DGP MONDAY NOTES (Parts of Speech)

NOUN PRONOUN ADVERB ADJECTIVE PREPOSITIONS

CONJUNCTION VERB VERBAL

1) NOUNS are a person, place, thing, idea...

Common: begins with lower case letter (city)

Proper: begins with capital letter (Memphis)

Possessive: shows ownership (girl’s)

2) PRONOUNS take the place of a noun…hence the word…proNOUN

6 Types of pronouns:

*personal

*reflexive

*relative

*indefinite

*interrogative

*demonstrative

Personal PRONOUN

1st person…pronouns having to do with “me”

2nd person…pronouns having to do with “you”

3rd person…pronouns having to do with everyone else

Singular nominative…I, you, he, she, it

Plural nominative…we, you, they

Singular objective…me, you, him, her, it

Plural objective…us, you, them

Singular possessive…my, your, his, her, its, mine, yours

Plural possessive…our, your, their, ours, yours, theirs

Reflexive PRONOUN reflects back to “self”

Myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves

NOTE: hisself, ourself, thierselves DO NOT exist in the English language…

Relative PRONOUN starts dependent clauses.

that

which

who

whom

whose

Indefinite PRONOUN does not refer to a definite person or thing

each, either, neither, some, all, most, several, few, many, none, one, someone, no one, everyone, anyone, somebody, nobody, everybody, anybody, more, much, another, both any, other, etc.

DGP MONDAY NOTES (Parts of Speech) continued

Interrogative PRONOUN asks a question.

Which?

Whose?

What?

Whom?

Who?

Demonstrative PRONOUN demonstrates which one.

this

that

these

those

3) ADVERBS modify:

adjectives really cute

verbs carefully planned

other adverbs very easily

ADVERBS tell… How? When? Where? To what extent?

NOT is ALWAYS an adverb.

4) ADJECTIVES modify:

nouns I have a green pen.

pronouns They are happy.

ADJECTIVES tell… Which one?

How many?

What kind?

Articles… a, an, and the are Adjectives

5) PREPOSITIONS show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and some other word in the sentence.

Think about a squirrel and the tree or a spider and its’ web, they can… across, after, against, around, at, before, below, between, by, during, except, for, from, in, of, off, on, over, since, through, to, under, until, with, according to, because of, instead of, etc.

DGP MONDAY NOTES (Parts of Speech) continued

6) CONJUNCTIONS join words, phrases, and clauses

3 Types of CONJUNCTIONS

*Coordinating

*Subordinating

*Correlative

Coordinating CONJUNCTION

F for

A and

N nor

B but

O or

Y yet

S so

Subordinating CONJUNCTIONS start dependent clauses (and therefore must be followed by the subject and verb)

after, since, before, while, because, although, so that, if, when, whenever, as, even though, until, unless, as if, etc.

Correlative CONJUNCTION

not only/but also

neither/nor

either/or

both/and

7) VERBS show the action or helps to make a statement.

3 types of VERBS

*Action

*Linking

*Helping

Action VERBS shows action

She wrote a note.

Linking VERBS link two words together

is, be, am, are, was, were, been, being, appear, become, feel, grow, look, remain, seem, smell, sound, stay, taste

English is fun (English = fun)

The game is on Saturday. (action)

The flower smells pretty. (flower = pretty)

The dog smells the flower. (action)

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Helping VERBS do just as the name implies…help out the main verb in a sentence. Any time you see a verb ending in “ing”, a helping verb usually accompanies it. They all fall into one of two groups: primary helping verbs and modal helping verbs.

The primary helping verbs are be, do, and have.

The term “be verbs” is a little deceiving because they include more than the word “be.”

Here is a list of “be” verb forms: am, is, are, was, were, been, being, be.

The helping verb have is used to make perfect tenses. The perfect tense shows action that is already completed. I have finished washing the dishes.

The verb “do” can perform a variety of functions:

To make negatives: I do not care for broccoli.

To ask questions: Do you like broccoli?

To show emphasis: I do you want you to eat your broccoli.

To stand for a main verb: Sam like broccoli more than Carmen does.

Modal helping verbs help “modify” the main verb so that is changes the meaning somewhat. They help express possibility or necessity. They are can, could, may, might, will, would, shall, should, must.

The bus may arrive on time this morning.

It might be full of rowdy passengers, though.

VERB tenses

Present…happening now (jump, talk, eat, falling, is falling, am falling)

Past…happened previously (jumped, talked, ate, fell, was falling)

Future…will happen in the future (will jump, shall talk, will be eating)

Present perfect…have or has plus past participle (have jumped, has talked, have been eating, has been falling)

Past perfect…had plus the past participle (had jumped, had talked, had been eating)

Future perfect…will have or shall have plus past participle (will have jumped, shall have talked, will have been eating)

8) VERBALS are verbs that do not behave as a verb.

Gerunds are verbs that act like a noun and end in “-ing”…Reading is fun. (subj.) I hate shopping. (D.O.) Use pencils for drawing. (O.P)

Participles are verbs that act like an adjective and end in “-ing” or “-ed” (or other past tense ending)…I have running shoes. Frightened, I ran down the street. It’s an unspoken rule.

Infinitive is to + verb and can act like a noun (I like to eat.), adjective (It’s the best place to eat.), or adverb (I need a pen to write a letter.)

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