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You will be taking notes

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Presentation on theme: "You will be taking notes"— Presentation transcript:

1 You will be taking notes
P.O.S. (Parts of Speech) You will be taking notes

2 VERB IS A WORD THAT SHOWS ACTION OR LINKS A SUBJECT TO ANOTHER WORD.
The weather is often calm before a storm. Tornadoes cause tremendous damage. Earthquakes are fairly common. They take my breath away.

3 PREPOSITIONS Are words that show position, direction, location or how two words or ideas are related to each other. Show the relationship between an object or some other word in a sentence. My mother looked in the clothes hamper. She went to my room. She found my shirt behind the bed against the wall along with my progress report. During the holiday break I had to clean my house. I was in trouble and had to stay inside all week. Except Thursday when I went to my grandma’s house.

4 ADJECTIVE IS A WORD USED TO DESCRIBE A NOUN OR PRONOUN.
They usually come before the word they describe. ARTICLES = A, AN, and THE. PROPER = always get capitalized. (A Chicago museum…) COMMON = it is not capitalized COMPOUND = made up of two or more words Examples: North American Allosaurus was an egg-laying dinosaur. DEMONSTRATIVE = point out a particular noun Examples: this, these, that, those This butterfly is small, but that butterfly is huge.

5 NOUNS A person, place, thing, or concept/idea.
Proper nouns get capitalized. Common nouns are not capitalized. Compound nouns are two nouns that have grown together or are joined with a hyphen. Collective nouns are a singular word that constrain a lot inside them. Examples: family, school, and space.

6 CONJUNCTIONS connect other words, groups of words or sentences.

7 PRONOUNS Short words that replace nouns.
I, me, my, mine (1st person point of view) He, she, his, hers, them, their (3rd person) 3rd person also includes words like: It, ours, they, we. The antecedent is the noun that is replaced by the pronoun. Example: Thurber was sick and in bed. He was going to have to miss school.

8 He snores loudly. The snores are really explosive.
ADVERB IS A WORD USED TO MODIFY A VERB, AN ADJECTIVE, OR ANOTHER ADVERB. They usually end with “ly” but not always. Examples: He snores loudly. The snores are really explosive. There are four types: time, place, manner, degree Time = tomorrow, often, never, always Place = here, there, backward, outside Manner = unkindly, gently, well, boldly Degree = generally, very, usually, entirely


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