Monday, April 3, 2017
Parts Of Speech
Words can be considered as the smallest independent elements in language and communication. In the English language, words can be classified under 8 major word types or parts of speech namely, nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs, adverbs, conjunctions, prepositions, and interjections. In this article, you will learn more about the most common and simplest word type, which are the nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs, and adverbs.
Noun
A noun is generally defined as a person, place, or thing; however, ideas are also nouns. Nouns have sometimes been defined in terms of the grammatical categories to which they are subject (classed by gender, inflected for case and number). Such definitions tend to be language-specific, since nouns do not have the same categories in all languages. Nouns are often preceded by "noun markers," the words a, an, and the. The word answering "who or what" asked after a noun marker will be a noun. Nouns usually form a plural by adding an s. If you are unsure if a word is a noun, try adding s to mean more than one. If it works, the word is probably a noun.
- They are abstract or concrete.
Abstract nouns name things we cannot
see, touch, or detect readily through our senses. Abstract nouns name ideas
(existentialism, democracy), measurements (weight, percent), emotions (smile, love),
or qualities (responsibility). Concrete nouns, on the other hand, name persons,
including animals (cousins, Roger Rabbit), places (mountain, home), or things
we can see, touch, or otherwise detect through our senses (smoke, beer).
- They are proper or common.
A proper noun identifies a
particular person, animal, place, thing, or idea--Roger Rabbit, for example.
The first letter of each word of a proper noun is capitalized. A common noun
does not name a particular person or thing; rather, it refers to a whole class
or type. Common nouns do not require capitalization.
- Most are singular or plural
Most nouns are made plural with the
addition of s or es. Thus, instructor becomes instructors, and class becomes
classes. Some nouns have irregular plural forms: man becomes men, and woman
becomes women. Child becomes children, and person becomes people. Some nouns
have the same form in both singular and plural: "A moose is crossing the
river. No, wait--three moose are crossing the river!"
- Some are collective.
A collective noun names a collection
or group of things. Although a collective noun refers to a group of many
things, it is usually singular in form.
Pronoun
A pronoun is a part of a speech which
functions as a replacement for a noun. Pronouns are used in place of anoun that has already been mentioned or
that is already known, often to avoid repeating the noun. For example, you
could say, “Najwa is a nice girl". Then you could replace the noun “Najwa” with the word “She” and get the
following sentence: “She is a nice girl.” “She” is a pronoun.
Example
sentences:
- He doesn’t want go with them.
- Would they help us?
- His house is bigger than ours.
- Who is she?
Verb
A
verb is a word that describes action or doing or a state of being. Verb is
used to show an act/acts from subject, situation, or conditions. The second part of this definition is important, as many believe that
verbs are always action words that can be visualized. This is true of action
verbs: Go, jump, sleep, eat,
think, be, change, become, drive, etc.
Regular Verb
Verb that past tense and participle form added suffix -ed to base form.
Base Form
|
Study
|
Walk
|
Clean
|
Past Tense
|
Studied
|
Walked
|
Cleaned
|
Past Participle
|
Studied
|
Walked
|
Cleaned
|
Irregular Verb
Verb that past tense and participle form added with
anyways. There is verb that both in past
tense and participle has
same form. And also there is verb that has different form between base form, past tense, and participle. And others have many same
forms between past tense and participle form.
Irregular Verb
|
Base Form
|
Past Tense
|
Past
Participle
|
Same base form, past tense,
& participle form
|
Let
|
Let
|
Let
|
Put
|
Put
|
Put
|
|
Read
|
Read
|
Read
|
|
Different base form, past tense,
& participle form
|
Break
|
Broke
|
Broken
|
Forget
|
Forgot
|
Forgotten
|
|
Go
|
Went
|
Gone
|
|
Same past tense & participle form
|
Have
|
Had
|
Had
|
Leave
|
Left
|
Left
|
|
Meet
|
Met
|
Met
|
|
Same base form & participle form
|
Come
|
Came
|
Come
|
Run
|
Ran
|
Run
|
Adverbs
- Adverb of time (yesterday, now)
- Adverb of manner (softly, quickly)
- Adverb of degree (very, so)
- Adverb of modality (likely, maybe)
- Adverb of frequency (always, sometimes)
- Adverb of place (here, somewhere)
- Adverb of focus (also, only)
- The teacher carefully graded the homework (Carefully is an adverb that modifies the action verb to grade)
- We left it here (here modifies the verb phrase left it, indicating place)
- I worked yesterday (yesterday modifies the verb worked, indicating time)
Adjectives
An adjective often comes before a noun:
- A yellow flower.
- A dark sky.
- An interesting story.
- My flower is yellow.
- The sky became dark.
- His story seemed interesting.
But adjectives can also modify pronouns (She is beautiful). Look at these examples:
- They were empty.
- I thought it seemed strange.
- Those are not expensive.
References :
- http://www.butte.edu/departments/cas/tipsheets/grammar/parts_of_speech.html
- http://www.edb.utexas.edu/minliu/pbl/ESOL/help/libry/speech.htm
- https://www.englishclub.com/grammar/parts-of-speech.htm
- http://www.aims.edu/
- http://www.csi.edu
- https://www.wordsmile.com/contoh-regular-irregular-verbs-1-2-3-artinya
- http://www.really-learn-english.com/english-parts-of-speech.html
- http://mc.libguides.com/c.php?g=39012&p=247960
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