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PARTS OF SPEECH PACKET English 10
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NOUNS A noun is a word used to name a person, place, thing, or idea A proper noun is ALWAYS capitalized and it names a specific person, place, or thing. Examples of proper nouns: McDonalds, Copley High School, Ohio, Romeo and Juliet
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NOUNS A common noun is not capitalized and does not name a specific noun Examples of common nouns: restaurant, school, state, movie A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words Examples of compound nouns: highchair, Declaration of Independence, bookshelf
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NOUNS A concrete noun can be identified by any of the five senses (you can see it, touch it, taste it, hear it, smell it) Examples of concrete nouns: rose, wind, chicken, thunder, poison An abstract noun cannot be identified by any of the five senses. Usually it refers to an idea or feeling Examples of abstract nouns: happiness, sadness, hate
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PRONOUNS A pronoun is a word used in place of a noun or more than one noun. Ex: Lian showed her dad how to use the computer program. Computers had always baffled him. The most commonly used pronouns are the personal pronouns.
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PRONOUNS First person: I, my, mine, me, we, our, ours, us Second person: you, your, yours Third person: he, his, him, she, her, hers, it, its, they, their, theirs, them
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PRONOUNS Relative pronouns: Introduce adjective and noun clauses; these do NOT begin questions Examples: who, whom, whose, which, that Ex: Buy the shirt that is green. Interrogative pronouns: Begin questions Examples: Who…? Whom…? Whose…? Which…? What…? Ex: Who bought the shirt?
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PRONOUNS Demonstrative pronouns: point out specific persons or things Ex: this, that, these, those Ex: Look at that! These are great! Reflexive pronouns: refer to the subject in a sentence and direct the action of the verb back to the subject Ex: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves Ex: She gave herself a pat on the back.
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PRONOUNS Indefinite pronouns: refer to persons or things not specifically named. Examples: all, any, anybody, both, each, everyone, everything, few, many, more, neither, nobody, none, no one, one, other, several, some, somebody, someone Ex: One piece of chicken is enough. *Intensive pronouns (pronouns ending in ‘self’ or ‘selves’) are used to emphasize the word before it Ex: Tony himself carried the large box.
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ADJECTIVES An adjective is a word used to describe a noun or a pronoun. Adjectives tell “what kind?” “which one?” or “how many/much?” Some words may be used as either adjectives or as pronouns. To tell them apart, remember that adjectives modify nouns or pronouns and pronouns take the place of nouns.
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ADJECTIVES Ex: Each person was told to take shelter. Adjective Ex: The police officer handed each of us directions to the shelter. Pronoun
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ADJECTIVES Some nouns may be used as adjectives. Ex: Hurricane winds battered the coast. Adjective Ex: During the hurricane several houses were washed out to sea. Noun
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ADJECTIVES Articles are also technically adjectives because they modify nouns or pronouns. Examples: a, an, and the.
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VERBS A verb expresses an action or a state of being. A physical action verb describes an action that can be seen or heard. Examples: run, hit, jump, dance, sing A mental action verb described an action that CANNOT be seen or heard. Examples: think, worry, believe, feel, understand, anticipate
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VERBS A verb phrase consists of the main verb and its helping verbs, also called auxiliary verbs. Examples: She is going to the store He must have wanted the video game. Note: If any of the “helping verbs” stand alone, they are linking verbs. Also, if a word, such as “seems,” or “feels” can be replaced by “am,” “is,” “are,” “was,” or “were,” it is a linking verb.
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VERBS All of the words below are helping verbs. Some of them can stand alone as linking (state of being verbs), as well. Have, has, had, Do, does, did, Be, am, is, are, Was, were, been, Can, could, Shall, should, Will, would, May, might, Must, being
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VERBS IMPORTANT: The words not, so, and very are NEVER part of the verb phrase.
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ADVERBS An adverb is a word used to modify a verb, adjective, or another adverb. An adverb answers the following questions: how? when? where? or to what extent? Ex: We stayed inside. [The adverb inside modifies the verb stayed and tells where.] Ex: It was an unusually quiet morning. [The adverb unusually modifies the adjective quiet and tells how.] The dog barked quite loudly. [The adverb quite modifies the adverb loudly and tells to what extent.]
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ADVERBS The most frequently used, and often overworked, adverbs are too, so, and very. Also, if a word ends in –ly, it is usually an adverb.
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PREPOSITIONS A preposition is a word used to show the relationship of a noun or a pronoun to some other word in the sentence.
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PREPOSITION RULES 1. A preposition always introduces a phrase. 2. A prepositional phrase must end with a noun or a pronoun which is called the object of the preposition. 3. There CANNOT be TWO prepositions located next to each other. The first one will probably be an adverb if that is the case.
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PREPOSITIONS A word may either be a preposition or an adverb, depending on how it’s used. Ex: When they reached the bridge, they marched across. Adverb Ex: They marched across the bridge. Preposition
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CONJUNCTIONS A conjunction is a word used to join words or groups of words. Conjunctions that join equal parts of a sentence are called coordinating conjunctions. The coordinating conjunctions are FANBOYS: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so
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CONJUNCTIONS Conjunctions that are used in pairs are called correlative conjunctions. The correlative conjunctions are both…and Not only…but also Either…or Neither…nor Whether…or
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CONJUNCTIONS COPY THIS IN BLANK AREA ON CONJUNCTION PAGE When punctuating a sentence using a conjunction, use a comma BEFORE the conjunction if it connects two complete sentences. If the two parts are not complete sentences, then do not use a comma. Ex: I am going to the store and to the movies. Ex: I am going to the store, and then I am going to the movies.
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INTERJECTIONS An interjection is a word that expresses emotion and has no grammatical relation to other words in the sentence. An interjection is usually followed by a(n) exclamation point. An interjection that shows only mild emotion is set off by a(n) comma. Ex: Wow! I can’t believe we won that game in the final second! Ex: Well, it certainly was an exciting game, wasn’t it?
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