Writer's Inc: Parts of Speech
simple pronouns include
I, you, he, she, it, we, they, who, what
a sentence usually has _____ and _____
a subject, a predicate...
the articles, _____, _____, and _____ are adjectives
a, an, the
phrase that consists of a noun and a participle (plus the participle's object, if there is one, an any modifiers); functions as an adjective that adds information to the entire sentence; always set off with commas
absolute phrase (ITS WHEELS CLATTERING RHYTHMICALLY OVER THE RAILS, the train rolled into town)
names an idea, a condition, or a feeling-in other words, something that cannot be touched smelled, tasted, seen, or heard
abstract noun (greed, poverty, hope, etc.)
voice that indicates that the subject of the verb is, has been, or will be doing somthing
active voice
describes or modifies a noun or a pronoun
adjectives
describes or modifies a verb, an adjective, or another of itself
adverb
clause that is used like an adverb to modify a verb, an adjective, or an adverb; begin with a subordinating conjunction
adverb clause (IF I STUDY HARD, I will pass the test)
types of dependent clauses (3)
adverb, noun, adjective
a preposition is always followed by _____, if there is no _____, the word is _____
an object, object, an adverb
the noun that the pronoun refers to or replaces
antecedent
all pronouns have
antecedents
phrase, which folllows a noun or a pronoun and renames it, that is consisted of a noun and its modifiers, adds new information about the noun or pronoun it follows
appositive phrase (the Trans-Siberian Railroad, THE WORLD'S LONGEST RAILWAY, stretches from Moscow to Vladivostok)
helping verbs; used to form some of the tenses, the mood, and the voice or the main verb
auxiliary verbs (is, am, are, was, could, will, etc.)
tells how nouns are related to other words used with them
case
a group of related words that has both a subject and a predicate
clause
names a group or a unit
collective noun (United States, team, crowd, etc.)
does not name a particular person, place, thing, or idea; not capitalized
common noun (person, president, park, etc.)
form of adjectives that compares two persons, places, things, or ideas
comparative form (-er, more, less, etc.)
predicate with all its modifiers
complete predicate
the subject with all of its modifiers
complete subject
predicate that is composed of 2 or more simple predicates
compound predicate
composed of 2 or more simple subjects
compound subject
names a thing that is tangible (can be seen, touched, heard, smelled, or tasted); either proper or common
concrete noun (child, Grand Canyon, music, aroma, etc.)
connects individual words or groups of words
conjunction
conjunctions that usually connect a word to a word, a phrase to a phrase, or a clause to a clause; things equal in importance or are of the same type
coordinating conjunctions (an, but, or, for, yet, so, etc.)
kinds of conjunctions (3)
coordinating, correlative, subordinating
conjunctions that are used in pairs
correlative conjunctions (either, or; neither, nor; not only, but also; both, and; whether, or
adverbs that tell how much or how little
degree (greatly, partly, too, etc.)
the subject when it comes after the verb
delayed subject
pronoun that points out people, places, or things without naming them
demonstrative pronoun (this, that, these, those, etc.)
clause that does not present a complete thought and cannot stand alone as a sentence
dependent clause
part of the predicate and receives the action of the verb
direct object
receives the action of a transitive verb directly from the subject; without it, the transitive verb's meaning is incomplete
direct object
indicates whether a noun is masculine, feminine, neuter, or indefinite (masculine or feminine)
gender
a verb form that ends in ing and is used as a noun
gerund
phrase that consists of a gerund and its modifiers; whole phrase functions as a noun
gerund phrase (SPOTTING THE TINY MOUSE was easy for the hawk)
types of verbals (3)
gerunds, infinitives, participles
mood that is used to give a command
imperative mood
pronoun that often refers to unnamed or unknown people or things
indefinite pronoun (all, any, both, each one, everything, nobody, somebody, etc.)
clause that presents a complete thought and can stand alone as a sentence
independent clause
mood that is used to state a fact or to ask a question
indicative moon
receives the action of a transitive verb but indirectly; names the person to whom or for who something is done
indirect object
a verb form that is usually introduced by to; may be used as a noun, an adjective, or an adverb
infinitive
phrase that consists of an infinitive and its modifiers; whole phrase functions either as a noun, and adjective, or an adverb
infinitive phrase (your efforts TO CLEAN THE CHALKBOARD are appreciated)
communicates strong emotion or surprise; punctuation is used to set it from the rest of the sentence
interjection (oh no!, yipes!, etc.)
pronoun that asks a question
interrogative pronoun (who, whose, whom, which, what, etc.)
verb that communicates an action that is complete in itself; does not need an object to receive action
intransitive verb
verb that links the subject to a noun or an adjective in the predicate
linking verb (is, seem, feel, was, etc.)
adverbs that often end in ly and tell how something is done
manner (precisely, well, smoothly, etc.)
indicates the tone or attitude with which a statement is made
mood
compound nouns include
myself, someone, anybody, everything, itself, whoever
noun that can be the subject of a clause; can also be a predicate noun which follows a "be" verb (am, is, are, was, were, be, being, been) and renames the subject
nominative case noun
cases (3)
nominative, possessive, objective
cases of pronouns (3)
nominative, possessive, objective
a word that names something, a person, a place, a thing, or an idea
noun (governor, Oregon, hospital, etc.)
indicates whether the noun is singular or plural
number
nouns are grouped according to their (3)
number, gender, case
noun that can be a direct object, an indirect object, or an object of the preposition
objective case nouns
phrasal nouns include
one another, each other
a verbal phrase is based on
one of the three types of verbals (gerund, infinitive, participle)
a sentence is made up of
one or more words that express a complete thought
phrase that consists of a pst or present participle and its modifiers; whole phrase functions as an adjective
participial phrase (FOLLOWING HIS NOSE, the beagle took off)
a verb form ending in ing or ed that acts as an adjective
participle
voice that indicates that the subject of the verb is being, has been, or will be acted upon
passive voice
pronoun that can take the place of any noun
personal pronoun (I, me, we, they, his, etc.)
classes of pronouns (6)
personal, reflexive and intensive, relative, indefinite, interrogative, demonstative
a gorup of related words that function as a single part os peech
phrase
adverbs that tell where, to where, and from where)
place (here, nearby, forward, etc.)
form of adjectives that describes a noun or pronoun without comparing it to anyone of anything else
positive form
forms of adjectives (3)
positive, comparative, superlative
forms of adverbs (3)
positive, comparative, superlative
noun that shows possession or ownership
possessive case
the part of the sentence that shows action or says something about the subject
predicate
adjective that follows a form of the "be" verb (or other linking verb) and describes the subject
predicate adjective
the first word (or group of words) in a prepositional phrase; shows the relationship between its object and another word in the sentence
preposition (to, at, from, of, since, without, etc.)
includes the preposition, the object of the preposition, and the modifiers of the object; functions as an adverb o as an adjective
prepositional phrase
phrase that is a group of words beginning with a preposition and ending with a noun or pronoun; function mainly as adjectives and adverbs
prepositional phrase (Zach won the race IN RECORD TIME)
a word used in place of a noun
pronoun (I, you, she, it, etc.)
adjective that is created from a proper noun and is captialized
proper adjective (Canadian, etc.)
names a particular person, place, thing or idea; always capitalized
proper noun (Jackie Robinson, Christianity, etc.)
classes of nouns (5)
proper, common, concrete, abstract, collective
pronoun that relates an adjective clause to the noun or pronoun it modifies
relative pronoun (what, who, whose, whom, which, that, etc.)
predicate without its modifiers
simple predicate
the subject without its modifiers
simple subject
types of pronouns (3)
simple, compound, phrasal
mood that is no longer commonly used
subjunctive
use the _____ mood to express a condition that is contrary to fact, to express an unreal condition, in clauses to express necessity, legal decisions, or parliamentary motions
subjunctive
conjunctions that connect 2 clauses that are not equally important, thereby showing the relationship between them; connects a dependent clause to an independent clause in order to complete the meaning of the dependent clause
subordinating conjunctions (after, although, as, as if, as long as, unless, because, in order that, since, while, etc.)
form of adjectives that compares three or more persons, places, things, or ideas
superlative form (-est, most, least, etc.)
the part of the sentence that says something about the subject and contains the verb
the predicate
the part of the sentence about which something is said
the subject
adverbs that tell when, how often, and how long
time (today, daily, briefly, etc.)
types of adverbs (4)
time, place, manner, degree
an action verb that needs an object to complete its meaning
transitive verb
a word that expresses action or state of being
verb
phrase that consists of a main verb preceded by one or more helping verbs
verb phrase (the snow HAS BEEN FALLING for days)
a word that is derived from a verb but acts as another part of speech
verbals
indicates whether the subject is acting or being acted upon
voice