Parts of Speech
Parts of Speech
Parts of Speech
1. NOUN
2. PRONOUN
3. VERB
4. ADJECTIVE
5. ADVERB
6. PREPOSITION
7. CONJUNCTION
8. INTERJECTION
NOUN:
A person, place, thing or idea.
EXAMPLE:
Cat, firemen, house, pencil, Chicago.
TYPES OF NOUNS:
1. Concrete Nouns
2. Abstract Nouns
3. Countable and Uncountable Nouns
4. Collective Nouns
5. Compound Nouns
6. Possessive Nouns
7. Regular Plural Nouns
8. Irregular Plural Nouns
CONCRETE NOUNS:
Are people, places, or things that we can experience with our five senses.
Concrete nouns can be divided into common nouns and proper nouns
EXAMPLES:
Armchair
Aunt
Ball
Bermuda’s
Beans
Balloon
Bear
Blouse
Bed
Baby
ABSTRACT NOUNS:
refer to abstract objects which you cannot see, hear, touch, smell, or
taste (ideas or concepts).
EXAMPLES:
Awareness
Awe
Beauty
Belief
Childhood
Clarity
Cleverness
Confusion
Contentment
Courage
EXAMPLES:
Apple
School
Student
Picture
House
Tree
Box
Book
Customer
Friend
UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS:
are substances, concepts, materials, information… that we cannot
divide into separate elements. They can’t be counted.
EXAMPLES:
Access
Adulthood
Alcohol
Business
Blood
Botany
Bacon
Chaos
Clothing
Confidence
COLLECTIVE NOUNS:
are names for a collection or a number of people or things. Words like
group, herd, and array are collective noun examples.
EXAMPLES:
Herd
Pack
Flock
Swarm
Shoal
Group
Crowd
Gang
Mob
Staff
COMPUND NOUNS:
are words for people, animals, places, things, or ideas, made up of
two or more words. Most compound nouns are made with nouns that have
been modified by adjectives or other nouns.
EXAMPLES:
Airline
Airport
Aircraft
Armchair
Boyfriend
Battlefield
Briefcase
Butterfly
Countdown
Comeback
POSSESSIVE NOUNS:
are nouns that show ownership or possession. Normally these words
would be a singular or plural noun, but in the possessive form they are
used as adjectives to modify another a noun or pronoun.
EXAMPLES:
Cat’s toy
Charles’s car
Chris’s exam
Children’s clothes
Men’s shoes
Babies’ shoes
Lemons’ acidity
Owls’ eyes
Sister’s room
Jim’s pen
EXAMPLES:
car – cars
bag – bags
table – tables
house – houses
dog – dogs
kiss – kisses
dish – dishes
witch – witches
judge – judges
half – halves
Aircraft – aircraft
Barracks – barracks
Deer – deer
Gallows – gallows
Moose – moose
Salmon – salmon
Hovercraft – hovercraft
Spacecraft – spacecraft
Series – series
Species – species
PRONOUN:
A pronoun is used instead of a noun or noun phrase in a sentence. A
pronoun may take place of the name of a person, place or thing.
EXAMPLES: I, me, we, they, you, he, she, it, yours, himself, ourselves, its, my, that,
this, those, us, who, whom…
TYPES OF PRONOUN:
1. Personal
2. Indefinite
3. Reflexive
4. Reciprocal
5. Possessive
6. Demonstrative
7. Interrogative
8. Relative.
PERSONAL PRONOUN:
are used as a substitute for a person's name. There are two kinds:
subjective and objective pronouns. That is, they either act as the subject of
the sentence or the object of the sentence.
As the subject of a sentence, they are
I
you
he
she
it
we
they
EXAMPLES:
They went to the store.
I don't want to leave.
He runs a great shop in town.
You can't leave, either.
EXAMPLE:
Please don't sit beside me.
Go talk to her.
Mary put the gift under it.
Don't look at them.
POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS:
show ownership or possession of a noun. They are:
my
our
your
his
her
its (note there is no apostrophe)
their
EXAMPLES:
Is that my book?
mine
ours
yours
his
hers
its
theirs
EXAMPLES:
That's mine.
Wrong. It's ours.
So, I suppose those clothes are yours?
No, it's theirs.
INDEFINITE PRONOUNS:
don't point to particular nouns. We use them when an object doesn't
need to be specifically identified. As such, it can remain indefinite. They
include:
few
everyone
all
some
anything
nobody
EXAMPLES:
Most wealth is held by a select few.
Everyone is here already.
I don't have any paper napkins. Can you bring some?
He's nobody.
RELATIVE PRONOUNS:
are used to connect a clause or phrase to a noun or pronoun. We often
see them when we need to add more information. They are:
who
whom
which
whoever
whomever
whichever
that
EXAMPLES:
The driver who ran the stop sign was careless.
I don't know which pair of shoes you want.
Take whichever ones you want.
No, not that one.
emphasize, or intensify, nouns and pronouns. Typically, we find them right
after the noun they're intensifying. These pronouns typically end in -self or -
selves. They are:
myself
himself
herself
themselves
itself
yourself
yourselves
ourselves
EXAMPLE:
I myself like to travel.
He himself is his worst critic.
She approved the marriage herself.
We went to hear W.B. Yeats himself speak.
DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS:
take the place of a noun that's already been mentioned. They can be
singular or plural. There are five of them. They include:
these
those
this
that
such
FOR EXAMPLE:
These are ugly.
Those are lovely.
Don't drink this.
Such was his understanding.
INTERROGATIVE PRONOUNS
do just what they say. They work in sentences that are posing a
question. They are:
who
whom
which
what
whoever
whomever
whichever
whatever
FOR EXAMPLE:
Who is going to arrive first?
What are you bringing to the party?
Which of these do you like better?
Whatever do you mean?
REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS:
are similar to intensive pronouns. the difference between the two is that
intensive pronouns aren't essential to a sentence's meaning. meanwhile,
reflexive pronouns are. also, they're used when the subject and the object
of a sentence refer to the same person or thing. these pronouns end in -self
or -selves. they are:
myself
yourself
himself
herself
itself
ourselves
yourselves
themselves
FOR EXAMPLE:
I told myself not to spend all my money on new shoes.
You're going to have to drive yourself to the restaurant today.
We gave ourselves plenty of extra time.
They bought themselves a new car.
VERB:
A verb is a doing word that shows an action, an event or a state. A
sentence may either have a main verb, a helping verb or both. In other
words, a verb is a word that informs about an action, an existence of
something or an occurrence.
TYPES OF VERBS:
We are learning about helping verbs. (are: helping verb; learning: main
verb)
We are in the Green House Club. (are: helping verb)
You should complete the work by tomorrow. (should: helping verb;
complete: main verb)
Understanding Verbs
The words: am, is, are, was, and were, belong to the verb "to be". We use
'am' or 'was' with the pronoun 'I'. We use 'is' or 'was' when the subject of
the sentence is singular. We use 'are' or 'were' when the subject of the
sentence is plural.
List of Example Sentences
1. I was late for school yesterday.
2. I am twelve years old.
3. She is a wonderful singer.
4. These questions are difficult.
5. He was planning to meet the doctor.
6. The Hollywood actors are famous.
7. They were winners last year.
8. It is a great feeling to win the trophy.
We use 'is' with singular nouns and pronouns 'he, she, it'.
LIST OF EXAMPLE SENTENCES
1. My school is near my house.
2. This restaurant is closing down.
3. She is writing a postcard.
4. Dog is a faithful animal.
5. Ottawa is the capital of Canada.
6. He is acting strange today.
We use 'are' with plural nouns and pronouns 'we, you, they'.
Subject-Verb Agreement
It is very important to take care of the subject and verb agreement while
framing a sentence. It is very important that a verb must be compatible and
agree with its subject to make a correct and valid sentence.
If we write:
Phil is playing with a ball. (Correct)!
Phil are playing with a ball. (Incorrect) X
In the first sentence, the subject (Phil) is singular, so we need a singular
verb (is playing). The sentence is correct. In the second sentence, the subject
(Phil) is singular, but the verb is plural (are playing). The sentence is
incorrect.
If the subject is a singular noun or a pronoun (he, I, she, it), we must ensure
that we use a singular verb to write a correct sentence.
LIST OF EXAMPLE SENTENCES
If the subject is plural (we, they, those, you), we need a plural verb to write a
correct sentence.
LIST OF EXAMPLE SENTENCES
The collective nouns are considered as singular. We use singular verbs with
them.
LIST OF EXAMPLE SENTENCES
1. The crowd was very noisy.
2. Our team has to win the match.
3. The audience is having a gala time.
4. The band is playing the school song.
5. The choir is singing beautifully.
6. My family is from Poland.
7. Our cricket team is the best in the whole town.
8. A bouquet of flowers was presented to the chief guest.
The verb must agree with the noun or the pronoun that is closer to
'either/or' or 'neither/nor'.
List of Example Sentences
1. Neither he nor I am guilty.
2. Neither Bob nor his friends want the party.
3. Either you or your sister is telling a lie.
4. Either Nancy or Mary is typing the letter.
5. Neither Julia nor her parents know the way to the passport office.
Rule 5 - Subject-Verb agreement with indefinite pronouns
Indefinite pronouns like 'nobody', 'everybody', 'someone', 'somebody', 'one'
are always singular.
List of Example Sentences
1. Everybody is liking the new car.
2. Someone is calling for you.
3. Nobody is allowed to enter that room.
4. Everybody likes Mrs. Ola, the new History teacher.
5. One of the passengers was asking for tomato soup.
6. Somebody is knocking at the door.
Rule 6
We use singular verbs for uncountable nouns.
LIST OF EXAMPLE SENTENCES
Rule 7
A plural noun takes a singular verb when it is a name such as Paris, China,
Arabian Nights, and so on.
1. Transitive Verbs
2. Intransitive Verbs
Transitive Verbs
A transitive verb expresses an action directed towards a person, place or
thing. The action expressed by a transitive verb passes from the doer or the
subject to the receiver of the action. Words that receive the action of a
transitive verb are called objects.
For example:
1. The teacher made the question paper.
2. Peter cut the cake.
In the above two sentences, we can see that the words in green colour 'the
question paper' and 'the cake' complete the sense of the sentence or work
as objects. The two sentences would not make complete sense without the
objects.
1. The teacher made .................... what? (the question paper)
2. Peter cut .................... what? (the cake)
In the above sentences, the verbs 'made' and 'cut' are transitive verbs. A
transitive verb needs a direct object to complete its meaning.
Example Sentences of Transitive Verb
1. Birds have feathers.
2. The teacher praised the pupil.
3. She is eating a pear.
4. I like English.
5. They are playing football.
6. The potter has made a beautiful pot.
7. Dennis bought a bicycle.
8. She is writing an essay.
Intransitive Verbs
A verb which does not need an object to make complete sense is called
an intransitive verb. An intransitive verb expresses action (or tells something
about the subject) without the action passing to a receiver or object. It can
stand alone in the predicate because its meaning is complete.
Example Sentences of Intransitive Verb
1. Mr. Becker jogs every day.
2. The wicked hunter was hiding.
3. Anne looks very beautiful.
4. Mr. John speaks loudly.
5. The ship sank rapidly.
6. The department store opens at six o'clock.
7. Mr. Ben is driving carefully.
8. The wind blew strongly.
(Theidioms.com)