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Saturday, March 9, 2013

ENGLISH CLUB
Posted by DHILIP TEACHER at 1:03 AM No comments:
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      Grammar Glossary
  • 1. Verbs
  • 2. Present
    • Imperative
    • Present Continuous
    • Present Simple
    • There is / There are
    • To Be Present
    • To Have Present
  • 3. Past
    • Past Continuous
    • Simple Past
    • There was / There were
    • To Be Past
  • 4. Future
    • Be Going to ...
    • Simple Future
  • 5. Can
  • 6. Make / Do
  • Adjectives
  • Adverbs
  • Antonyms
  • Articles/Determiners
    • Some / Any / No
  • Compound Words
  • Contractions
  • Countable/Uncountable
    • (A) few / (A) little
    • Much / Many / A lot
  • Demonstratives
  • Homonyms
  • Homophones
  • Idioms
  • Making Sentences
    • Punctuation
  • Nouns
  • Parts of Speech
  • Plurals
  • Possessives
    • Genitive Case
  • Prefixes and Suffixes
  • Prepositions
    • Place
    • Time
  • Pronouns
  • Question Words
  • Syllables
  • Synonyms
    • Grammar Glossary
  • 1. Verbs
  • 2. Present
    • Imperative
    • Present Continuous
    • Present Simple
    • There is / There are
    • To Be Present
    • To Have Present
  • 3. Past
    • Past Continuous
    • Simple Past
    • There was / There were
    • To Be Past
  • 4. Future
    • Be Going to ...
    • Simple Future
  • 5. Can
  • 6. Make / Do
  • Adjectives
  • Adverbs
  • Antonyms
  • Articles/Determiners
    • Some / Any / No
  • Compound Words
  • Contractions
  • Countable/Uncountable
    • (A) few / (A) little
    • Much / Many / A lot
  • Demonstratives
  • Homonyms
  • Homophones
  • Idioms
  • Making Sentences
    • Punctuation
  • Nouns
  • Parts of Speech
  • Plurals
  • Possessives
    • Genitive Case
  • Prefixes and Suffixes
  • Prepositions
    • Place
    • Time
  • Pronouns
  • Question Words
  • Syllables
  • Synonyms

FIGURES OF SPEECH

Figures of Speech
blt1Adjunction Examples
blt1Allegory Examples
blt1Alliteration Examples
blt1Allusion Examples
blt1Anadiplosis Examples
blt1Analogy Examples
blt1Anaphora Examples
blt1Anastrophe Examples
blt1Antecedent Examples
blt1Anticlimax Examples
blt1Antimetabole Examples
blt1Antithesis Examples
blt1Antonomasia Examples
blt1Apostrophes Examples
blt1Appositive Examples
blt1Assonance Examples
blt1Asyndeton Examples
blt1Chiasmus Examples
blt1Climax Examples
blt1Consonance Examples
blt1Double Negative Examples
blt1Enthymeme Examples
blt1Epistrophe Examples
blt1Epithet Examples
blt1Euphemism Examples
blt1False Analogy Examples
blt1Funny Metaphors Examples
blt1Hyperbole Examples
blt1Idiom Examples
blt1Imagery Examples
blt1Irony Examples
blt1Jargon Examples
blt1Examples Of Litotes
blt1Metaphor Examples
blt1Metonymy Examples
blt1Onomatopoeia Examples
blt1Oxymoron Examples
blt1Palindrome Examples
blt1Paralipsis Examples
blt1Parallelism Examples
blt1Parenthesis Examples
blt1Personification Examples
blt1Polysyndeton Examples
blt1Pun Examples
blt1Rhetorical Questions Examples
blt1Simile Examples
blt1Stereotypes Examples
blt1Symbolism Examples
blt1Synecdoche Examples
blt1Tautology Examples
blt1Understatement Examples
blt1Verbal Irony Examples
blt1Zeugma Examples
blt1Abstract Nouns Examples
blt1Commonly Misspelled Words
blt1Types Of Verbs
blt1Usage Of Semicolon
blt1Demonstrative Adjectives
blt1Comma Splice Examples
blt1Usage Of Colon
blt1Apostrophe Usage
blt1Helping Verbs
blt1List of Prepositions
blt1Parts Of Speech
blt1What Are Prepositions
blt1What Is A Noun
blt1Whom Vs Who
blt1Types Of Adjectives
blt1Types Of Sentences
blt1Types Of Tenses
blt1What Are Adjectives
blt1What Are Adverbs
blt1What Is A Predicate
blt1What Is A Pronoun
blt1Ensure Vs Insure
blt1Empathy Vs Sympathy
blt1Degrees of Comparison
blt1Dangling Modifiers
blt1Compliment Vs Complement
blt1Common Homophones List
blt1Common Grammatical Errors
blt1Colon Vs Semicolon
blt1Affect Vs Effect
blt1Linking Verbs
blt1Prepositional Phrases List
blt1Types of Clauses
blt1Use Of Articles In English
blt1When To Use A Comma
blt1When To Use A Hyphen
blt1Passive Voice & Active Voice
blt1Subject Verb Agreement
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ENGLISH GRAMMAR WORKSHEETS

  • ENGLISH GRAMMAR WORKSHEETS

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PARTS OF SPEECH -LESSON 1

Parts of Speech
Chapter 1 Introduction

Learning about the parts of speech is the first step in grammar study just as learning the letters of the alphabet is the first step to being able to read and write. From learning the parts of speech we begin to understand the use or function of words and how words are joined together to make meaningful communication. To understand what a part of speech is, you must understand the idea of putting similar things together into groups or categories. Let's look at some examples of categories.

COLORS
FRUITS
DRINKS
LANGUAGES
bluebananamilkTamil
redapplewaterTelugu
yelloworangesodaHindi
greengrapebeerEnglish
blacklemoncoffeeMalayalam

Colors, fruits, drinks, and languages are categories. If I tell you that Grebo is a language, you would understand exactly what Grebo is. If we did not have the category language, it would be hard to explain what is meant by the word Grebo. It is very convenient to have categories to talk about similar things. Let's look at some more examples of categories. In the list below, which does not belong with the others?

a) violin
b) hammer
c) drums
d) piano
e) guitar

If you chose hammer, you are right. Violin, drums, piano, and guitar are used to make music, but a hammer is not used to make music. Hammer doesn't fit with the other words because it is a tool and all of the others are musical instruments.

Let's try another example. Which of these does not belong with the others?

a) hammer
b) saw
c) violin
c) screwdriver
d) wrench

This time, the word violin does not belong because it is not a tool. It is very useful to have categories like musical instruments and tools to organize our ideas. The parts of speech arecategories used to organize or classify words according to how they are used. We use parts of speech as a way to make it easier to talk about language.

The philosopher Aristotle and later scientists studied animals and classified them according to what they have in common. For example, eagles, robins and sparrows are kinds of birds;sharks, salmon and tuna are kinds of fish; and dogs, horses and elephants are kinds of mammals. Aristotle and others also studied language and classified words according to what they have in common. We usually use 8 categories or parts of speech to classify all the words we use in English. This classification is not perfect. Sometimes it is hard to tell which category a word belongs in. The same word may belong in different categories depending on how it is used. There may be better ways to classify English than by using the 8 parts of speech. But thisclassification has been used for a long time and many grammar books use it, so it is easier to keep on using it. It is possible to speak or learn a language without knowing the parts of speech, but for most of us, knowing about parts of speech makes things easier.

Here is an example of how it can be helpful to know about the parts of speech. Look at the sentence: The man surreptitiously entered the room. You probably don't know the meaning of the word surreptitiously, but if you know about parts of speech, you will recognize that it is an adverb and that it tells you something about how the man entered the room. You may still not understand the exact meaning of the word, but you can understand the whole sentence better than if you did not know about parts of speech.

When you look up a word in a dictionary, you will find not only the meaning of the word but also what part of speech it is. This information is very helpful in understanding the full meaning of the word and knowing how to use it.

The 8 parts of speech that are used to describe English words are:

Nouns
Verbs
Adjectives
Adverbs
Pronouns
Prepositions
Conjunctions
Articles

This set of lessons will teach you about each of the parts of speech and show how they are different from each other. They will help you recognize which part of speech each word in a sentence is and that will help you become a better reader. Review this lesson as many times as you want, and when you are ready, take the pop quiz on this chapter.

END OF CHAPTER 1

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