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Published byMatilda Hood Modified over 6 years ago
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Nouns Common and proper Abstract and concrete Compound
Plural and collective
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Common and proper Common- Proper-
teacher gun Brain zombie phone Common- Person, place, thing or idea Proper- names a specific (usually a one-of-a-kind) item. Begins with a capital letter Carl West Georgia Correctional Facility Georgia Daryl Dixon
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Abstract and concrete Abstract- your 5 senses can’t detect them.
deceit dedication curiosity trust relaxation Concrete- your 5 sense CAN see them teacher cat airplane bubble bath
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Compound noun that is made with two or more words
open or spaced full moon Hyphenated check-out closed or solid underworld
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Plural and collective Plural Collective- More than one noun
names groups (things) composed of members (usually people) heads farms knives machetes community army family jury faculty
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Pronouns Personal Reflexive Intensive Indefinite Possessive
Demonstrative interrogative
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Pronoun A pronoun is a word that substitutes for a noun.
John, George, Paul and Ringo were not zombies. They were not zombies.
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Personal 2 kinds of personal pronouns
Subject- renames the subject of the sentence…duh I, You, He, She, It, They, We Carol did not emerge from the cell, she might be dead.
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Personal 2 kinds of personal pronouns
Object- takes the place of the object of the sentence The object is the noun receiving the action Me, You, Him, Her, It, Us After Herschel shot a zombie, it fell backward.
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Reflexive A reflexive pronoun refers back to the subject of a sentence
Shane could not control himself. herself, himself, itself, myself, ourselves, themselves, yourselves
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Intensive An intensive pronoun emphasizes its antecedent (the noun that comes before it). I gave the head to the Governor himself. herself, himself, itself, myself, ourselves, themselves, yourselves
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Possessive A possessive pronoun tells you who owns something.
Michonne said the Katana sword was hers. hers, his ours, theirs, yours its, mine
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Demonstrative A demonstrative pronoun points out a noun. that these
this those. The zombie wants those brains.
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Interrogative Which machete should I use?
An interrogative pronoun is used in a question. Which machete should I use? what, which, who, whom
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Indefinite Anybody can die in a zombie apocalypse.
Indefinite pronouns refer to persons, places, or things in a general way. Anybody can die in a zombie apocalypse. all both everything no one another each few none any either many nothing anybody enough most one anyone neither everybody other anything nobody everyone others several some somebody someone something
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