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Noun
Names a person, place, thing, or idea.
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Common noun
- General, not particular, name of noun.
- Nurse, hospital, syringe.
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Proper nob
- Official name of noun.
- Michael, London, Washington University.
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Abstract noun
- The name of a quality or general idea.
- Persistence, democracy.
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Collective noun
- Represents a group of persons, animals, or things.
- Family, flock, furniture.
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Pronoun
Takes the place of a noun, another pronoun, or a group of words acting as a noun. The word to which a pronoun refers to is the antecedent.
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Personal pronoun
Refers to a specific person, place, thing, or idea by indicating first,second, or third person. Can be singular or plural.
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Possessive pronoun
- Shows possession or ownership.
- My book, the book is mine.
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Preposition
Shows the relationship of a noun or pronoun to some other word in the sentence.
- Compound preposition:More than one words
- Prepositional phrase: Group of words that begin with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun, which is called the object of the preposition.
- Michael left at noon. She learned basics of grammar.
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Adjective
Word, phrase, or clause that modifies a noun. It answers the questions what kind, which one, how many,or how much.
- Participle: A type of verb that functions as an adjective, usually ends in -ing or -ed.
- Absent-minded professor.
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Verb
Expresses an action or state of being. Expresses time through past, present, and future tense.
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Linking verb
Link the subject of a sentence to a noun, pronoun, or predicate adjective. Does not show action.
- -Commonly used linking verbs are forms of to be: am, is, are, was, were, being, been.
- - Can relate to 5 senses: look, sound, smell, feel, taste.
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Can reflect a state of being: aappear, seem, become brow, turn, prove, remain.
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Adverb
- Modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb.
- Operates quickly, very somber, quite badly.
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Conjunction
Joins words, phrases, or clauses.
Coordinating conjunctions: and, but, or, so, nor.
Correlative ccconjuctions work in pairs to join words or phrases. Neither/nor.
SSubordinating conjunctions join 2 clauses or thoughts. While he was away, she studied.
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Interjection
Expresses emotion or exclamation, no grammatical connection to the rest of the sentence. Yikes, whew.
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