hat t d r o w is a Nouns the s a s n o i funct me o s f o e t nam e s r o g n thi c i f i c e p s s a h c u s , of things s, e r u t a e r living c , s e c a l p , objects s, e i t i l a u q actions, e, c n e t s i x f e states o or ideas.
Proper nouns:is nouns: a noun that in its primary application refers to a unique entity e.g:Mary, Seattle, Tommy.
Common nouns:A nouns: common noun is the word for something e.g: Man, Country, Dog.
Possessive nouns: nouns When we want to show that something belongs to somebody or something, we usually add an apostrophe + s ('s) to a singular noun and an apostrophe (') to a plural noun e.g: man’s hat, bird’s beak, the boy’s ball.
Compound nouns: A compound Collective nouns: A collective noun is a noun that is made with two or more words There noun names a single group composed of multiple members are three forms for compound nouns: e.g: a band of musicians, a open or spaced - space between class of students. words (tennis shoe) hyphenated - hyphen between words (six-pack) closed or solid - no space or hyphen between words (bedroom).
Pronouns are words that substitute for nouns. Every pronoun must have a clear antecedent(the word for which the pronoun stands).
Personal Pronouns: I, me, you, he, him, she...
Demonstrative Pronouns: this, that, these, those
Possessive Pronouns: mine, yours, his...
Interrogative Pronouns :who, what, which...
Reflexive Pronouns: myself, yourself, himself...
Reciprocal Pronouns: each other, one another
Indefinite Pronouns: another, much, nobody, few, such...
Relative Pronouns: who, whom, which...
Verbs are sometimes described as "action words". This is partly true. Many verbs give the idea of action, of "doing" something. For example, words likerun, fight, do and work all convey action. But some verbs do not give the idea of action; they give the idea of existence, of state, of "being". For example, verbs like be, exist, seem and belong all convey state. In simple terms, therefore, we can say that verbs are words that tell us what a subject does or is
An adverb is a word that tells us more about a verb. It "qualifies" or "modifies" a verb (The man ran quickly). In the following examples, the adverb is in bold and the verb that it modifies is in italics. John speaks loudly. (How does John speak?) Afterwards she smoked a cigarette. (When did she smoke?) Mary lives locally. (Where does Mary live?)
An adjective is a word that tells us more about a noun. (By "noun" we include pronouns and noun phrases.) An adjective "qualifies" or "modifies" a noun (a big dog). Adjectives can be used before a noun (I like Chinese food) or after certain verbs (It ishard). We can often use two or more adjectives together (a beautiful young French l ady).
A preposition is a word governing, and usually coming in front of, a noun or pronoun and expressing a relation to another word or element, as in:
She left before breakfast.
What did you come for? (For what did you come?)
A conjunction is a word that "joins". A conjunction joins two parts of a sentence. Here are some example conjunctions:
Coordinating conjunctions:and, but, or, nor, for, yet, so.
Subordinating conjunctions:although, because, since, unless.
Interjections are short exclamations like Oh!,Um or Ah! They have no real grammatical value but we use them quite often, usually more in speaking than in writing. When interjections are inserted into a sentence, they have no grammatical connection to the sentence. An interjection is sometimes followed by an exclamation mark (!) when written.