PARTS OF SPEECH
NOUN: A word that names a person, place, thing,
idea, animal, quality, or action. Nouns function as the subject
of
the sentence. They also function as objects, complements, appositives, and
modifiers, as well as in direct address.
Examples: child, John, New York,
books, pizza, love, pony, generosity
Edwin, my brother, is a professional musician.
PRONOUN: A word that takes the position of a noun and
functions as nouns do.
Examples: he, she, it myself, me,
theirs, ours, we, you, yours
He attended a luncheon in his honor on
Wednesday.
ADJECTIVE: A word that modifes, qualifies or describes nouns
and pronouns. Generally, adjectives appear
immediately
before the words they modify.
Examples: pretty girl, talented
doctor, young athlete, blue book
The small child begged for a bedtime story.
VERB: A word denoting action, occurrence, or existence.
Examples: ran, jump, shout,
sweat, thinks, feels, sleeps, eat, laugh, are, is, was, has
The President met with foreign diplomats on Tuesday.
ADVERB: A word that modifies verbs, adjectives and other
adverbs. An "ly" ending almost always changes an
adjective
to an adverb.
Examples: spoke quickly, ran
hastily, worked frantically
Kelly reluctantly agreed to serve on my committee.
Many
adverbs do not end in "ly." However, all adverbs identify when,
where, how, how far, how much, etc.
Examples: hang low, stand
straight, added wrong, study hard
Kelly never loses her temper.
PREPOSITION: A word that establishes
a relationship between its object and another word in the sentence.
The
relationship can be one of time, space, direction, place accompaniment, cause,
or manner.
Examples: on, between, down, in,
of, since, to (not a complete list)
Jack sat beside Jill on the bus.
CONJUNCTION: A word that functions
as a connector between words, phrases, and clauses. There are
coordinating,
correlating, and subordinating conjunctions.*
Examples: for, and, nor, but, or,
yet, so (coordinating)
when,
until after, before, although (subordinating)
I work part-time although I don't need the money.
ARTICLE: A word that is used before a noun and functions
as an adjective
Examples: The (definite article),
a and an (indefinite articles)
The bees that were on the flowers stung Kaye.
A man gave us directions to the airport.
[A
is used before a noun beginning with a consonant sound]
An article in the paper caught my attention.
[An
is used before a noun beginning with a vowel sound]
INTERJECTION: An exclamation
expressing emotion.
Examples: Wow! Help! Stop! Ouch!
Wow! Look at all the snow.
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