Anyway... on to the sentences. As always, these are real sentences from student work and my comments are in ( ).
- (In answer to the question, What color is the light?) Hope
- (In answer to the question, Who does Myrtle Wilson mistakenly believe is Tom's wife?) One student wrote "Nick," and another "Jay Gatsby." (Score two for marriage equality in the 1920s, I guess.)
- She had the money to ravish herself in gifts.
- A trust passer is about to get hung. (Trespasser)
- A person's car went into the ditch that was drinking. (Nothing worse than a ditch that's been drinking. Ditches be crazy, man.)
- Teenagers are the future tomorrow.
- I read only 5 chapters of Gatsby because that's all I felt like doing. (Nice to have you in school.)
- The building itself looked a banded. (Abandoned)
- The back story of this specific matter is never filled in so the reader can interoperate it into something for their selves.
- ... a man is remembering and thinking about his diseased wife. (She's dead, not sick.)
- I think what caused her initial death... (And her secondary death? Did she have nine lives?)
- (Said aloud in class:) "So wait, Macbeth killed Danforth?" (Yes. The character from Shakespeare's play invaded The Crucible to kill the judge.)
- The only thing this woman hatted was her husband's art.
- If there is more foreign adoptions then the gender balance will maintain normal. (Maintain Normal would be a cool name for a band. Or self help book.)
- It loses significance when the green light doesn't mean anything to Gatsby anymore. (It lost significance when it lost significance? Got it.)
- I like Daisy (Buchanan) because she wasn't a typical mother. (Did you read The Great Gatsby, or some other story about a Daisy Buchanan?)
- (On the deep meaning of The Great Gatsby:) be yourself!
- The Great Gatsby is upbeat. (I think he meant fast paced. I mean, I hope he meant fast paced.)
- The actions that Montresor possessed...
I have two more for you, but I present them not for their potential humor. I guess I'll let you come to your own conclusions about my motives for tacking them on.
- I found it difficult to find time and actually sit down and read (The Great Gatsby) with working 2 jobs and having other homework to do, but when I did find a chance to read it, it was engaging and I found it hard to put down.
- (The Great Gatsby) made me want to live my life differently from how I've been living.
J