first.
CURRICULUM VITAE
PERSONAL INFORMATION
| Field | Economics |
| Current Address | P.O Box 9742-00100, Nairobi, Kenya Mobile: 0725950083 E-mail: machiopc@yahoo.com
|
| Marital status | Single |
| Nationality | Kenyan |
| Identity Number | 23358787 |
| Religion | Christian |
| Date of birth | 12/05/1983 |
| Languages (Spoken and written) | English, Kiswahili |
| Career Aspiration | Economist |
PROFILE
Proficient in Research, Teaching, Training, Planning, Organizing, Coordinating skills, Administration, Statistical analysis using SPSS, E-views and STATA, Report Writing, Preparation of Presentation material, Leadership skills, Teamwork, Decision Making skills, and Effective Communication .
SUMMARY OF RELEVANT WORK EXPERIENCE
EDUCATION BACKGROUND
Post-Graduate:
University of Nairobi
PhD in Economics
Collaborative PhD Programme in Economics (CPP) sponsored and managed by the African Economic Research Consortium (AERC)
University of Nairobi
Masters of Arts in Economics
June 24, 2007 to September 30, 2007: Africa Economic Research Consortium (AERC)
Collaborative Masters Programme in Economics (CMAP) for Anglophone countries expect Nigeria; Joint Facility for Electives (JFE)
Specialized in:
Year | Institution | Certificate | Qualifications |
2003-2005 | University of Nairobi | B.A (Economics Major, Sociology Minor) | First Class honors
|
1998-2001 | Moi Girls’ Secondary School | K.C.S.E | Mean grade B – (Minus) |
1994-1997 | Misikhu Boarding Primary School | K.C.P.E | Mean Grade B (Plain) |
Other Certification
SPECIAL SKILLS
ACADEMIC AWARDS
2006/07-2007/08 Awarded University of Nairobi Scholarship.
2009-2013 Awarded African Economic Research Consortium (AERC) PhD scholarship
WORKSHOPS ATTENDED
WORK EXPERIENCE
HOBBIES
Reading novels, listening to music, watching soap operas and reading educational and professional journals
SPORTS: Netball
REFEREES
| Professor Gamiano Mwabu, Professor, University of Nairobi, P.O Box 30197, Nairobi. E-mail mwabu@kenyaweb.com Tel 0721565387
| Dr Damiano Kulundu Manda,Manager, Research, African Economic Research Consortium, P.O Box Nairobi. E-Mail damiano.manda@aercafrica.org Tel. 0721553635
| Dr. Adolf F. Mukenda,Senior Lecturer in Economics and Head of the Department, P.O Box 35045, University of Dar es Salaam Tel +255754489275
|
Question
Imagine that you have done KCSE exam and passed. You see an advertisement in a local daily of a position that you qualify for. You decide to apply for it. Write a resume/CV that would be attached to your letter of application.
Question KCSE 2012
Read the advertisement below and answer the question that follow.
The Electoral Commission is currently seeking to recruit 800 clerical officers, who will work closely with the commission for two months to register voters in preparation for elections. The clerks will be expected to prepare a voters register.
Applicants must be :
Citizens of Kenya
–18 years and above
–Fluent in Swahili and English
–In possession of KCSE grade C and above
–Computer literate
–Able to work with little or no supervision
Interested candidates are required to send their applications to the following address so as to reach the commision by 30th, November 2015. The Chief Executive Officer, Electoral Commision, P.O. BOX 679439-010
Nairobi
Book Review
A book review is an advertisement for the book. It is a report or a critique giving a person’s opinion about a book or a film.
–After publication, a book should be reviewed to
When reviewing a book, point out the following:
–the title of the book
–Its author or playwright
–publisher
–Date of publication
–price
–the reviewer
When reviewing the book, a summary of the book should be given. The summary should be done in form of a synopsis. The summary should highlight major themes and state what the book is all about.
The book review should also point out an aspect of the book that is striking or original. This could be: style, characterization, setting etc
–Assess in your own opinion, whether the book is successful or not giving valid reasons e.g. The book is fun for children because it is full of juvenile mischief etc.
Example
BOOK REVIEW
Title: Who am I? The Story of Barack Obama
Author: Phillis Andrews
Publisher: East African Educational Publishers
Reviewer: Okong’o Nyanduki Sheila
Date of Publication: April 23, 2010
Price: Ksh 500
This book, used in more than 600 schools in the US, is a biography of Barack Obama for elementary school children. Using colour photographs and text, it tells how Obama struggled to define himself as a black child in a white world. Starting with his birth to a white mother and a black Kenyan father, it follows the fascinating story from his early life in Hawaii to his move to Indonesia and the rich cultural differences he experienced there. Children will be intrigued by the way Obama dealt with his return to Hawaii at age ten as an outsider. They will learn how he managed to surmount many odds to become President of the United States. This is an inspirational story for children of all backgrounds. The colour photographs of Obama as a child and throughout his life allow children to understand and identify with the 44th President. This book can be read by children as young as seven but is appreciated as a photo biography by children in the upper elementary grades. The actual reading level is grade 3-4.
Biographies
A biography is an account of someone’s life history written by someone else. It is normally a true story. The writer of a biography is called a biographer. Writing a biography gives us a sense of setting, time and place of major events in a person’s life. The story usually starts with his or her birth as a major event.
—Points to consider when interviewing the subject for a biography
Autobiography
An autobiography is the history/ story of a person written by that person. The authors of autobiographies describe events and people they think influenced their lives. They are based on facts and are therefore referred to as non-fiction.
ELEMENTS OF AN AUTOBIGRAPHY
The author describes events in the order in which they occurred. Interesting details are highlighted, often humorous stories to enliven the piece of writing.
Auto biographers write to justify their lives—what they have done. They look at themselves as people who have lived interesting and important lives. They are characters in their own works. They select events and details they serve to embrace their artistic purpose of the work, namely making an important statement about life.
EXAMPLE
Mother Teresa was born in 1910 in Skopje, capital of the Republic of Macedonia. Little is known about her early life, but at a young age she felt a calling to be a nun and serve through helping the poor. At the age of 18 she was given permission to join a group of nuns in Ireland. After a few months of training, with the Sisters of Loreto, she was then given permission to travel to India. She took her formal religious vows in 1931, and chose to be named after St Therese of Lisieux – the patron saint of missionaries.
On her arrival in India, she began by working as a teacher, however the widespread poverty of Calcutta made a deep impression on her and this led to her starting a new order called “The Missionaries of Charity”. The primary objective of this mission was to look after people, who nobody else was prepared to look after. Mother Teresa felt that serving others was a key principle of the teachings of Jesus Christ.
She experienced two particularly traumatic periods in Calcutta. The first was the Bengal famine of 1943 and the second was the Hindu/Muslim violence in 1946, before the partition of India. In 1948, she left the convent to live full-time among the poorest of Calcutta. She chose to wear a white Indian sari, with a blue border, out of respect for the traditional Indian dress. For many years, Mother Teresa and a small band of fellow nuns survived on minimal income and food, often having to beg for funds. But, slowly her efforts with the poorest were noted and appreciated by the local community and Indian politicians.
In 1952, she opened her first home for the dying, which allowed people to die with dignity. Mother Teresa often spent time with those who were dying. Some have criticised the lack of proper medical attention, and their refusal to give painkillers. Others say that it afforded many neglected people the opportunity to die knowing that someone cared.
Over time the work grew. Missions were started overseas, and by 2013, there are 700 missions operating in over 130 countries. The scope of their work also expanded to include orphanages, and hospices for those with terminal illnesses.
Mother Teresa never sought to convert those of another faith. Those in her hospices were given the religious rites appropriate to their faith. However, she had a very firm Catholic faith and took a strict line on abortion, the death penalty and divorce – even if her position was unpopular. Her whole life was influenced by her faith and religion, even though at times she confessed she didn’t feel the presence of God.
The Missionaries of Charity now has branches throughout the world including branches in the developed world where they work with the homeless and people affected with AIDS. In 1965, the organisation became an International Religious Family by a decree of Pope Paul VI.
In the 1960s, the life of Mother Teresa was first brought to a wider public attention by Malcolm Muggeridge who wrote a book and produced a documentary called “Something Beautiful for God”.
In 1979, she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize “for work undertaken in the struggle to overcome poverty and distress, which also constitutes a threat to peace.” She didn’t attend the ceremonial banquet, but asked that the $192,000 fund be given to the poor.
In later years, she was more active in western developed countries. She commented that though the West was materially prosperous, there was often a spiritual poverty.
“The hunger for love is much more difficult to remove than the hunger for bread.”
- Mother Teresa
When she was asked how to promote world peace, she replied,”Go home and love your family”.
Over the last two decades of her life, Mother Teresa suffered various health problems but nothing could dissuade her from fulfilling her mission of serving the poor and needy. Until her very last illness she was active in travelling around the world to the different branches of The Missionaries of Charity. During her last few years, she met Princess Diana in the Bronx, New York. The two died within a week of each other.
Following Mother Teresa’s death the Vatican began the process of beatification, which is the second step on the way to canonisation and sainthood. Mother Teresa was formally beatified in October 2003 by Pope John Paul II. In September 2015, Pope Francis declared:
Giving Directions
Directions are explanations on how to carry out a certain task such as preparing a seedbed, mending a bicycle or reaching a certain place.
Qualities of Good Directions
—They should be simple and clear
–The instructor should be knowledgeable on the subject matter
–Instructions should be given step by step and in the correct order
–Emphasis the critical points that the listener must know or must handle with caution
–Confirm from the listener if every step is clear
When giving directions
–Note the landmarks along the way
–Give estimates of time and distance from one stop to another
–Give directions in relation to sides e.g. turn left or right
–Advice of the availability of certain means of transport e.g. take a boda boda
–Always give directions from the starting point that is familiar
–Do not give options because they tend to confuse someone—just give the easiest way When receiving instructions
–Be attentive and take notes
–Seek clarification on any area that might not be clear
–Pay close attention to the instructor’s gestures and body language
–Repeat the instructions if possible to confirm that you have understood them.
MEMORANDUM
Internal memo or just memo is an internal communication document within an organisation or institution. It is used to pass information within different offices of the same institution and not beyond. The information could be a short report, instructions, reminders or suggestions.
Usually, a given organisation has a standard form used for internal communications. This form may vary from one organisation to another.
Basically the internal memo has the following:
GARDEN VIEW HIGH SCHOOL
Internal memo
The contents of a memo are usually very formal brief and direct.
KYANGULI SECONDAY SCHOOL
Internal memo
REF/NO: 33/06/2017
TO: All prefects
FROM: The deputy Principal
CC: Julius Opondo—The Principal
DATE: 12TH JULY 2017
SUBJECT: School Uniforms
It has been observed that prefects have stopped wearing their proper school uniforms. This is disturbing as a prefect is a model for the rest of the school community. I request those concerned to stop this habit.
Sign
James Okiru
–The date should be written in full
–The subject of the memo should be brief and concise.
–The message should be written clearly.
–There is no complementary closing such as Your Faithfully. All memos must be signed. Write your name without indicating the designation then as you sign off, you need to indicate your designation below he signature e.g. FROM: Head of Physics
Signing off
Sign
Josephat Lagat
EXAMPLE
HIGHLANDS ACADEMY
Internal memo
REF/NO: 67/5/2017
TO: Bursar
FROM: Josephat Lagat
CC: Principal
DATE: 10th June 2017
SUBJECT: Hire of Transport
Fifteen students from our school will be taking part in the inter-school debating competition scheduled for 18th June at Emeraid High School from 9.00 AM. They will be accompanied by two teachers from the department.
Kindly make arrangements to hire transport for the event.
Thank you.
Sign
Head of Languages
EXERCISE
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