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English Grammar

Parts of Speech

Adjectives
Adverbs
Conjunctions
Interjections
Nouns
Prepositions
Pronouns
Verbs
Adjectives
Adjectives are words that describe nouns and pronouns. Adjectives answer the questions:
What kind? How much? Which one? How many? For example:
What kind? red nose gold ring
How much? more sugar little effort
Which one? second chance those chocolates
How many? several chances six books
There are five kinds of adjectives: common adjectives, proper adjectives, compound adjectives,
articles, and indefinite adjectives.
1. Common adjectives describe nouns or pronouns.
strong man
green plant
beautiful view
2. Proper adjectives are formed from proper nouns.
California vegetables (from the noun “California”)
Mexican food (from the noun “Mexico”)
3. Compound adjectives are made up of more than one word.
far-off country
teenage person
4. Articles are a special type of adjective. There are three articles: a, an, the.
The is called a “definite article” because it refers to a specific thing.
A and an are called “indefinite articles” because they refer to general things. Use a with
consonant sounds; use an before vowel sounds.
5. Indefinite adjectives don’t specify the specific amount of something.
all another any both
each either few many
more most neither other
several some
Follow these guidelines when you use adjectives:
1. Use an adjective to describe a noun or a pronoun.
Jesse was unwilling to leave the circus.
noun adj. adj. noun
2. Use vivid adjectives to make your writing more specific and descriptive.
Take a larger slice of the luscious cake.
adj. noun adj. noun
3. Use an adjective after a linking verb. A linking verb connects a subject with a descriptive
word. The most common linking verbs are be (is, am, are, was, were, and so on), seem,
appear, look, feel, smell, sound, taste, become, grow, remain, stay, and turn.
Chicken made this way tastes more delicious (not deliciously).

Adverbs
Adverbs are words that describe verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. Adverbs answer the
questions: When? Where? How? or To what extent?
When? left yesterday begin now
Where? fell below move up
How? happily sang danced badly
To what extent? partly finished eat completely
Most adverbs are formed by adding -ly to an adjective. For example:

Adjective Adverb
Quick — quickly
Careful — carefully
Accurate — accurately

Here are some of the most common non-ly adverbs:
afterward almost already also back even
far fast hard here how late
long low more near never next
now often quick rather slow soon
still then today tomorrow too when
where yesterday
Follow these guidelines when you use adverbs:
1. Use an adverb to describe a verb.
Experiments using dynamite must be done carefully.
verb adv.
2. Use an adverb to describe an adjective.
Sam had an unbelievably huge appetite for chips.
adv. adj.
3. Use an adverb to describe another adverb.
They sang so clearly.
adv. adv.

Conjunctions
Conjunctions connect words or groups of words and show how the words are related. There
are three kinds of conjunctions: coordinating conjunctions, correlative conjunctions, and subordinating
conjunctions.
1. Coordinating conjunctions link similar words or word groups. There are seven coordinating
conjunctions:
for and nor but or yet so

2. Correlative conjunctions also link similar words or word groups, but they are always used
in pairs. Here are the correlative conjunctions:
both . . .and either . . . or
neither . . . nor not only . . . but also whether . . . or
3. Subordinating conjunctions link an independent clause (complete sentence) to a dependent
clause (fragment). Here are the most often used subordinating conjunctions:
after although as as if
as long as as soon as as though because
before even though if in order that
since so that though till
unless until when whenever
where wherever
Interjections
Interjections show strong emotion. Since interjections are not linked grammatically to other
words in the sentence, they are set off from the rest of the sentence with a comma or an exclamation
mark. For example:
_ Oh! What a shock you gave me with that gorilla suit.
_ Wow! That’s not a gorilla suit!
Nouns
A noun is a word that names a person, place, or thing. Nouns come in these varieties: common
nouns, proper nouns, compound nouns, and collective nouns.
1. Common nouns name any one of a class of person, place, or thing.
girl city food
2. Proper nouns name a specific person, place, or thing. Proper nouns are always capitalized.
Barbara New York City Rice-a-Roni
3. Compound nouns are two or more nouns that function as a single unit. A compound noun
can be two individual words, words joined by a hyphen, or two words combined.
Individual words: time capsule
Hyphenated words: great-uncle
Combined words: basketball
4. Collective nouns name groups of people or things.
audience family herd crowd
Possessive Nouns
In grammar, possession shows ownership. Follow these rules to create possessive nouns.
1. With singular nouns, add an apostrophe and an s.
dog dog’s bone
singer singer’s voice
2. With plural nouns ending in s, add an apostrophe after the s.
dogs dogs’ bones
singers singers’ voices
3. With plural nouns not ending in s, add an apostrophe and an s.
men men’s books
mice mice’s tails
Plural Nouns
Here are the guidelines for creating plural nouns.
1. Add s to form the plural of most nouns.
cat cats computer computers
2. Add es if the noun ends in s, sh, ch, or x.
wish wishes inch inches box boxes
3. If a noun ends in consonant -y, change the y to i and add es.
city cities lady ladies
4. If a noun ends in vowel -y, add s. Words ending in -quy don’t follow this rule (as in soliloquies).
essay essays monkey monkeys

Prepositions
Prepositions link a noun or a pronoun following it to another word in the sentence. Use this
chart to help you recognize some of the most common prepositions:
about above across after against along
amid around as at before behind
below beneath beside between beyond but
by despite down during except for
from in inside into like near
on onto of off opposite out
outside over past since through to
toward under underneath until upon with
A noun or pronoun always follows a preposition. A prepositional phrase is a preposition and
its object. A prepositional phrase can be two or three words long.
on the wing in the door
However, prepositional phrases also can be much longer, depending on the length of the
preposition and the number of words that describe the object of the preposition.
near the violently swaying oak trees
on account of his nearly depleted bank account
Pronouns
A pronoun is a word used in place of a noun or another pronoun. Pronouns help you avoid
unnecessary repetition in your writing and speech. A pronoun gets its meaning from the noun
it stands for. The noun is called the antecedent.
Although Seattle is damp, it is my favorite city.
antecedent pronoun
There are different kinds of pronouns. Most of them have antecedents, but a few do not.
1. Personal pronouns refer to a specific person, place, object, or thing.
2. Possessive pronouns show ownership. The possessive pronouns are: your, yours, his, hers,
its, ours, their, theirs, whose.
Is this beautiful plant yours?
Yes, it’s ours.
Parts of Speech 11
3. Reflexive pronouns add information to a sentence by pointing back to a noun or pronoun
near the beginning of the sentence. Reflexive pronouns end in -self or -selves.
Tricia bought herself a new car.
All her friends enjoyed themselves riding in the beautiful car.
4. Intensive pronouns also end in -self or -selves but just add emphasis to the noun or pronoun.
Tricia herself picked out the car.
5. Demonstrative pronouns direct attention to a specific person, place, or thing. There are
only four demonstrative pronouns: this, that, these, those.
This is my favorite movie.
That was a fierce rain storm.
6. Relative pronouns begin a subordinate clause. There are five relative pronouns: that,
which, who, whom, those.
Jasper claimed that he could run the washing machine.
Louise was the repair person who fixed the machine after Jasper washed his sneakers.


Singular  Plural       Singular  or  Plural
Another       both           all
Anyone        few           any
Each            many       more
Everyone     others      most
Everybody   several     none
everything    some
much
nobody
nothing
other
someone
anybody
anything
either
little
neither
no one
one
somebody
something

Verbs
Verbs name an action or describe a state of being. Every sentence must have a verb. There
are three basic types of verbs: action verbs, linking verbs, and helping verbs.
Action Verbs
Action verbs tell what the subject does. The action can be visible (jump, kiss, laugh) or mental
(think, learn, study).
The cat broke Louise’s china.
Louise considered buying a new china cabinet.
An action verb can be transitive or intransitive. Transitive verbs need a direct object.
The boss dropped the ball.
The workers picked it up.
Intransitive verbs do not need a direct object.
Who called?
The temperature fell over night.
the most common linking verbs include: be, feel, grow, seem, smell, remain, appear,
sound, stay, look, taste, turn, become. Look for forms of to be, such as am, are, is, was, were,
am being, can be, have been, and so on.
The manager was happy about the job change.
He is a good worker.
Many linking verbs can also be used as action verbs.
Linking: The kids looked sad.
Action: I looked for the dog in the pouring rain.
Helping Verbs
Helping verbs are added to another verb to make the meaning clearer. Helping verbs
include any form of to be, do, does, did, have, has, had, shall, should, will, would, can, could,
may, might, must. Verb phrases are made up of one main verb and one or more helping
verbs.
They will run before dawn.
They still have not yet found a smooth track.
English has eight parts of speech:
Adjectives
Adverbs
Conjunctions
Interjections
Nouns
Prepositions
Pronouns
Verbs
The way a word is used in a sentence determines what part of speech it is.