Intro to EL Sample 2

Page 1

Parts of Speech


ď‚— Parts of speech are classifications of words according to

their relations to each other and to the things they represent.

ď‚— Parts of speech are divided into 11 categories: nouns,

pronouns, adjectives, numbers, verbs, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, exclamations, particles, articles.


Divisions  Based on whether an affix can be added to the word:  inflected (nouns, verbs, pronouns, adjectives)  not inflected (all other parts of speech)  Based on whether they accept new members:  open class (nouns, lexical vebs, adjectives and adverbs)  closed class (all other parts of speech)


Nouns ď‚— Words which denote names of persons, things, living

creatures, places, etc.



Pronouns ď‚— Words used to replace nouns


Adjectives  Words which denote characteristics of nouns  They can have:  Attributive function  

if they stand in front of a noun e.g. grey elephant

 Predicative function  if they are part of a predicate  e. g. This function is predicative.


Numbers  Words which denote the amount or order of

something  They can be:

 cardinal  e. g. one, two, three  ordinal 

e. g. first, second, third


Verbs  Denote an activity or state, function as a predicate  They can be:  stative and dynamic  regular and irregular  transitive and intransitive  reflexive  lexical and auxiliary


Adverbs  Describe, modify or provide more information about a

verb, adjective or another adverb; they tell us when, where, how, in what manner or to what extent an action is performed  They can usually be divided into four categories:  time and frequency (now, never, daily, usually)  place (everywhere, there, outside)  manner (easily, badly, well)  degree (almost, very, extremely)


Prepositions ď‚— words which stand in front of a noun and indicate

spatial and temporal relations, direction, possession, etc. (in, on, before, above)

Exclamations ď‚— words which indicate emotions and attitudes, usually

followed by an exclamation mark (Wow! Ouch! Yay!)


Conjunctions  Linking words, phrases and clauses  They can be divided into:  coordinating 

e. g. for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so

 subordinating  e.g. after, before, if, though, unless, since  correlative 

e.g. both - and, not only – but also, either – or, neither – nor, as – as


Particles ď‚— A function word that must be associated with another

word or phrase to impart meaning

ď‚— e. g. to (in the infinitive, e.g. to fly), not


Articles  A kind of adjective which is used with and gives

information about a noun

 a, an, the

 Sometimes no article is used  Can only be used with countable nouns


References  Childs, Leslie. Support Materials And Exercises For

Grammar: Part 1. 1st ed. 1998. Web. [20 Dec. 2014]. http://en.copian.ca/library/learning/academic/engl ish/grammar/speech/module5.pdf  Grammar-monster.com,. 'Free English Grammar Lessons And Tests'. N.p., 2014. Web. [20 Dec. 2014].  Web2.uvcs.uvic.ca,. 'ELC Study Zone: Parts Of Speech'. N.p., 2014. Web. [20 Dec. 2014].  Shopen, Timothy. Language Typology And Syntactic Description: Clause Structure - Volume 1. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2007. Print.


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