1 / 21

Parts of Speech

Parts of Speech. Nouns. Person: boy, teacher, Josh, doctor Place: Miami, city, countryside Thing: house, tree, horse, bicycle, ice cream Idea: democracy, truth, illusion, fantasy Quality: beauty, caring, hatred, boredom. When to Capitalize N ouns. Names of specific people: Mrs. Houck

hao
Télécharger la présentation

Parts of Speech

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Parts of Speech

  2. Nouns Person: boy, teacher, Josh, doctor Place: Miami, city, countryside Thing: house, tree, horse, bicycle, ice cream Idea: democracy, truth, illusion, fantasy Quality: beauty, caring, hatred, boredom

  3. When to Capitalize Nouns • Names of specific people: • Mrs. Houck • Days of week, months, and holidays, but not seasons • Ranks and titles when used with a person’s name: • Doctor Smith or doctor • Specific geographic areas: • New York City or city • Names of specific schools, businesses, organizations: • Daniel Boone High School or high school

  4. When to Capitalize Nouns • Regions of the US: • Midwest or north side of town • Historical periods: • World War II or war • Religions, nationalities, languages, and races • Specific school subjects, not general subjects: • Algebra 101 or math • Letters that stand alone: • T-shirt, X-ray

  5. Making Nouns Possessive • Usually add an apostrophe s: • Mrs. Houck - Mrs. Houck’s classroom • The Williams -The Williams’ house • If two people own the same thing, only the second gets apostrophe s: • Arnold and Helga’s baseball • If two people don’t own the same thing, use an apostrophe s for both: • Arnold’s and Helga’s toes

  6. Making Nouns Plural • Usually add s: • House - Houses • If the words ends in o, usually add es: • Hero -Heroes • If the word ends in s, x, z, ch, or sh, add es: • Box -Boxes • If the word ends in y, and there’s a vowel before the y, add s • Play -Plays

  7. Making Nouns Plural • If the word ends in y, and there’s a consonant before the y, changes the y to i and add es • Party -Parties • If a compound noun has a main noun in it, add the s to the main noun • Father-in-law -Fathers-in-law • If the compound noun has no main noun, add the s to the end • Follow-up -Follow-ups

  8. Pronouns • A word that stands for or takes the place of a noun. • Antecedent: the noun that the pronoun takes the place for. • Mrs. Houck and her student edited the paper. • Mrs. Houck=Antecedent Her=Pronoun • *Always try to keep the pronoun as close as possible to its antecedent*

  9. Pronoun Cases • Subjective: the doer of the action. • I sing • Objective: the receiver of the action. • Sing to me • Possessive: shows ownership. • My song

  10. Forms of Pronouns • Reflexive and Intensive: • Reflexive: reflects action back upon the subject and adds information to the sentence. • Donna prepared herself for a long day. • Intensive: adds emphasis to a noun or pronoun. • The wait itself would take hours. • Demonstrative: • Indicate whether the things you are pointing out are relatively near in time or space or farther away. • This, these, that, and those.

  11. Forms of Pronouns • Indefinite: • Does not refer to a specific person, place, or thing. • Singular: another, anybody, anything, each, either, everybody, everyone, everything, much, neither, nobody, no one, nothing, one, somebody, someone, or something. • Plural: both, few, many, several. • Singular or plural: all, any, more, most, none, some. • Interrogative and Relative: • Interrogative: used to ask a question. • Who, whom, whose, which, what. • What is your favorite song? • Relative: used to introduce subordinate clauses. • Who, whom, whose, which, that. • The seats that the students asked for were unavailable.

  12. Verbs • A word that shows action or state of being. • Verb Tenses • Present: I ace tests, but not often enough. • Past: I aced the test yesterday. • Future: I will eat pizza later today. • Present Perfect: I have eaten pizza many times. • Past Perfect: I had eaten pizza just before you arrived. • Future Perfect: I will have eaten pizza at least a million times by the year 2020.

  13. Types of Verbs • Action Verbs: • Expresses action • The band marches onto the field. (physical) • The audience expects a great performance. (emotional) • Linking Verbs: • Links the subject of a sentence to a word in the predicate. • Forms of to be: The instruments are safe in the bus. • Verbs that express condition: The students seemed bored during the long trip • Look, smell, feel, sound, taste, grow, appear, become, seem, remain. • Auxiliary verbs: • Are combined with verbs to form verb phrases. • The stadium is filled to the capacity.

  14. Infinitives • An infinitive is a verb with the word to in front of it. • Never split infinitives, ie put words in between the word to and the verb. • It is usually better to not split infinitives. • It is usually better not to split infinitives.

  15. Active or Passive Voice • Passive voice should be avoided in formal writing • Passive: The ball was hit. • Active: Samantha hit the ball. • Passive: My nose was punched by you. • Active: You punched me in the nose.

  16. Gerunds • When you put –ing on the end of the verb, it can be turned into a noun or gerund. • I run. -Run=verb • Running is fun. -Running=gerund

  17. Adjectives and Adverbs • A word that describes a noun or a pronoun. • Which one this or that • What kind red, large, sick, cloudy, petite • How many six, many, several • A word that describes a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. • Where there, here, away • When now, then, later, immediately • How quickly, stupidly, gracefully • How often frequently, never, once, sometimes • How much hardly, extremely, greatly, too

  18. Adjectives and Adverbs • Positive: small or beautiful • Comparative: smaller or more beautiful • Superlative: smallest or most beautiful • Rule of thumb: most short adjectives/adverbs get –er or –est, and most long adjectives/adverbs get more or most.

  19. Conjunctions • A word that joins words or groups of words. • Coordinating Conjunctions: Connect words or groups of words of equal importance. • And, but, for, nor, or, so, yet, etc • Correlative Conjunctions: conjunctions used in pairs. • Either-or, neither-nor, not only-but also, both-and • Subordinating Conjunctions: introduce subordinate clauses and join them so independent clauses. • The band waited while the director checked the lighting.

  20. Prepositions • A word that shows how a noun or pronoun relates to another part of the sentence. • In, on, of, by, for, with etc. • Rule of thumb: don’t end a sentence in a preposition. • Ends in preposition: I’m the one she’s sitting next to. • Doesn’t end in preposition: She is sitting next to me.

  21. Interjections • Word or phrase used to express emotion. • Wow, gee, hey, ouch, aha, boy, imagine, and unbelievable. • A strong interjection is followed by an exclamation point. • Yikes! Our project is due tomorrow. • A mild interjection is followed by a comma. • Well, where should we start.

More Related