Parts of Speech # 1

Parts of Speech # 1

<p> PARTS OF SPEECH STUDY SHEET # 1</p><p>1. sentence: A sentence begins with a capital letter and has ending punctuation. Is a complete thought that has a subject and a predicate. e.g. My friend bought a new computer. (subject) (predicate) 2. noun: A noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or idea. Anything you can see is a noun. e.g. girl, Los Angeles, book, peace.</p><p>3. pronoun: A pronoun is used to replace a noun. e.g. he, that, who, it, she Two types of pronouns are nominative case and objective case.  Nominative case pronouns (I, you, he, she, it, we, they) are used as subjects of a sentence. Example: He ate the banana.  Objective case pronouns (me, you, him, her, it, us, and them) are used in the predicate of the sentence as a direct object, indirect object, or object of the preposition.  Examples: Our puppy likes him., Hand her the keys., You can ride with me. </p><p>4. adjective: Adjectives describe, modify or add to nouns and pronouns. e.g. big, tall, red, beautiful</p><p>5. verb: Verbs are words that express an action or a state of being. Verbs are what you DO! (There are also linking and helping verbs) e.g. talk, run, think, be, is</p><p>6. adverb: Adverbs describe, modify, or add to verbs (or adjectives). They usually end in -ly. Adverbs also tell us time and place. e.g. very, carefully, fast, loudly, today.</p><p>7. conjunction: Conjunctions connect or join other words, phrases, or clauses. Remember "FANBOYS" to help you remember the coordinating conjunctions: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so. e.g. and, but, because, while, or, yet.</p><p>8. preposition: Prepositions tell position. Prepositions tell position in place or time 95% of the time. Think of prepositions as anything you can do to a cloud. e.g. on, by, in, to, for, under, about, around, through, with, over.</p><p>9. interjection: Interjections show strong or sudden emotion, or excitement. They usually include exclamation marks. If the feeling is not as strong, interjections are followed by a comma. e.g. Ouch!, Oh!, Wonderful! Wow, Hallelujah!</p><p>10. article: Articles tell you that a noun is coming. There are only three articles in the world: a, an, or the.</p><p>DICTATION SENTENCE TO DIAGRAM</p><p>The talented teacher tirelessly tried teaching trigonometry while</p><p> twirling around her table.</p>

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