From idea to essay a rhetoric, Reader, and Handbook Eleventh Edition Jo Ray McCuen


A More Perfect Union: How the Founding Fathers Would Have Handled Gay Marriage



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A More Perfect Union: How the Founding Fathers Would Have Handled Gay Marriage

Jonathan Rauch

Answers to Quiz



c, a, d, c, b
Answers to Questions on Meaning and Technique (529)


  1. Rauch, himself an acknowledged homosexual, takes the position that the federalist approach—that is, the approach that the rights of the individual states must be protected against blanket dictatorship by the federal government. This idea forms the thesis of his essay.




  1. One certainly must admit that emotions run hot among many conversations on the subject of homosexual marriage. Some people shudder at the idea as if Satan himself were threatening the moral fiber of our world; others are uncomfortable with the notion but remain silent so as not to offend; yet others support an individual’s right to control his or her own destiny in matters of love and marriage. To avoid the turmoil associated with conflict, people will need to study the issue calmly and vote on it when the opportunity presents itself. Then, as is our custom in the United States, whatever the outcome is, we must accept it—just as we do in presidential elections. The losing side simply settles down to normal living.




  1. At the end of paragraph 2, the author indicates that he will present three reasons why a decentralized approach would improve the odds of making same-sex marriage work. Then, he introduces his first guidepost with the word “First,….” In paragraph 4, he introduces his second guidepost with the words “Just as important is the social benefit of letting the states find their own way.” He introduces his third guidepost at the beginning of paragraph 5 with the word “Finally,….” Guidepost like these add to the coherence of the essay, making it flow more smoothly and logically.




  1. Probably the most obvious moral communities are the people who believe in the Bible as a moral guide and those who see the Bible as a collections of myths. Other moral communities are those who form attitudes about capital punishment, the welfare system, and treatment of immigrants. Have students add their own examples of moral communities they have confronted. We believe that living in a homogeneous society is a true blessing (despite its challenges) because it assures that the talents of a varied citizenry are used for the improvement of our country. If we were all white Anglo Saxon Protestants or all black southern Baptists our country would not have the verve or the progress it experiences due to so many divergent cultures living side by side.




  1. They can move to a state where this law does not exist. For instance, if you were uncomfortable in a state that allowed homosexual marriage, you could move to a state that did not allow it. Of course, moving from one state to another in order to find a compatible environment could cause a hardship to individual families. Have students discuss this issue and offer their opinions on it.




  1. He feels that domestic laws are best handled by the individual states because the citizens in our country often disagree strongly on matters of personal choice and morality; thus a law forced on all states might cause pandemonium. Rauch feels that for the sake of domestic tranquility, domestic laws should be left to a level of government closest to home—in other words, the state.



CHAPTER NINETEEN
Writing and Documenting the Research Paper
Exercises (589)
Exercise 1
a. Doctorow, E. L. Ragtime. New York: Random House, 1975.

b. “What Is the Federation Cup?” World Tennis Aug. 1976: 32 34.

c. O’Connor, Flannery. “Good Country People.” The Modern Tradition. 2nd ed. Ed. Daniel F. Howard. Boston: Little, Brown, 1972.

d. Dostoevsky, Feodor. Crime and Punishment. Trans. Jessie Coulson. New York: Oxford UP, 1953.

e. “The Dutiful Child’s Promises.” Readings from American Literature. Eds. Mary Edwards Calhoun and Emma Lenore MacAlarney. Boston: Ginn, 1915.


f. Wallbank, T. Walter, and Alastair M. Taylor. Civi1ization—Past and Present. 2 vols. Chicago: Scott, Foresman, 1949.

g. “Tiryns.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1963 ed.

h. Garrison, Karl C. Psychology of Adolescence. 6th ed. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, 1965.

i. “To Plains with the Boys in the Bus.” Time 9 Aug. 1976: 16, 19.

j. Murray, Jim. "The Real Olympian." Los Angeles 'Times, 4, Aug. 1976, pt. 3: 1, 7.

Exercise 2
a. The Canadian Tax Foundation. (1979). Provincial and municipal finances. Toronto, Canada.

b. Rice, B. (1988, April). Boom & doom on Wall Street. Psychology Today, 52-54.

c. Kerr, B., Davison, J., Nelson, J., & Haley S. (1982). Children and psychological testing. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 34, 526-541.

d. Skinner, B.F. (1952). Beyond freedom and dignity. In H. Hall and N. B. Bowie (eds.) The tradition of philosophy (pp. 321-325). Belmont, California: Wadsworth.

e. Athlete’s heart. (1975) New Columbia encyclopedia (p. 176). New York: Columbia UP.

Exercise 3
MLA


  1. (Garrison 25)

  2. (50)

  3. (Wallbank and Taylor, vol. 1: 30)

  4. (31)

  5. (Calhoun and MacAlarney 205)

  6. (Murray 1)

  7. (“Tiryns” 248)

  8. (Dostoevsky 48).

  9. (qtd. in The Modern Tradition 507).

  10. (Doctorow 46).

Exercise 4
Answers will vary. Have students read their choices.

Exercise 5

Answers will vary. Have students volunteer to read their summaries.



Exercise 6

Answers will vary. Have students volunteer to read their paraphrases.





CHAPTER TWENTY
Grammar Fundamentals
The Sentence (616)

Underline the simple subject once and the simple predicate twice in the following sentences. Identify the verb first. To find the subject, ask, “Who or what did it?”



  1. The teacher arrived ten minutes after the class was to begin.

  2. Mary believes in the intelligence and honesty of dogs.

  3. After seeing the movie twice, Alice was sure she was in love with Robert Redford.

  4. At the end of the first act, the big star made his appearance.

  5. People all over the world expect America to feed them.

  6. Ted was elected to run as vice president.

  7. We danced in the hallway, in the cellar, and on the patio.

  8. Grace, her voice controlled and her head held high, debated the issues with her rival.

  9. My father, a business consultant, is going to New York on Friday.

  10. At the end of the examination, Bill breathed a sigh of relief.

In the following sentences, draw a line between the complete subject and the complete predicate. (617)



  1. Jane / arranged her schedule to allow for study.

  2. As an usher as well as a waiter, Bruce /worked to save $300.

  3. Alaska, with all of its natural beauty, /appealed to the Smiths.

  4. Playing a guitar / demands skill and sensitivity. Angry and tired, the dean / arrived and was hit with a water balloon.

  5. Separate wills / are recommended for couples who have been married twice.

  6. The top of Mt. Whitney / offers a breathtaking view of the Sierras.

  7. The undefeatable Johnson / was dropped from the squad.

  8. Horses, covered with flies, / stood scratching their backs on the fence.

  9. Honor / is more important than love.


Clauses and Phrases (619)
Label the following passages I (independent clause), D (dependent clause), or P (phrase).


  1. Spring has begun (I)

  2. Since their parents died (D)

  3. Although Sam is an atheist (D)

  4. Follow the main road for a mile (I)

  5. Between the two houses (P)

  6. Everyone told him to stay home (I)

  7. For your country (P)­

  8. If Mary enrolled in the class (D)

  9. You may wish to return the picture today (I)

  10. People who attend religious services (D)

  11. Begging her to love him (P)

  12. Flowers blossom (I)

  13. Have you seen the five napkins (I)

  14. He seldom speaks his mind (I)

  15. Because she grew up in Poland (D)

Sentence Types (622)
Place the appropriate punctuation mark at the end of the following sentences.


  1. Oh, crime and violence, how long will you continue to rob us of peace?




  1. This is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country.

  2. Come here this minute!

  3. Have you, by chance, already met this gentleman?

  4. Help! I am caught in a mousetrap.

  5. Go to the store and buy me a quart of milk.

  6. If I need you, will you be available?

  7. What an exciting evening!

  8. Should we never meet again, I wish you the best of luck.

  9. I asked him if he had been paid for his time.

Classify each of the following sentences as (A) simple, (B) compound, (C) complex, or (D) compound complex. Justify your classification by identifying the various clauses. (623)


  1. At the end of the day, Alice made an appearance; however, she did not smile once. (B)

  2. Because the winter was nearly over, Maxine arranged to be home with her mother, her grandmother, and her sisters. (C)

  3. After he had reached the end of the road, Mr. Leffingwell began to cross the bridge. (C)

  4. Big Tom was dropped from the club after one month of membership; he now is trying out for the swimming team. (B)

  5. At the end of the race, Jane let out a yell, for she had finished in third place. (B)

  6. Maybelle operated an elevator for three years to save enough money to go to night school, to buy a new car, and to pay her mother's doctor bills. (A)

  7. In the top drawer you will find two pairs of old gloves, three torn sweaters, and a yellowed picture album. (A)

  8. We all believed that the U.S. Constitution must be preserved, be­cause our liberties, which our ancestors paid for with their lives, must be nurtured with care. (C)

  9. After freezing all night, Nancy decided she should have worn a sweater. (A)

  10. When my family left for New Orleans, I thought they would return within two weeks; instead, they stayed there a full year. (D)

  11. My uncle, a famous poet, gave me a handwritten manuscript and asked me to take care of it for him. (A)

  12. Your letter was delightful; I am sure that it offended no one. (B)

  13. Because Tom gave the most forceful pep talk, he was asked to represent the senior class at the fine arts festival. (C)

  14. The mayor, his voice trembling with rage, denounced his opponent, Jack Wilson. (A)

  15. He flew to New York, and she drove to Chicago because she was afraid to fly with him. (D)


Parts of Speech (632)
Identify the part of speech of each italicized word in the following paragraphs:
Il went back to the Devon School2 not long ago and3 found4 it looking oddly5 newer than when6 I was a student there7 fifteen years before. It seemed more8 sedate than9 I remembered it, more perpendicular10 and straitlaced, with11 narrower12 windows and shinier woodwork, as though13 a coat of14 varnish had been put15 over16 everything for better preservation. But,17 of course, fifteen years before18 there had been a war going on. Perhaps the school wasn’t as well19 kept up in those days; perhaps2O varnish, along with2l everything22 else, had gone to war.

I didn’t entirely23 like this glossy new surface,24 because25 it made the school look like26 a museum, and that’s exactly what27 it was to me, and what I did not want it to be. In the deep, tacit way in which feeling28 becomes stronger than thought, I had always felt29 that30 the Devon School came into31 existence the day32 I entered it, was vibrantly real33 while34 I was a student there, and then blinked out like a candle the35 day I left.


John Knowles, A Separate Peace


1. pronoun

2. noun

3. conjunction

4. verb

5. adverb

6. conjunction

7. adverb

8. adverb

9. conjunction

10. adjective

11. preposition

12. adjective

13. conjunction

14. preposition

15. verb

16. preposition

17. conjunction

18. adverb

19. adverb

20. adverb (conjunctive adverb)

21. preposition

22. pronoun

23. adverb

24. noun

25. conjunction

26. preposition

27. pronoun

28. noun

29. verb

30. pronoun

31. preposition

32. adverbial noun

33. adjective

34. conjunction

35. article








CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Correcting Common Errors
Fragments, Comma Splices, Run Together Sentences (635)

C means the sentence is correct; frag, means it is a fragment; CS means it is a comma splice, and RT means it is a run together sentence. Correct any sentence that is incorrect.

  1. People must eat. (C)

  2. The countless women who need jobs. (frag)

  3. Chicago being a city riddled with crime. (frag)

  4. The rivers overflowed their banks the trees were swept away. (RT)

  5. Houses were destroyed, and homes were burned. (C)

  6. Pet lovers in our country as well as abroad. (frag)

  7. In particular the mayor, who had supported a transit system when he spoke to the legislature. (frag)

  8. Irresistible also were the lovely orchards surrounding the swim­ming pool. (C)

  9. However, some crowds were vengeful. (C)

  10. “I cannot marry you,” said the princess, “I am too ugly.” (CS)

  11. Every one of us felt the loss. (C)

  12. The Vietnam War was senseless it gained us nothing. (RT)

  13. Run as fast as you can you need the practice. (RT)

  14. Recalling his visit to Paris, my uncle smiled. (C)

  15. All of us visited the statue, few of us admired it. (CS)

  16. Originally made in Taiwan but then transported to the United States. (frag)

  17. Soon giving up trying. (frag)

  18. She was as delicate as a butterfly. (C)

  19. I want to excel not only as a musician, but also as a human being. (C)

  20. The car weighed a ton; they could not lift it. (C)


Subject Verb Agreement (638)
Answers to exercise on changing each verb that does not agree with its subject. C means the sentence is correct.


  1. Neither storms nor illness delay (delays) our newspapers.

  2. His five children and their education was (were) his main worry.

  3. There's much to be said for simplicity. (C)

  4. The importance of words are (is) being stressed in all newspapers.

  5. My chief concern this summer are (is) my expenses.

  6. Taste in books differs from student to student. (C)

  7. The Three Stooges are (is) a wonderful movie.

  8. Mathematics is one of my worst subjects. (C)

  9. Either you or I am mistaken. (C)

  10. My brothers as well as my sister is (are) coming to visit me.

Case (643)
Answers to exercise on underlining the correct form of the pronoun in the following sentences:

  1. I am more to be pitied than (he, him).

  2. The saleslady (who, whom) they think stole the stockings lives next to us.

  3. You must praise (whoever, whomever) does the best job.

  4. During the Vietnam War some of (we, us) football players felt guilty.

  5. Florence insists that I was later than (he, him).

  6. Was it (she, her) who called you the other day?

  7. The candidate made an excellent impression on us—my Dad and (I, me).

  8. (Who, whom) do you think will set a better example?

  9. We were relieved by (his, him) paying the bill.

  10. Between you and (me, I), is she innocent or guilty?

  11. The coach said that I swim better than (him, he).

  12. (Him, his) daydreaming affected his work negatively.

  13. Bud doesn't care (who, whom) he gives his cold to.

  14. The pinecones were divided among the three of us—John, Bill, and (me, I).

  15. (Our, us) leaving the inner city was a blessing in disguise.

  16. Do you remember (me, my) telling you?

  17. Can you tell me the rank of the general (who, whom), it is said, struck one of his soldiers?

  18. (Whom, who) the Cubs will play next is unknown.

  19. Marilyn Monroe, (who, whom) most women envied, was unhappy.

  20. Give the papers to (he and I, him and me).


Point of View (647)
Possible answers to exercise on shifts in sentences. A shift in person is indicated by (A), in tense by (B), in mood by (C), in discourse by (D), in voice by (E), and in key word by (F).


  1. (A) Everyone must live according to his or her conscience.

  2. (D) She insisted loudly, “I am opposed to abortions.”

  3. (E) All of us enjoy a good meal, and we like fresh air, too.

  4. (B) She revealed that an unknown intruder was in the room.

  5. (A) So far we have not mentioned poverty. So let us discuss it now.

  6. (A) Truth is a principle everyone should cherish because one can be a better person when one adheres to it.

  7. (C) Lock the door and turn out the lights.

  8. (E) The robber stole her jewelry and mugged her, too.

  9. (B) Slowly he crept toward me and grabbed for my wallet.



  1. (D) A straightforward question to ask the salesman is, “Why should people buy your razors?”

  2. (A) He helped me by pointing out where I could find an inexpensive hotel.

  3. (E) The doorman opened the door; then a porter picked up my baggage.

  4. (B) In his memory he heard the melody of the song and knew that time was passing quickly.

  5. (B) She was a spoiled brat, it always seemed to me.

  6. (F) The senator’s question was an intelligent one; the chairman’s answer was also intelligent.

Pronoun Reference (650)
Possible answers to exercise on sentences with confusing, implied, nonexistent, or vague pronoun references.

  1. Many people have difficulty showing their emotions.

  2. At the factory where I work at night, my fellow workers say not to ask for salary advances.

  3. My dad warned my brother, “You won't got a promotion.”

  1. She sat knitting by the window, which was too small to let in any light.

  2. The nuclear bomb was developed in the twentieth century; this weapon completely changed man’s approach to war.

  3. The fact that the leading baritone did not show up for opening night caused all kinds of gossip.

  4. New York accents are not understood in the South.

  5. Life is a cycle of happiness followed by misery, but I want to have equal portions of happiness and misery.

  6. Although the river’s bank is muddy, the water looks inviting.

  7. The first chapter awakens the readers’ interest in mining, and this interest continues until the Camerons move to America.

  8. The American colonists’ refusal to pay taxes without being represented was the major cause of the 1776 revolution.

  9. Our roof must be protected against the rain that may fall tomorrow.

  10. Because the heat really bothered them, the guests were perspiring and fanning themselves with the printed program.

  11. The rose garden in Hoover Park is spectacular. Some of the roses are deep purple, almost black.

  12. Although, I went over my check stubs three times, my account never balanced.


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