Skip to main content

Parts of speech



Noun:
Noun is a name of a person, place, animal and things.
1.Ex:  Rahul is a name of a Person.
2.Hyd is a name of a place.
3.Tiger is a name of a Animal.
4.Table is a name of a Thing.


Kind of Noun:
1) Common noun
2)Proper noun
3)Abstract noun
4)Collective noun


 Common Noun:
Common Noun is a name of a common person.
Ex: Boy, girl, man, woman, oldman, oldwoman,etc.


Proper Noun:
Proper noun is a proper name of a person, place, and thing.
Ex: India, Tiger, Table, Hyd.


Abstract Noun:
Abstract noun is a noun which cannto be seen or touch but we can fill it.
Ex: Air, Knowledge, Honesty, Joy.


Collective Noun:
Collection of noun.
Ex: Army- Collection of soldiers
Libray- Collection of books.

Pronouns:
Pronouns is use instead of noun.
Ex:I, we, you, they, he, she, it
Ex: He takes tea
He-pronoun
Takes-verb
Tea-object
Adjective:
words which are used to modify nons or pronouns are usually refered to as adjective
Ex: He is a good boy (good is a adjective)
Ravi is a clever man (clever is a adjective)


Conjunction:
Joining of sentences is called conjunction
Ex: I know english and urdu
He is still bachelor


Interjection:
An interjection is a word used to express some sudden emotion of the mind
Ex: Alas!, Wahoo!, Ho!, Oops!.


Preposition:
Preposition occupies a place before a noun or preposition comes before a noun. Without preposition s sentence is incomplete.
Ex: About, above, below, under, on, at, towards, beside, plus, per, during, between, among, of, in, from, since, for, etc.
1.I know about Rahul.
2.He above to come.
3.He is below 2 year.
4.The cat is under the table.
5.The cap is on the table.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Grammar Rules Review

Grammar Rules Review This is a quick, basic grammar review for nouns, verbs, and the sometimes confusing usage of lay versus lie, and rise versus raise. This reference can be used for term papers, grammar class reviews, or simply for anyone confused or curious about the basics of English grammar. Nouns 1. Noun identification 2. Count, Mass, and Collective Nouns 3. Plural and Possessive Nouns Noun Identification What is a noun? A noun is a person, place, thing, quality, animal, idea or activity. For example: Person — Maria Place — Detroit Thing — Desk Quality — Width Animal — Dog Idea — Independence Activity — Navigation Spot the nouns in a sentence: Maria went into the city to purchase detergent. Nouns: Person — Maria Place — City Thing — Detergent The functions of nouns Nouns sometimes function differently in sentences. For example: Subject: Maria likes ice cream Object of Preposition: He gave the ice cream to Maria Subject complement: The best customer is Maria Grammar vocabulary: N...

Conversations in English

Telephoning in English includes learning a number of special phrases, as well as focusing on listening skills. Some of the most important phrases include how to answer the phone, how to ask for others, how to connect, and how to take messages. Start with Role Playing Begin by learning important telephone English with the dialogue below. Here is a short telephone conversation with some of the key phrases: Operator: Hello, Frank and Brothers, How can I help you? Peter: This is Peter Jackson. Can I have extension 3421? Operator: Certainly, hold on a minute, I'll put you through... Frank: Bob Peterson's office, Frank speaking. Peter: This is Peter Jackson calling, is Bob in? Frank: I'm afraid he's out at the moment. Can I take a message? Peter: Yes, Could you ask him to call me at . I need to talk to him about the Nuovo line, it's urgent. Frank: Could you repeat the number please? Peter: Yes, that's , and this is Peter Jackson. Frank: Thank you Mr Jackson, ...

Syntax - English sentence structure

Introduction: This page contains some basic information about sentence structure (syntax) and sentence types. It also includes examples of common sentence problems in written English. ESL students who understand the information on this page and follow the advice have a better chance of writing well. [Note to teachers/advanced students] [Presentation mode] Definition: Linguists have problems in agreeing how to define the word sentence. For this web page, sentence will be taken to mean: 'a sequence of words whose first word starts with a capital letter and whose last word is followed by an end punctuation mark (period/full stop or question mark or exclamamtion mark)'. On the basis of this definition, some of the sentences written by ESL students (indeed by all writers) will be correct, and other sentences will be problematic. Good readers (teachers, for example!) can quickly see the difference between a correct and a problematic sentence. Subject/predicate: All sentences are a...