Title: Grammar
1Grammar
28 parts of speech
- noun
- pronoun
- verb
- adjective
- adverb
- preposition
- conjunction
- interjection
38 parts of speech
- noun
- pronoun
- verb
- adjective
- adverb
- preposition
- conjunction
- interjection
Nouns Gerunds Infinitives Noun Clauses
48 parts of speech
- noun
- pronoun
- verb
- adjective
- adverb
- preposition
- conjunction
- interjection
- Tenses
- Active Vs Passive
- Modals auxiliary verbs
58 parts of speech
- noun
- pronoun
- verb
- adjective
- adverb
- preposition
- conjunction
- interjection
Adjectives are words that describe or modify
another person or thing in the sentence. (The
Articles a, an, and the are adjectives.
His, their, our , etc. are Possessive
Adjectives.)
- the tall professor
- a solid commitment
- a month's pay
- a six-year-old child
- the unhappiest, richest man
68 parts of speech
- noun
- pronoun
- verb
- adjective
- adverb
- preposition
- conjunction
- interjection
Adjective Clause a group of words containing a
subject and verb acts as an adjective My sister,
who is much older than I am, is an engineer.
If an adjective clause is stripped of its subject
and verb, the resulting modifier becomes an
Adjective Phrase He is the man who is keeping my
family in the poorhouse.
78 parts of speech
- noun
- pronoun
- verb
- adjective
- adverb
- preposition
- conjunction
- interjection
- Adverbs phrases
- Adverb clauses (Time, Conditionals, etc.)
8Clause Vs Phrase
- a meaningful group of words
- with subject
- with verb
- stands alone as a sentence
- e.g. They sang. We listened.
- a meaningful group of words
- no subject
- no verb
- part of a sentence
- e.g. every Saturday, make fun of, for Gods sake
9Simple Sentence 1 clause (1 noun/pronoun )
1 verb ( )
- CRY! or RUN!
- The man cries.
- He cries every morning.
- The old man cries every morning.
- The old man living next door cries every morning.
- The miserable old man living next door cries
loudly every morning. - The miserable old man living next door cries
loudly every morning to get his wifes attention.
10Compound Sentence clauses
- made up of two or more independent/ coordinate
clauses (but no subordinate clauses.) - usually joined by conjunctions and/or some kind
of punctuation. -
- I will go home and he will go to work.
- John likes hamburgers, but Mary prefers hot dogs.
- We might go to Seattle, or we might go to
California.
11Simple Vs Compound
- Simple
- Canada is a rich country.
- Simple
- Still, it has many poor people.
- Compound
- Canada is a rich country, but still it has many
poor people.
12Complex Sentence clauses
- A complex sentence contains one independent
clause and at least one dependent/subordinate
clause - The committee will meet when the Chief Executive
is in Macau.
13Compare
- Simple
- My friend invited me to a party. I do not want to
go. - Compound
- My friend invited me to a party, but I do not
want to go. - Complex
- Although my friend invited me to a party, I do
not want to go.
14Compound-Complex Sentence
- joins two complex sentences, or
- joins one simple sentence and one complex
sentence - The package arrived in the morning, but the
courier left before I could check the contents.
15More about Nouns
- Gerunds Infinitives - their NOUN roles
- http//webster.commnet.edu/grammar/gerunds.htm
- Playing basketball takes up too much of her time.
- To play basketball for UConn is her favorite
fantasy. - Appositives A word, phrase or clause that means
the same thing as (ie, synonym) or further
explains another noun (pronoun). - e.g. My favorite place, the English building,
is located on the Quad, a grassy square in the
middle of the campus. -
http//owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/gra
mmar/g_appos.html - Her desire to play basketball for UConn
became an obsession. - Her one burning desire in life, playing
basketball for UConn, seemed a goal within reach.
16Noun Clauses
- Noun clauses dependent/subordinate clauses that
act as nouns FOG Unit 22, 23 - What I really hate is people who borrow money
and don't pay it back. (Noun clause acting as a
subject) - I don't know who he is. (Noun clause acting as
a direct object). - Noun Clauses usually begin with Subordinators
how, however, if, that, what, whatever, where,
which, whichever, whose, whether (or
not)........etc