Grammar Mastery Blueprint
Analyzing Relative Pronoun Patterns & Generating Your Exam Prep Deck
💻 Your NotebookLM Prompt
Copy and paste the prompt below into NotebookLM to generate your highly structured, 60-slide grammar revision deck for Units 6-10.
Act as an expert English teacher and curriculum designer. Please extract a comprehensive 60-slide presentation deck covering all aspects of grammar for Units 6 to 10 based on the uploaded materials. Strict Structure Requirements (12 slides per unit, 60 slides total): For each unit (Units 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10), create exactly 12 slides in this order: - Slides 1-4: Clear, illustrative explanations of the grammar rules. - Slides 5-8: Authentic Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs), ordered by their importance and frequency of repetition in the provided files. Include the correct answer and a brief explanation in the speaker notes. - Slides 9-12: Authentic "Rewrite the Sentence" questions, ordered by importance. Include the model answer. Design & Formatting Mandates: 1. Include the exact text "Ahmed Rashad English +201203642783" as a seal/footer on EVERY single slide. 2. Ensure the layout is neat, highly visual, and organized with clear headings. 3. Output the content in a clear Markdown format separated by "---" for each slide so it can be easily copied into a presentation software.
Quiz Data Analytics
We analyzed the 20 relative pronoun questions you provided to identify the most heavily tested concepts. Understanding these patterns is key to exam mastery.
Frequency of Relative Pronouns Tested
Out of 20 questions, "whose" is the most dominant focus area.
Context Entity Distribution
What is the antecedent? Half the questions refer to human subjects/objects.
Relative Pronoun Decision Matrix
Follow this logic tree to select the perfect pronoun for any exam question.
(Works for people, places, AND things! Highly tested concept.)
Core Question Examples
"I think it was Mr. Jack whose car was damaged in the accident."
Why: The car belongs to Mr. Jack. Whenever a noun immediately follows the blank and relates to the previous noun, check for possession.
"The old shopping souq is where you can find many attractive souvenirs."
Why: Refers to a physical location where an action takes place. Do not use 'which' unless a preposition follows (e.g., 'which you can find souvenirs in').
"T. Edison was the scientist who invented the light bulb."
Why: Refers to a person (scientist) who is the subject performing the action (invented). Followed directly by a verb.
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