Unit 2 Notes
Unit 2 Notes
Unit#2
The champions
Grammar Notes
Articles are words used before nouns to define them as specific or unspecific. There are three types of
articles in English:
The definite article “the” is used to refer to specific nouns, both singular and plural. It signals that the
noun being mentioned is something already known to the speaker and listener or something unique in
its context.
Unique objects: Used before nouns that are unique or well-known in context.
Previously mentioned objects: When something has been mentioned earlier in a conversation or text.
Example: the Pacific Ocean, the Taj Mahal, the White House.
Superlatives and ordinal numbers: Used before superlatives and ordinal numbers.
Example: a car, a book, a university (though “university” starts with a vowel letter, it begins with a
consonant sound /ju/).
Example: an apple, an hour (though “hour” starts with a consonant letter, it begins with a vowel sound
/au/).
When introducing something for the first time: Use “a” or “an” when the noun is not specifically known
to the listener.
With singular countable nouns: Indefinite articles are used only with singular countable nouns.
When referring to one of many: The noun is one example of a larger group.
3. Zero Article
The zero article refers to the absence of an article before certain types of nouns. This occurs primarily
with plural nouns, uncountable nouns, and some proper nouns.
Names of countries (except countries that include words like “kingdom,” “states,” etc.):
Example: France, Pakistan, Germany, but the United States, the United Kingdom.
Example: We have dinner at 7 p.m., She plays tennis, They went by car.
Zero Article – for general or uncountable nouns, and proper nouns (like names of countries, languages).
This understanding of articles helps in determining when and how to specify or generalize a noun in
sentences.
1. Personal Pronouns
Personal pronouns are used to represent specific people or things. They change form based on person,
number, gender, and case (subject, object, or possessive).
Examples: my, mine, your, yours, his, her, hers, its, our, ours, their, theirs
2. Relative Pronouns
Relative pronouns introduce a dependent (or relative) clause and refer to a noun mentioned previously,
acting to connect the two parts of a sentence.
3. Indefinite Pronouns
Indefinite pronouns refer to people or things without specifying exactly who or what they are. They are
often used when the exact identity is unknown or not important.
Concept #3
Pronouns are words used to replace nouns to avoid repetition in a sentence. They refer back to a noun
or noun phrase mentioned earlier, making the sentence smoother and less repetitive. Examples of
pronouns include: he, she, it, they, him, her, them, etc.
Antecedents are the nouns or noun phrases that the pronouns refer to. In other words, the antecedent
is the word that the pronoun is standing in for.
For example:
Here, “Sarah” is the antecedent, and “her” is the pronoun referring to “Sarah.”
It’s essential for pronouns and their antecedents to agree in gender, number, and person to avoid
confusion in sentences.
Example:
“The students” is the antecedent, and “their” is the pronoun that refers to it.