The word any is what part of speech

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The word any is an adverb.

It can also be used as a determiner and a pronoun.

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When the word if begins a sentence what is the part of speech?

it depends what word it is it could be any part of speech
depending on the sentence


What part of speech is -ical?

«-ical» isn’t any part of speech. It’s a suffix (noun) added to
a word to create an adjective.


Part of speech for manufacturing?

part of speech


What parts of speech may be in a predicate?

An active verb is required; any other part of speech may be
present.


Are adjectives part of speech or sentence part?

An adjective is a part of speech.

Related questions

People also asked

§ 2. Classification of pronouns.

Pronouns fall under the
following groups:

  1. personal
    pronouns:
    /, he,
    she, it, we, you, they.

  2. possessive
    pronouns:
    my,
    his, her, its, our, your, their;

mine, his, hers, ours,
yours, theirs.

(3) reflexive
pronouns:
myself,
himself, herself, itself, ourselves,

yourself (yourselves),
themselves.

  1. reciprocal
    pronouns:
    each
    other, one another.

  2. demonstrative
    pronouns:
    this
    (these), that (those), such,

(the) same.

(6) interrogative
pronouns:
who,
whose, what, which.
(!)
relative
pronouns:
who,
whose, which, that, as.

  1. conjunctive
    pronouns:
    who,
    whose, which, what.

  2. defining
    pronouns:
    each,
    every, everybody, everyone, every-

thing, all, either,
both, other, another.

(10) indefinite
pronouns:
some,
any, somebody, anybody, some-

thing, anything, someone,
anyone, one.

(11) negative
pronouns:
no,
none, neither, nobody, no one, nothing.

There
is no uniformity of morphological and syntactical char­acteristics
in the groups of pronouns. Some pronouns have the grammatical
categories of person,
gender, case,
and
number.
The
categories
of person and gender (in the third person singular) exist only
in personal and possessive pronouns.

Pronouns
as well as nouns have two cases but whereas some pronouns
(e. g., personal pronouns and the relative and interroga­tive
who)
have
the nominative and objective cases, others (e. g. indefinite
pronouns such as somebody,
reciprocal
pronouns such as one
another,
negative
pronouns such as nobody)
have
the common and
genitive cases.

The
category of number is found in demonstrative pronouns (this
and
that)
and
the defining pronoun other.

Many
pronouns are characterized by double syntactical use (they may
be used as subject, predicative, object, and at the same time as
attribute). Here belong demonstrative pronouns, possessive pro­nouns,
etc.

§ 3. Personal pronouns.

1.
The personal pronouns are: /, he,
she, it, we, you, they.
The
personal pronouns have the grammatical categories of person, case,
number and (in the third person singular) gender.

53

The
personal pronouns have two
cases:
the
nominative
case
and
the objective case.

The
nominative case; /, he,
she, it, we, you, they.
1

The
objective case: me,
him, her, it, us, you, them.
2

The
objective case of the pronouns /, he.,
she, we
is
expressed by
suppletive forms.

In
colloquial speech me,
not
/ is commonly used as a predica­tive:
Who
is there?

It
is me.

The
personal pronouns have two
numbers,
singular
(I,
he, she,
it)
and
pluial (we,
they).

The
second-person pronoun you
is
both singular and plural.

The
pronouns of the third person he,
she, it
distinguish
gender. Male
beings (man,
father, uncle, boy,
etc.)
are referred to as. he;
female
beings (woman,
mother, aunt, girl,
etc.)
are referred to as
she;
inanimate
things (house,
tree, cap,
etc.)
are referred to
as it?

Her
husband
asked
a few questions and sat down to read the

evening
paper. He was a silent man… (Dreiser)

And
then he turned and saw the girl...
She
was
a pale, ethe- !

real creature, with wide,
spiritual eyes and a wealth of golden j

hair.
(London)

He
did not know what to do with his cap,
and
was stuffing it
ij

into
his coat pocket… (London)

As
some nouns denote animate beings of either sex, masculine [
or
feminine (friend,
teacher, servant, cousin,
etc.),
personal pro- j nouns are often used to specify them:

«Tell
your servant that he
must
not use such words to Hend- f rike,
Mr. Allan,» Stella said to me. (Haggard)

2.
Personal pronouns may have different functions in the sen­tence,
those of subject, object, predicative:

I was not free to resume the
interrupted chain of my reflections

till
bed-time… (Ch.
Bronte)
(subject)

He
arranged to meet her
at
the 96th Street station… (Wilson)

(OBJECT)

«Who’s there?»
«It’s me.» «Who’s me?» «George Jackson,
sir.»

(Twain)
(PREDICATIVE)

But
I think that was him
I
spoke to. (Cronin)
(predicative)

1 The
archaic pronoun of the second person singular is thou.

2 The
objective case of thou
is
thee.

3 In
literary style the general principle is to associate with the
pronoun he
words
indicating strong forces, violent passions, violent
actions, big heavenly,
bodies {wind,
fear, love, anger, despair, sun);
and
to associate with the pro-/
noun she
gentler
forces, gentler feelings, smaller heavenly bodies (hope,
mercy,
f
justice,
modesty, moon).

54

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The basic building blocks of any language are the words and sounds of that language. English is no exception. We will start with the categories into which we classify the words of English. It is quite likely that you will already know the names of some or all of the parts of speech. Nevertheless, this is where we must begin.

The parts of speech are as follows:

  • Nouns
  • Pronouns
  • Adjectives
  • Verbs
  • Adverbs
  • Articles
  • Determiners
  • Conjunctions
  • Interjections
  • Prepositions

These are also known as word classes. The terms are familiar to most people, and are in everyday use. However, many people would probably admit that their understanding of some of them is a little sketchy. We will now take each in turn and have a closer look.

Nouns

What are nouns? Very few people with a good knowledge of English would expect to experience any difficulty in picking the nouns out of the following list:

briefcase, open, disc, plate, London, knife, write, usually, and, however, football, sing

My guess is that you probably decided that the following were nouns:

  • briefcase
  • disc
  • plate
  • London
  • knife
  • football

Who knows? Perhaps you are right. Briefcase is certainly a noun and London as a place name must be, but what about knife? This is a more difficult decision. We have no context. What if we found this word in a sentence such as ‘He knifed me!’ — surely here it is a verb? And what about ‘plate’ — is this a noun? Suppose the context were ‘The window was plate glass.’ Or perhaps, ‘The frame had been plated with silver.’ So is ‘disc’ a noun? Not always, it depends on how it is used in a particular sentence. The lesson here is ‘Be careful!’ When a student asks you the meaning of a word, always check the context in which it appears before answering. Remember in the world of TEFL, as in the world in general, it is not what you don’t know that gives you the biggest problems, but what you think you know!

So how can we define the word class ‘noun’ then? One apparently acceptable definition might be that a noun is a word that represents one of the following:

a person

David

a place

Paris

a thing

stapler

an activity

hockey

a quality

responsibility

a state

poverty

an idea

communism

Does a noun have to be a single word? What about ‘disc jockey,’ or ‘post office’? Are these nouns? The answer is ‘Yes they are’. These are called compound nouns and are quite common in English. So the word class ‘noun’ is not restricted to single words. Can a noun consist of more than two words then? Once again the answer is ‘yes’. An example might be ‘football team coach’. These are often found in newspaper headlines, where space is at a premium, since they usually express quite complex ideas in very few words.

In a sentence nouns can be used as either the subject or the object of the main verb.

John (subject) kissed (verb) Maria (object).

Types of Nouns

The word class ‘Nouns’ can be sub-divided into the following four types:

Abstract

The name of an action, an idea, a physical condition, quality or state of mind

an attack, Communism, liveliness, modesty, insanity

Collective

A name for a collection or group of animals, people or things that are thought of as being one thing

flock, gang, fleet

Common

A name that can be applied to all members of a large class of animals, people or things

puppy, woman, banana

Proper

The name by which a particular animal, organisation, person, place or thing is known

Fido, Microsoft, Julia, Liverpool, the Tower of London. Capital letters are used in order to distinguish between common nouns and proper nouns e.g., broom and Broom, where the former is an implement used for sweeping floors while the latter is a surname.

There are some nouns that can be placed in more than one of these groups depending on how we are thinking at the time of usage. An example would be the noun ‘family’, which could be a collective if we are thinking of the family as a unit e.g. ‘My family is quite large.’ Or a common noun if we are thinking in terms of a collection of individuals e.g. Helen’s family are coming up next week.’ Many Americans may find this particular example unacceptable since in most parts of the US ‘family’ can never agree with the plural verb form ‘is’. In British English, however, this usage is perfectly correct.

Nouns can also be divided into two other groups: countable and uncountable. Water, flour and sand are examples of uncountable nouns. It would be very strange to use them with a number as in six flours or three sands. Countable nouns, on the other hand, can be used with numbers: seven men, two houses, etc. Countable nouns have a plural form. This is usually made by the addition of an ‘s’ or ‘es’ to the end of the singular form: guitars, books, ships, glasses etc. Some countable nouns, however, have an irregular plural form: men, children, wives, geese, etc. Plural countable nouns are always used with plural verb forms. So ‘Coconuts are nice.’ and not *’Coconuts is nice.’* Uncountable nouns have only one form and therefore can only be used with singular verbs. So ‘Water is used as a coolant.’ but never *’Water are used as a coolant.’*

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Pronouns

In English, sentences such as ‘John ran up to the house, checked to see John wasn’t being watched and then John knocked on the door twice.’ would cause confusion. How many Johns are involved? Which of them knocked on the door? Probably the solution least likely to occur to a native speaker of English would be that there was only one John and that he carried out all three actions. Why is that? Well, it’s because English just doesn’t work like that! The sentence should be rendered thus ‘John ran up to the house, checked to see he wasn’t being watched and then knocked on the door twice.’ So what makes the difference? Obviously it must be the use of the word ‘he’ in place of John in the second instance. What is ‘he’ then? ‘He’ is a member of the word class Pronouns. These are words that stand in the place of nouns in order to avoid unnecessary repetition.

Kinds of pronoun:

Demonstrative

this, that, these, those, the former, the latter ( ‘Have you seen this?’)

Distributive

each, either, neither ( ‘Give me either.’)

Emphatic

myself, yourself, his/herself, ourselves, etc. ( ‘Do it yourself.’)

Indefinite

one, some, any, some-body/one, any-body/one, every-body/one

Interrogative

what, which, who ( ‘Who was that?’)

Personal

I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they

Possessive

mine, yours hers, his, ours, theirs

Reflexive

myself, yourself, her/himself, ourselves, etc. ( ‘She cut herself, while slicing bread.’)

Relative

that, what, which, who (as in, ‘The car that hit him went that way.’)

It should be noted that some of these words may also at times be deemed adjectives. It is a feature of the English language that many words have multiple uses and hence can be different parts of speech according to the context in which they are found.

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Adjectives

Adjectives are words that describe/qualify nouns or pronouns:

  • ‘She was a quiet woman.’
  • ‘That’s an unusual one.’

Types of adjective

Demonstrative

this, that, these, those (‘I like this picture.‘)

Distributive

either, neither, each, every (‘Either wine is fine by me.‘)

Interrogative

what? which? (‘Which wine would you like?‘)

Numeral

one, two, three, etc.

Indefinite

all, many, several

Possessive

my, your, his, her, our, their

Qualitative

French, wooden, nice

Not surprisingly, most adjectives fit into the ‘Qualitative‘ category, as their basic function is to describe.

Some adjectives are made from nouns or verbs by the addition of a suffix:

  • comfort — comfortable
  • health — healthy
  • success — successful
  • consume — consumable
  • consider — considerate

Many positive adjectives can be made negative by the addition of a prefix:

  • comfortable — uncomfortable
  • responsible — irresponsible
  • respectful — disrespectful
  • patient — impatient
  • considerate — inconsiderate

Comparative and Superlative Adjectives

Some adjectives are used to compare and contrast things:

  • big — bigger — biggest
  • happy — happier — happiest

There is more information about this important use later.

Verbs

Verbs are words that indicate actions or physical and/or mental states.

Action

Susan slapped Michael.

Mental state

Paul was exhausted.

Physical state

Stephen felt sad.

It is a popular misconception that verbs are ‘doing-words‘. Unfortunately, this is too simple an explanation as only some verbs fit this description. An example of one that doesn’t might be ‘seem‘ as in, ‘ Sarah seemed puzzled‘. What is ‘done‘ in this case? Absolutely nothing! In fact, only verbs indicating actions can be called ‘doing-words‘.

Most verbs have three forms. The first form (present) also uses an inflection to indicate third person singular:

First form (present)

Second form (past)

Third form (past participle)

do(es)

did

done

give(s)

gave

given

like(s)

liked

liked

hit(s)

hit

hit

As you can see sometimes the second and third forms coincide, and occasionally all three forms coincide as in ‘hit’. This is because verbs such as hit, give, take, do, have, etc. are irregular. That is to say that, unlike the vast majority of English verbs, they don’t use ‘-ed’ to make their second and third forms. There are only about two hundred irregular verbs in total, but since they tend to be the most common verbs it seems more. These can be quite a problem for EFL students as they simply have to be learnt and remembered.

Auxiliary and Modal Auxiliary Verbs

There is a category of verb known as ‘auxiliary verbs‘ or sometimes ‘helping verbs‘. This category includes to be, to do and to have. These three verbs are very important. ‘Be‘ is used in forming the ‘continuous aspect‘ — I am flying to France tomorrow.’ It is also used to form the ‘passive‘ — ‘I was arrested.’ ‘Do‘ is used in forming questions and for emphasis. ‘Have‘ is used to form the ‘perfect aspect‘ — ‘I have been here before.’ More about these later, when we look at the English tense system.

Also included in the category auxiliary verbs are nine very special verbs, which form a sub-category of their own called ‘modal auxiliary verbs‘ or ‘modal verbs‘ for short. This sub-category comprises the verbs can, could, may, might, shall, should, will, would and must. These nine verbs share some important characteristics:

  • They can never be followed by ‘to‘: ‘I must to go.’ is a badly formed sentence in English.
  • They cannot co-occur in the same verb phrase: ‘You must can go’ is also unacceptable.
  • They have no ‘third person‘ inflection: ‘She likes reading.’ is fine, but ‘ She cans swim.’ is not.

In a verb phrase they always occupy the first position — ‘It must have been my aunt.’ Likewise, they do not have three forms.

So what exactly do these ‘modal verbs‘ do? An interesting question! The following table should give you some idea.

Modal verbs are used to express:

Degrees of certainty

Certainty (positive/negative)

We shall/shan’t come.

I will/won’t be late.

That must/can’t be her.

Probability/Possibility

She should arrive at about midday.

It shouldn’t be a problem.

We may (not) go to France after all.

Weak probability

She might call — you never know!

Don’t worry! It might never happen.

I suppose you could be right.

Theoretical/habitual possibility

You may have a problem

understanding this.

Moscow can be very hot in the summer.

How quickly do you think it could be done?

Conditional certainty/possibility

If you had asked me, I would

have told you.

I’m sure he wouldn’t mind if you called him.

I couldn’t possibly go without you.

Obligation

Strong obligation

All employees must clock in and out.

Must I go?

Passes will be issued to authorised personnel.

Prohibition

Staff must not make personal calls.

You may not smoke in this building.

You can’t bring that dog in here.

Weak obligation/recommendation

When shall we leave?

You should drink less.

It might be a good idea to phone her first.

Willingness/Offering

Can I help you?

Would you like a lift to work?

I could collect it for you.

Permission

Might I ask a favour?

May I use your telephone

Could I bring a friend?

Ability

Can you swim?

How many languages could he speak?

He can type quite quickly.

Other uses

Habitual behaviour

When I was a boy, I would often go skiing.

Most days he‘ll just sit quietly in the garden.

Before we argued he‘d call me every day.

Irritation

Must you do that?

He will keep making stupid jokes all the time!

Will you please shut up?

Requests

Would you open the window please?

Could you tell him I’ll be late.

Will you get me one too please?

Some linguists include verbs such as dare, need and ought in the modal verb sub-category. There is some justification for this, as they display the relevant characteristics some of the time. However, since they do not do so all the time it is better to leave them out of this group.

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Adverbs

Adverbs describe or add to the meaning of verbs, prepositions, adjectives, other adverbs and even sentences. They answer questions such as ‘How’, ‘Where’ or ‘When’. Many, but by no means all, adverbs are made from adjectives by simply adding the suffix ‘ly’.

Types of adverb:

Adverbs of manner

carefully, gently, quickly, willingly (She kissed him gently on the forehead.)

Adverbs of place

here, there, between, externally (He lived between a pub and a noisy factory.)

Adverbs of time

now, annually, tomorrow, recently (I only returned recently.)

Adverbs of degree

very, almost, nearly, too (She is very rich.)

Adverbs of number

Adverbs of certainty

not, surely, maybe, certainly (Surely he’s not drunk again!)

Interrogative

How? What? When? Why? (What does it matter?)

Adverbials

An adverbial is a general term for any word, phrase or clause that functions as an adverb. The definition is necessary because sometimes whole phrases and clauses act as adverbs:

  • When I arrived she was watching TV. (adverbial time clause)
  • We went to France to visit my brother. (adverbial clause of purpose)
  • After breakfast, I went to work. (adverbial phrase)

An ordinary adverb is a single word adverbial.

The adverb/adverbial is quite a difficult area of the English language to get to grips with. It has been said that, when all the other words of English had been classified as nouns, verbs, prepositions, etc., those remaining were dumped into the adverb class because nobody knew what else to do with them. Even if this is not entirely historically accurate, it certainly describes the confused state of this word class.

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Articles

The articles in English are the words ‘a‘, ‘an‘ and ‘the‘. They are used with nouns to distinguish between the definite and the indefinite. They are not really a word class in themselves but are actually a sub-group of the word class Determiners. However, EFL usually treats them as a class and so they are dealt with separately here.

The definite article is ‘the‘. Its most common uses are to show that the nouns it is used with refer to:

something known to both speaker and listener

He is in the garage.

something that has already been mentioned

That woman keeps looking at you.

Which one? The blonde woman?

something that is defined afterwards

The house where my mother was born is somewhere near here.

something as a specific group or class

Can you play the piano? (But not ‘Can you play the instrument?’ — Unless which instrument is being referred to is understood by both speaker and listener.)

The indefinite article is ‘a(n)». I write ‘is’ because ‘a’ and ‘an’ are really the same word: the ‘n’ is added to the article ‘a’ for ease of pronunciation when the following word begins with a vowel sound — an egg, an ostrich, an upwards motion but a unicorn, a united front (because unicorn and united begin with consonant sounds).

The most common uses of the indefinite article are to show that the nouns it is used with refer to:

one example of a group or class

I’ll buy her an ornament for her birthday.

a typical example of a group or class

A reliable worker deserves a good boss.

It should be noted that the indefinite implies ‘oneness’ and so cannot be used with plural or uncountable nouns.

Finally, there are some nouns (apart from plural and uncountable) with which articles are not usually used. Examples of these are the names of countries, towns and cities and of people, months, mealtimes (breakfast, lunch, etc.). Where no article is used this is often referred to as the ‘Zero article‘.

For the EFL student articles either present no difficulty at all, or are a major obstacle in their acquisition of English. The determining factor seems to be whether or not there are articles in the student’s first (native) language (L1). If it doesn’t have them, then the student will have additional problems to face when studying a second language (L2) that does. Even quite advanced students make frequent slips with articles. Compounding the problem is the fact that there are no good rules as far as articles are concerned. Many course books offer ‘rules’ but there are so many exceptions that they are difficult to apply and students have to fall back on learning them by heart. Fortunately,

In order to gain some understanding of the difficulty from a teaching perspective, how would you set about explaining to a student with absolutely no understanding of articles why the fourth of the following sentences is unacceptable in English? Then, having done that, how would you explain why the second is fine?

  1. ‘I stopped the car and got in.’
  2. ‘I stopped a car and got in.’
  3. ‘I stopped the car and got out.’
  4. *’I stopped a car and got out.’*

Or perhaps it is easier to explain why ‘the Moscow’ might be the river Moscow, the hotel Moscow or the restaurant Moscow but couldn’t possibly be the city of that name. Or why, in British English at least, if you are ‘going to the prison’, you are probably visiting someone or maybe you work there, whereas if you are just ‘going to prison’, you are going because you have been convicted of a crime.

By far the biggest problem with articles is not so much when to use ‘a’, ‘an’ or ‘the’ but when not to use an article at all!

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Determiners

As has already been mentioned, the determiners are a word class that would normally include the articles, however, as is usual in TEFL, they have been listed above separately. Even so, it is important for the new teacher to understand that this distinction is false.

Determiners are words that restrict the meaning of the nouns they are used with. For example, ‘But I’m certain I put it in this cupboard. Where can it have got to?’ Even if we cannot see what is happening, we understand, from the speaker’s use of ‘this‘, that there must be more than one cupboard. Despite the obvious similarities, it should be clearly understood that determiners are not adjectives.

Types of determiner:

Articles

a pen, the house

Demonstratives

this hat, these hats, that book, those books

Possessives

my dog, your sunglasses, her car, etc.

Quantifiers

many choices, some people, several hooligans, etc.

Numerals

the second option, seven possibilities, etc.

Determiners can be grouped according to how they are used:

Group A includes the articles, demonstratives and possessives. The use of a Group A determiner allows us to understand whether or not the speaker believes the listener knows which one(s) is being referred to (e.g. a car, the car), or whether the speaker is talking about a specific example(s) or in general. It is not possible to put two group A determiners together in a phrase: so ‘the car‘ is fine but *’the her car‘* is not. If for some reason we want to do so, we have to use a structure using ‘of‘ (e.g. ‘this husband of yours‘).

Group B is composed mainly of quantifiers. It is possible to put two Group B determiners together where their individual meanings allow it. For example, ‘As a punishment for the city’s stubborn resistance, the invaders executed every third person.’

Most Group B determiners do not use ‘of‘ when placed before nouns (‘Do you have any cream?’ not *’Do you have any of cream?’*). However, when used in combination with a Group A determiner, ‘of‘ must be used (‘Several books were badly damaged in the fire.’, but ‘Several of the books were badly damaged in the fire.’). There are a few cases where a Group B determiner is used in combination with ‘of‘ when placed directly before a noun. These are mostly either place names (‘Most of London was destroyed in the great fire.’) or uncountable nouns that refer to entire subjects or activities (‘It is difficult to determine, with any great certainty, exactly what really happened in the past because much of recorded history was set down by interested parties.’).

Another important thing to be aware of, since many EFL students make this mistake, is that the ‘of‘ structure is not used after the Group B determiners ‘no‘ and ‘every‘. Instead ‘none‘ and ‘every one‘ are used (‘Every student was happy.’, but ‘Every one of her students were happy.’).

The correct use of ‘of‘ with determiners is a complex area and warrants more space than is available here. Those wishing to delve into this more deeply are again advised to refer to Michael Swan’s Practical English Usage.

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Conjunctions

Conjunctions are words that join words, phrases or clauses together and show the relationships that exist between them. Examples of these are: but, and, or (these are known as co-ordinating conjunctions).

  • but» is most often used to join and emphasise contrasting ideas: ‘They were exhausted, but very happy.’
  • and‘ is simply used to join things without unduly emphasising any differences that may exist (which is not to say that ‘and» cannot be emphatic — with the right intonation obviously it can be.): ‘He put on his hat, coat and an air of indifference.’

Other conjunctions like ‘when‘, ‘because‘, ‘that‘ are known as subordinating conjunctions and unlike the co-ordinating conjunctions are a part of the clause they join.

  • when‘ is used to join a time clause to the rest of a sentence: ‘I was shocked when they announced they were giving the prize to me’.
  • because‘ joins a fact with its cause: ‘He lied because he thought the truth would hurt her.’
  • that‘ is used to join clauses that are acting as the object of a verb: He promised her that he would come if he could. (Compare the above with He(subject) promised(verb) her(indirect object) a new dress(object))

Conjunctions can consist of more than one word. Examples of these are: ‘such as‘, ‘in order to‘, etc.

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Interjections

Interjections are words such as ‘Yuck!‘, ‘Ugh!‘, and ‘Ouch!‘ which indicate the emotions, like disgust, fear, shock, delight, etc., of the person who utters them.

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Prepositions

Prepositions are words which are used to link nouns, pronouns and gerunds ( the ‘-ing‘ form of a verb which is being used as a noun e.g. ‘At high level Swimming is a very demanding sport.’) to other words. They are often short words like ‘on‘, ‘in‘, ‘up‘, ‘down‘, ‘about‘, etc. They can consist of more than one word: in front of, next to, etc.

In TEFL we talk a lot about prepositions of time, place and movement:

Time

I’ll see you at six o’clock.

I’ll be home by five.

We’re having a party on Christmas eve.

Let’s have a party at Christmas.

Place

I’m in London at the moment.

He’s at work, I’m afraid.

The bookshop is on the second floor.

She always leaves a key under the doormat.

Movement

She went to post office.

He flew here from Guyana.

He leapt over the gate.

An elderly man was slowly climbing up the hill.

These of course are not the only prepositions. The biggest problem for EFL students and therefore for their teachers is that it is almost impossible to predict which preposition combines with which verb, noun or adjective in any particular case, or even whether one is necessary at all. Here are some examples to demonstrate this point:

  • agree with somebody about a subject but on a decision and to a suggestion,
  • angry with somebody about something (at could also be used in both cases), or angry with/at somebody for doing something
  • get/be married to somebody but marry somebody (no preposition)
  • ‘pay for the tickets’, but ‘pay a bill’.

To a native speaker of English these may at first sight seem obvious, but to an EFL student they are impossible to guess. After all what is really wrong with *’get married on somebody’*? This would be perfectly correct in a number of languages. Even native speakers fail to agree on the use of some prepositions: Americans can say ‘Congratulations for your exam results!’, or ‘In America football is different than soccer.’ but these feel very wrong to the British, who would prefer to say ‘Congratulations on your exam results .’, and ‘In America football is different from soccer.’ Interestingly, British English does allow ‘different than‘ if it is followed by a clause e.g. The situation is different than I expected.’ It should be said, however, that the impact of Hollywood on British English seems to be gradually causing these differences to disappear.

Another complication is that it is often very difficult to know whether a word is, in fact, an adverb particle or a preposition as many can be either depending on the particular context in which they are found. This creates a problem in distinguishing between phrasal verbs and prepositional verbs. In the sentence ‘She fell off her chair.’ Off is a preposition while in the sentence ‘She turned off the radio.’ it is an adverb particle. Why is this so important? Well, lets take a moment to consider these two examples.

1. She turned off the radio.

What happens to the word order in the above sentence if we replace ‘the radio’ with the pronoun ‘it’? We have to place ‘it’ between the verb and its adverb particle — ‘She turned it off.’ We cannot say *’She turned off it.’* We can, however, say ‘She turned the radio off.’

2. She fell off her chair.

What if we do the same to this sentence? We get ‘She fell off it (because she was laughing so much).’ In this case, we cannot insert ‘it’ into the middle of the prepositional verb. Nor can we say *’She fell the chair off.’*

No problem for a native speaker, of course, they ‘know’ what is right, but what about the poor EFL student, who doesn’t have this ‘knowledge’? And what about the poor EFL teacher, who has to find some way to help their students with this?

No matter what language is being studied prepositions are always a problem.

End of Section 1 Parts of Speech

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Слайд 1Lecture 3:
Parts of Speech Theory
Parts of Speech – lexico-semantic classes of

words, distinguished on the basis of their syntactic, morphological and semantic characteristics (L.V.Scherba).

Plato a noun,
a verb,
an adjective

Lecture 3:
 Parts of Speech Theory Parts of Speech – lexico-semantic classes of words, distinguished on the


Слайд 2H. Sweet’s theory:
Declinables (nouns, adjectives, verbs) morphological
Indeclinables (adverbs,

prepositions, criterion conjunctions, interjections)
Noun words (nouns, noun-pronouns,
noun-numerals, infinitive , gerund syntactic
Adjective words (adjectives, adjective- criterion
pronouns, adjective numerals, participle
Verb-words (finite and non-finite forms)

H. Sweet’s theory: Declinables (nouns, adjectives, verbs)    morphological Indeclinables (adverbs, prepositions,


Слайд 3O. Jespersen’s theory of 3 ranks

A furiously barking dog
3 2

1

Criterion – functioning in the sentence

O. Jespersen’s theory of 3 ranks    A furiously barking dog 				3		2	   1


Слайд 4Ch. Fries’s theory
Criterion – position in the sentence
The concert was good.

It was there.
1 2 3 4
Class 1: Nouns (he, reading, to read, the rich…)
Class 2: Verbs
Class 3: Adjectives
Class 4: Adverbs

Ch. Fries’s theory Criterion – position in the sentence The concert was good. It was there. 			1	2	3			4


Слайд 5Group A: words, that can occupy the position of “the”: no,

their, John’s, each, this…
Group B: words that occur in the position of “may”: might, can, would, will..
Group C: “not”
Group G: the word “do-did-does”
Group H: — “there”
Group L: “yes”, “no”
Group M: attention-getting signals: listen, look, say…

Group A: words, that can occupy the position of “the”: no, their, John’s, each, this… Group B:


Слайд 6Parts of Speech

Notional Functional

Have lexical meaning, Demonstrate the relations
Denote a notion between the notional

words
or specify the grammatical
meaning.

Parts of Speech  Notional					Functional   Have lexical meaning,	Demonstrate the relations Denote a notion		between the notional


Слайд 7Disputable questions:
Category of State: It’s easy (warm)
Modal words: probably, perhaps…
Pronouns (this-that,

one, each, other, myself…) and particles (to, not,)
Article
Auxiliary verbs (to be, to have, to do…)
Functional parts of speech

Disputable questions: Category of State: It’s easy (warm) Modal words: probably, perhaps… Pronouns (this-that, one, each, other,


Слайд 8Functional parts of Speech
Are distinguished on the basis of functional commonness

Demonstrate the relations between the notional words or specify the grammatical meaning
Denote subjective modality
Don’t denote a notion
Don’t have grammatical categories
Are characterized by a simple word structure and usually have 1 syllable
Can’t be a member of the sentence
Not homogeneous: but-and-if / what-in order that

Functional parts of Speech Are distinguished on the basis of functional commonness  Demonstrate the relations between


Слайд 9History:
VII – XI – noun, adjective, adverb, numeral, pronoun, verb
XI –

XV — + articles, Participle 1, 2, Gerund
XV – XXI — + pronoun, preposition, conjunction, particle

History: VII – XI – noun, adjective, adverb, numeral, pronoun, verb XI – XV - + articles,


Слайд 10Kobrina N., Korneeva E.:

The notional P of S: The functional P of

S
the noun the preposition
the adjective the conjunction
the stative the particle
the pronoun
the numeral
the verb
the adverb
the modal words
the interjection

Kobrina N., Korneeva E.:  The notional P of S:	The functional P of S the noun				the preposition


Слайд 11Kaushanskaya V.

The notional P of S: The functional P of S
the noun the

preposition
the adjective the conjunction
the words of the category
of state the particle
the pronoun the article
the numeral
the verb
the adverb
the modal words
the interjection

Kaushanskaya V.  The notional P of S:		The functional P of S the noun					the preposition the adjective				the


Слайд 12Krylova I.

The notional P of S: The structural P of S

the noun the

preposition
the pronoun the conjunction
the adjective the article
the numeral
the verb
the adverb

Krylova I.  The notional P of S:		The structural P of S  the noun				the preposition the


Слайд 13Questions:
What are the 3 criteria according to which the words of

a language fall into parts of speech?
Give the definition of the parts of speech.
What are the 2 large groups the parts of speech are subdivided into?
Characterize the notional and the functional parts of speech.
Consider the following classifications of the parts of speech of the English language. What parts of speech are mentioned in each classification?
What parts of speech are included only in some classifications?
What parts of speech of the English language are not mentioned at all in all classifications?
Is there any difference with the classification of the parts of speech in the Russian language?
Give the examples of the parts of speech which function as both notional and structural. Use the dictionary.
Give the full classification of your own.

Questions: What are the 3 criteria according to which the words of a language fall into parts


Parts of Speech. Principles of Classification of the Parts of Speech.

Курсы изучения разговорного английского языка

√ Parts of speech.
√ Semantic.
√ Morphological.
√ Syntactic.
√ Meaning.
√ Form.
√ Function
√ Meaning


Parts of speech

Parts of speech are grammatical classes of words which are distinguished on the basis of four criteria:
— semantic;
— morphological;
— syntactic;
that of valency (combinability)

1) Meaning. Each part of speech is characterized by the general meaning which is an abstraction from the lexical meaning of the constituent word. Thus, the general meaning of nouns is thingness (substance), the general meaning of verbs is action, state, process; the general meaning of adjectives — quality, quantity.

The general meaning is understood as categorial meaning of the class of words.

Semantic properties of every part of speech find their expression in their grammatical properties. If we take «to sleep, a night sleep, sleepy, asleep» they all refer to the same phenomena of the objective reality but belong to different parts of speech as they have different grammatical properties.

Meaning is supportive criterion in the English language which only helps to check purely grammatical criteria — those of form and function.

Глокая куздра штэка будланула бокра и кудрячит бокрёнка. V. V. Vinogradov
Green ideas sleep furiously.

Such examples though being artificial help us to understand that — grammatical meaning is an objective thing by itself though in real speech it never exists without lexical meaning.

2) Form, (morphological properties) The formal criterion concerns the inflectional and derivational features of words belonging to a given class. That is the grammatical categories they possess, the paradigms they form and derivational and functional morphemes they have.

With the English language this criterion is not always reliable as many words in English are invariable, many words have no derivational affixes and besides the same derivational affixes may be used to build different parts of speech.(e.g. «~ly»: quickly , daily , weakly(n.)).

Because of the limitation of meaning and form as criterion we should rely mainly on words’ syntactic functions (e.g. «round» can be adjective, noun, verb, preposition).

3) Function. Syntactic properties of any class of words are: combinability (distributional criterion), typical syntactic functions in a sentence. The three criteria of defining grammatical classes of words in English may be placed in the following order: syntactic, distribution, form, meaning (Russian: form, meaning, syntactic distribution).

Parts of speech are heterogeneous classes and the boundaries between them are not clearly cut especially in the area of meaning. Within a part of speech there are subclasses which have all the properties of a given class and subclasses which have only some of these properties and may even have features of another class.

So a part of speech may be described as a field which includes both central (most typical) members and marginal (less typical) members. Marginal areas of different parts of speech may overlap and there may be intermediary elements with contradicting features (modal words, statives, pronouns and even verbs).

Words belonging to different parts of speech may be united by common feature and they may constitute a class cutting across other classes (e.g. determiners or quantifiers).

Possible Ways of the Grammatical Classification of the Vocabulary.

The parts of speech and their classification usually involves all the four criteria mentioned and scholars single out from 8 to 13 parts of speech in modern English. The founder of English scientific grammar Henry Sweet finds the following classes of words: noun-words ( here he includes some pronouns and numerals), adjective-words, verbs 4 particles (by this term he denotes words of different classes which have no grammatical categories).

The opposite criterion — structural or distributional — was used by an American scholar Charles Freeze. Each class of words is characterized by a set of positions in a sentence which are defined by substitution test. As a result of distributional analysis Freeze singles out 4 main classes of words roughly corresponding to verbs, nouns, adjectives, adverbs and 15 classes of function-words.

Notional and Functional Parts of Speech.

Both the traditional and distributional classification divide parts of speech into notional and functional. Notional parts of speech are open classes, new items can be added to them, we extend them indefinitely. Functional parts of speech are closed systems including a limited number of members. As a rule they cannot be extended by creating new items.

Main notional parts of speech are nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs. Members of these four classes are often connected derivationally. Functional parts of speech are prepositions, conjunctions, articles, interjections & particles. Their distinctive features are:

— very general & weak lexical meaning;
— obligatory combinability;

The function of linking and specifying words.

Pronouns constitute a class of words which takes an intermediary position between notional and functional words: on the one hand they can substitute nouns and adjectives; on the other hand they can be used as connectives and specifiers. There may be also groups of closed-system items within an open class (notional, functional and auxiliary verbs).

A word in English is very often not marked morphologically. It makes it easy for words to pass from one class to another. Such words are treated as either lexico-semantic phonemes or as words belonging to one class. The problem which is closely connected with the selection of parts of speech is the problem of conversion.

There are usually the cases of absolute, phonetic identity of words belonging to different parts of speech. About 45% of nouns can be converted into verbs and about 50% of verbs — into nouns. There are different viewpoints on conversion: some scholars think that it is a syntactic word-building means. If they say so they do admit that the word may function as parts of speech at the same time.

Russian linguist Galperin defines conversion as a non-affix way of forming words. There is another theory by French linguist Morshaw who states that conversion is a creation of new words with zero-affix. In linguistics this problem is called «stone-wall-construction problem».

Another factor which makes difficult to select parts of speech, in English is abundance of homonyms in English. They are words and forms identical in form, sounding, spelling, but different in meaning. Usually the great number of homonyms in English is explained by monosyllabic structure of words but it’s not all the explanation.

The words are monosyllabic in English because there are few endings in it, because English is predominantly analytical. We differentiate between full and partial homonymity, we usually observe full homonymity within one pan of speech and partial — within different parts of speech. If we have two homonyms within one part of speech their paradigms should fully coincide.

Homonyms can be classified into lexical, lexico-grammatical and purely grammatical. We should differentiate between homonymity and polysemantic words.

Parts of speech are like Legos. Instead of being made into houses or spaceships, they’re the building blocks we use to form written and spoken language.

Every word you speak or write is a part of speech. In the English language, there are 8 parts of speech: nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, and articles (determiners). These parts of speech represent categories of words according to their grammatical function.

Parts of Speech examples

Why Understanding Parts of Speech is Important? 

Having a basic understanding of the parts of speech in the English language gives you a specific terminology and classification system to talk about language. It can help you correctly punctuate a sentence, capitalize the right words, and even understand how to form a complete sentence to avoid grammatical errors.

The 8 Parts of Speech: Definitions, Examples, and Rules

Part Of Speech Function Example Vocabulary Example Sentences

Part Of Speech

Noun

Function

is a person or thing.

Example Vocabulary

Birthday, cake, Paris, flat

Example Sentences

Today is my birthday. I like cake.
I have a flat; It’s in Paris.

Part Of Speech

Pronoun

Function

is a noun substitute.

Example Vocabulary

I, you, she, her, him, some, and them.

Example Sentences

Susan is my neighbor; She is charming.

Part Of Speech

Adjective

Function

describes the noun in a sentence.

Example Vocabulary

Happy, small, cozy, hungry, and warm.

Example Sentences

She lives in a small cottage. Her home is cozy and warm.

Part Of Speech

Verb

Function

is an action word or state of being.

Example Vocabulary

Run, jump, sleep, can, do, (to) be, or like

Example Sentences

The teacher is happy; she likes her students.

Part Of Speech

Adverb

Function

describes a verb, adverb, or adjective.

Example Vocabulary

Merrily, slowly, softly, or quickly

Example Sentences

The girl spoke softly. She walked away slowly.

Part Of Speech

Preposition

Function

connects a noun or pronoun to another word. Shows the direction, location, or movement.

Example Vocabulary

In, on, at, to, after.

Example Sentences

We left by bus in the morning.
Conjunction,»connects words, sentences, or clauses.

Part Of Speech

Article

Function

shows whether a specific identity is known or unknown.

Example Vocabulary

A, an, and the.

Example Sentences

A man called today. The cat is on the table; get it off!

Still with us? Now, we will break down each of these English grammar categories and give some examples.

1. Nouns

Nouns are words that name a person, place, thing, or idea. They can be further classified into different types of nouns.

Proper Nouns Vs. Common Nouns

There are some nouns we can count and others we cannot. Take a look at this table.

Type Of Noun Definition Examples

Type Of Noun

Proper Nouns

Definition

Name a specific person, place, or thing.
Always start with a capital letter.

Examples

Egypt, Paul, Eiffel Tower, Chicago

Type Of Noun

Common Nouns

Definition

Don’t name a specific person, place, or thing. Don’t start with a capital letter unless they are placed at the beginning of a sentence.

Examples

dog, houses, sleep, homes, cup

Concrete Nouns Vs. Abstract Nouns

Type Of Noun Definition Examples

Type Of Noun

Concrete Nouns

Definition

Identify material things.

Examples

apple, boy, clock, table, window

Type Of Noun

Abstract Nouns

Definition

Express a characteristic or idea.

Examples

happiness, tranquility, war, danger, friendship

Singular Nouns Vs. Plural Nouns

Rule Add Singular Noun Examples Plural Noun Examples

Rule

For most common nouns…

Add

-s

Singular Noun Examples

Chair

Plural Noun Examples

Chairs

Rule

For nouns that end in -ch, -s, -ch, or x…

Add

-es

Singular Noun Examples

Teach

Plural Noun Examples

Teaches

Rule

For nouns ending with -y and a vowel…

Add

-s

Singular Noun Examples

Toy

Plural Noun Examples

Toys

Rule

For nouns ending with -y and a consonant…

Add

Remove -y and add -ies

Singular Noun Examples

Lady

Plural Noun Examples

Ladies

Rule

For nouns ending in -o and a vowel…

Add

-es or -s

Singular Noun Examples

Tomato

Plural Noun Examples

Tomatoes

Rule

For nouns ending in -f or -fe…

Add

Remove -fe or -f and add -v and -es

Singular Noun Examples

Leaf

Plural Noun Examples

Leaves

Rule

For nouns ending in o- and consonant…

Add

-es

Singular Noun Examples

Echo

Plural Noun Examples

Echoes

Exceptions To The Rule

Some nouns are irregular, and it’s a case of learning their plural form as they don’t always follow specific rules. Here are some examples:

Singular Irregular Noun Plural Form

Singular Irregular Noun

Man

Plural Form

Men

Singular Irregular Noun

Woman

Plural Form

Women

Singular Irregular Noun

Tooth

Plural Form

Teeth

Singular Irregular Noun

Child

Plural Form

Children

Singular Irregular Noun

Person

Plural Form

People

Singular Irregular Noun

Buffalo

Plural Form

Buffalo

Countable Vs. Uncountable Nouns

Countable Nouns Uncountable of Mass Nouns Countable and Uncountable Nouns

Countable Nouns

Singular and Plural

Uncountable of Mass Nouns

Cannot be pluralized

Countable and Uncountable Nouns

Depends on the context of the sentence

Countable Nouns

Table / Tables

Uncountable of Mass Nouns

Hair

Countable and Uncountable Nouns

Chicken / A chicken

Countable Nouns

Chair / Chairs

Uncountable of Mass Nouns

Air

Countable and Uncountable Nouns

Coffee / Two coffees

Countable Nouns

Dog / Dogs

Uncountable of Mass Nouns

Information

Countable and Uncountable Nouns

Paper / Sheet of paper

Countable Nouns

Quantifiers: some, many, a few, a lot, numbers

Uncountable of Mass Nouns

Quantifiers: some, any, a piece, a lot of, much, a little

Countable and Uncountable Nouns

Other Types of Nouns

Possessive Nouns

Possessive nouns possess something and usually have ‘s or simply ‘ at the end. When the noun is singular, we add an ‘s. When the noun is plural, we add an apostrophe.

Here are examples of possessive nouns:

  • David’s sister has a dog.
  • His sister’s dog is named Max.

Collective Nouns

Collective nouns refer to a group or collection of things, people, or animals. Such as,

  • Choir of singers
  • Herd of sheep

Noun Phrases

A noun phrase is two or more words that function as a noun in a sentence. It also includes modifiers that can come before or after the noun.

Here are examples of noun phrases:

  • The little brown dog is mine.
  • The market down the street has the best prices.

If you want to know where to find nouns in a sentence, look for the subject or a direct object, and they will stand right out. For example:

  • Mary ate chocolate cake and ice cream.

(Mary = Subject) (Chocolate cake, and ice cream = direct objects)

This is an easy way to identify nouns in a sentence.

2. Pronouns

Pronouns are words used in the place of a noun or noun phrase. They can be further classified into different types of pronouns, such as personal, reflexive, and possessive.

Personal Pronouns

Subject Person Pronoun Examples

Subject

1st Person Singular

Person Pronoun

I

Examples

I am walking.

Subject

2nd Person Singular

Person Pronoun

You

Examples

You are walking.

Subject

3rd Person Singular

Person Pronoun

She, He, and It

Examples

It is walking.

Subject

1st Person Plural

Person Pronoun

We

Examples

We are walking.

Subject

2nd Person Plural

Person Pronoun

You (all)

Examples

You are walking.

Subject

3rd Person Plural

Person Pronoun

They

Examples

They are walking.

Reflexive Pronouns

Some examples of reflexive pronouns are myself, yourself, herself, and itself.

Here are examples of reflexive pronouns in sentences:

  • I helped myself to an extra serving of gravy.
  • She didn’t do the cooking herself.
  • The word itself is pretty easy to spell but hard to pronounce.

Reflexive pronouns can also be used for emphasis, as in this sentence:

  • Joe himself baked the cake.

Possessive Pronouns

Some examples of possessive pronouns are my, mine, your, yours, his, hers, its, ours, and theirs. We use these words when we want to express possession. Such as,

  • Is this your car?
  • No, it’s his.
  • It’s not mine.

Mine, yours, and his are examples of the independent form of possessive pronouns, and when showing possession, these pronouns never need an apostrophe.

3. Adjectives

Adjectives are words that describe nouns or pronouns. They make the meaning more definite. When we want to talk about what kind of a house we have, we can use adjectives to describe it, such as big, red, or lovely.

We can use adjectives to precede the word it modifies, like this;

  • She wore a beautiful, blue dress.

Or we can use adjectives following the word they modify, like this;

  • The athlete, tall and thin, was ready to win the race.

There are many types of adjectives, one being possessive. The seven possessive adjectives are my, your, his, her, its, our, and their. These words modify a noun or pronoun and show possession. Such as,

  • Their dog is brown.
  • How old is your brother?
  • That was my idea.

4. Verbs

Verbs are words that express an action or a state of being. All verbs help to make a complete statement. Action verbs express a physical action, for example:

  • Run
  • Jump
  • Stop

Other verbs express a mental action, for example:

  • Think
  • Consider
  • Dream

These can also be called lexical verbs.

Lexical Verbs and Auxiliary Verbs

Sometimes lexical verbs need the help of another type of verb. That’s where helping verbs, or auxiliary verbs, come into action; they help to make a statement or express action.

Examples of auxiliary verbs are am, are, is, has, can, may, will be, and might have.

When we use more than one verb when writing or speaking to express an action or state of being, it’s a verbal phrase consisting of the main verb, lexical verb, and one or more auxiliary verbs.

Some examples of verbal phrases:

  • Have gone
  • Should have done
  • Must have been broken
  • Will be following

Here are examples of verbal phrases used in a sentence.

  • You should have gone to the concert last night. It was amazing!
  • I may go to the concert next time if I have the money for a ticket.
  • I might have missed out this time, but I certainly won’t next time.

5. Adverbs

Adverbs are used to describe an adjective, verb, or even another adverb. They can express how something is done, as in splendidly or poorly.

Here are some examples of adverbs in use:

  • She was running extremely fast during that race.

The adverb extremely modifies the adjective fast, expressing just how rapid the runner was.

  • I can hardly see it in the distance.

The adverb hardly modifies the verb see, expressing how much is visible, which in this case is not much at all.

  • It’s been surprisingly poorly cleaned.

The adverb surprisingly modifies the adverb poorly, expressing the surprise at how badly the car has been cleaned.

6. Prepositions

They are used to show relationships between words, such as nouns or pronouns, with other words in the sentence. They can indicate spatial or time relationships. Some common prepositions are about, at, before, behind, but, in, off, on, to, and with.

Here are some examples of common prepositions in sentences:

  • She sat behind me in class.
  • Her mother was from Vietnam.
  • The two of us worked together on the project.

Prepositions are followed by objects of prepositions, a noun, or a noun phrase that follows to give it meaning.

  • Julie goes to school with Mark. (With whom? Mark.)

Groups of words can also act as prepositions together, such as in spite of.

  • In spite of all the traffic, we arrived just on time.

7. Conjunctions

Conjunctions link words or groups of words together. We often use them to create complex sentences. There are three types of conjunctions: coordinating conjunctions, correlative conjunctions, and subordinating conjunctions. 

Coordinating Conjunctions

Examples of coordinating conjunctions are and, but, or, nor, for, so, and yet. Such as:

  • He wanted apple pie and ice cream.
  • She offered him fruit or cookies.
  • He ate the fruit but still wanted apple pie.

Correlative Conjunctions

Correlative conjunctions are used in pairs. Some examples are;

  • Either/or,
  • and neither/ nor.

Here is an example of the conjunctions above in use:

  • He wanted neither fruit nor cookies for dessert.

Subordinating Conjunctions

We use subordinating conjunctions to begin subordinate clauses or sentences.

Some examples of common subordinating conjunctions are after, before, then, when, provided, unless, so that, and while. Such as,

  • He left the house before it turned dark.
  • He realized he had forgotten a gift when he arrived at the party.
  • The party was better than he had imagined.

8. Articles

There are three articles in the English language: a, an, and the. Articles can indicate whether a specific identity is known or not.

A and an are called indefinite articles and refer to a general group. Such as,

  • A woman is at the front door.
  • She stood there for a minute.
  • She had a book in her hand.

The is a definite article and refers to a specific thing or person. Such as,

  • The woman at the door is my friend Tracy.
  • She’s returning the book she borrowed last week.

Getting these right to know if we’re talking about a specific item, person, or thing, in general, is important.

Takeaways — Tips

Once you get the hang of it, identifying the various parts of speech in a sentence will be second nature, like riding a bike. And just think, it can help you craft stronger sentences!

A part of speech is a term used in traditional grammar for one of the nine main categories into which words are classified according to their functions in sentences, such as nouns or verbs. Also known as word classes, these are the building blocks of grammar.

Parts of Speech

  • Word types can be divided into nine parts of speech:
  • nouns
  • pronouns
  • verbs
  • adjectives
  • adverbs
  • prepositions
  • conjunctions
  • articles/determiners
  • interjections
  • Some words can be considered more than one part of speech, depending on context and usage.
  • Interjections can form complete sentences on their own.

Every sentence you write or speak in English includes words that fall into some of the nine parts of speech. These include nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, articles/determiners, and interjections. (Some sources include only eight parts of speech and leave interjections in their own category.)

Learning the names of the parts of speech probably won’t make you witty, healthy, wealthy, or wise. In fact, learning just the names of the parts of speech won’t even make you a better writer. However, you will gain a basic understanding of sentence structure and the English language by familiarizing yourself with these labels.

Open and Closed Word Classes

The parts of speech are commonly divided into open classes (nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs) and closed classes (pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, articles/determiners, and interjections). The idea is that open classes can be altered and added to as language develops and closed classes are pretty much set in stone. For example, new nouns are created every day, but conjunctions never change.

In contemporary linguistics, the label part of speech has generally been discarded in favor of the term word class or syntactic category. These terms make words easier to qualify objectively based on word construction rather than context. Within word classes, there is the lexical or open class and the function or closed class.

Read about each part of speech below and get started practicing identifying each.

Noun

Nouns are a person, place, thing, or idea. They can take on a myriad of roles in a sentence, from the subject of it all to the object of an action. They are capitalized when they’re the official name of something or someone, called proper nouns in these cases. Examples: pirate, Caribbean, ship, freedom, Captain Jack Sparrow.

Pronoun

Pronouns stand in for nouns in a sentence. They are more generic versions of nouns that refer only to people. Examples:​ I, you, he, she, it, ours, them, who, which, anybody, ourselves.

Verb

Verbs are action words that tell what happens in a sentence. They can also show a sentence subject’s state of being (is, was). Verbs change form based on tense (present, past) and count distinction (singular or plural). Examples: sing, dance, believes, seemed, finish, eat, drink, be, became

Adjective

Adjectives describe nouns and pronouns. They specify which one, how much, what kind, and more. Adjectives allow readers and listeners to use their senses to imagine something more clearly. Examples: hot, lazy, funny, unique, bright, beautiful, poor, smooth.

Adverb

Adverbs describe verbs, adjectives, and even other adverbs. They specify when, where, how, and why something happened and to what extent or how often. Examples: softly, lazily, often, only, hopefully, softly, sometimes.

Preposition

Prepositions show spacial, temporal, and role relations between a noun or pronoun and the other words in a sentence. They come at the start of a prepositional phrase, which contains a preposition and its object. Examples: up, over, against, by, for, into, close to, out of, apart from.

Conjunction

Conjunctions join words, phrases, and clauses in a sentence. There are coordinating, subordinating, and correlative conjunctions. Examples: and, but, or, so, yet, with.

Articles and Determiners

Articles and determiners function like adjectives by modifying nouns, but they are different than adjectives in that they are necessary for a sentence to have proper syntax. Articles and determiners specify and identify nouns, and there are indefinite and definite articles. Examples: articles: a, an, the; determiners: these, that, those, enough, much, few, which, what.

Some traditional grammars have treated articles as a distinct part of speech. Modern grammars, however, more often include articles in the category of determiners, which identify or quantify a noun. Even though they modify nouns like adjectives, articles are different in that they are essential to the proper syntax of a sentence, just as determiners are necessary to convey the meaning of a sentence, while adjectives are optional.

Interjection

Interjections are expressions that can stand on their own or be contained within sentences. These words and phrases often carry strong emotions and convey reactions. Examples: ah, whoops, ouch, yabba dabba do!

How to Determine the Part of Speech

Only interjections (Hooray!) have a habit of standing alone; every other part of speech must be contained within a sentence and some are even required in sentences (nouns and verbs). Other parts of speech come in many varieties and may appear just about anywhere in a sentence.

To know for sure what part of speech a word falls into, look not only at the word itself but also at its meaning, position, and use in a sentence.

For example, in the first sentence below, work functions as a noun; in the second sentence, a verb; and in the third sentence, an adjective:

  • Bosco showed up for work two hours late.
    • The noun work is the thing Bosco shows up for.
  • He will have to work until midnight.
    • The verb work is the action he must perform.
  • His work permit expires next month.
    • The attributive noun [or converted adjective] work modifies the noun permit.

Learning the names and uses of the basic parts of speech is just one way to understand how sentences are constructed.

Dissecting Basic Sentences

To form a basic complete sentence, you only need two elements: a noun (or pronoun standing in for a noun) and a verb. The noun acts as a subject and the verb, by telling what action the subject is taking, acts as the predicate. 

  • Birds fly.

In the short sentence above, birds is the noun and fly is the verb. The sentence makes sense and gets the point across.

You can have a sentence with just one word without breaking any sentence formation rules. The short sentence below is complete because it’s a command to an understood «you».

  • Go!

Here, the pronoun, standing in for a noun, is implied and acts as the subject. The sentence is really saying, «(You) go!»

Constructing More Complex Sentences

Use more parts of speech to add additional information about what’s happening in a sentence to make it more complex. Take the first sentence from above, for example, and incorporate more information about how and why birds fly.

  • Birds fly when migrating before winter.

Birds and fly remain the noun and the verb, but now there is more description. 

When is an adverb that modifies the verb fly. The word before is a little tricky because it can be either a conjunction, preposition, or adverb depending on the context. In this case, it’s a preposition because it’s followed by a noun. This preposition begins an adverbial phrase of time (before winter) that answers the question of when the birds migrate. Before is not a conjunction because it does not connect two clauses.

Parts of Speech

Parts of Speech

Every word is a part of speech, each playing a specific role in a sentence. There are 8 different parts of speech including noun, verb, adjective, adverb, pronoun, preposition, conjunction, and interjection. Each word in a sentence plays a vital role in conveying the meaning and intent of the sentence.

What is Part of Speech?

The English language has thousands of words and every word has some function to perform. Some words are there to show action, some to join, and some to name something. And together, all the functions performed by words in the English language fall under Parts of speech.           
 

Parts of Speech Definition

The parts of speech are the “traditional grammatical categories to which words are assigned in accordance with their syntactic functions, such as noun, verb, adjective, adverb, and so on.” In other words, they refer to the different roles that words can play in a sentence and how they relate to one another based on grammar and syntax.

Parts of Speech Table

Types Function Examples Sentences
Noun Refers Things or person Pen, Chair, Ram, Honesty

Cars are expensive.

This chair is of wood.

Ram is a topper.

Honesty is the best policy.

Pronoun Replaces a noun I, you, he, she, it, they

They are expensive.

It is of wood.

He is a topper.

It is the best policy

Adjective Describes a noun

Super, Red, Our, Big, Great

class

Super cars are expensive

Red chair is for kids

Ram is a class topper.

Great things take time.

Verb Describes action or state Play, be, work, love, like

I play football

I will be a doctor

I like to work

I love writing poem.

Adverb Describes a verb, adjective or adverb Silently, too, very

I love reading silently.

It is too tough to handle.

He can speak very fast.

Preposition Links a noun to another word at, in, of, after, under,

The ball is under the table.

I am at a restaurant.

she is in trouble.

I am going after her.

It is so nice of him

Conjunction Joins clauses and sentences and, but, though, after

First, I will go to college and then I may go to fest.

I don’t have a car but I know how to drive.

She failed the exam though she worked hard.

He will come after he finish his match. 

Interjection Shows exclamation oh!, wow!, alas! Hurray!

Oh! I got fail again.

Wow! I got the job.

Alas! She is no more.

Hurray! we are going to party. 

Parts of Speech Examples with Sentences

Noun

Examples: Luggage, Cattle.

Sentence:  Never leave your luggage unattended.

In some places, cattle are fed barely.

Pronoun

Examples: who, either, themselves

Sentence: I know a man who plays the guitar very well.

Either of the two cars is for sale.

They enjoyed themselves at the party.

Adjective

Examples: kind, moving, wounder.

Sentence: 

She is a kind person.

Boarding a moving bus can be dangerous.

Never poke a wounded animal.

Verb

Examples: Praise, Hate, Punish

Sentence: She always praises her friends.

I don’t hate anybody.

The boy has been punished by his teacher

Adverb

Examples: Always, enough, immediately

Sentence: we should always help each other.

We should be wise enough to understand what is good for us.

We should leave bad habits immediately.

Preposition

Examples: Off, Below, From. to

Sentence: 

He plunged off the cliff

I live below the 9th floor.

I travel daily from Delhi to Noida.

Conjunction

Examples: whereas, as well as, so, 

Sentence: The new software is fairly simple whereas the old one was a bit complicated.

The finance company is not performing well as well as some of its competitors.

He was ready so he may come. 

Interjection

Examples: oops! whoa! phew! 

Sentence: Oops! I forgot to mention her name.

Whoa! you drive fast. 

Phew! That was close call, we had a narrow escape.

Parts of Speech Quiz

Choose the correct Parts of Speech of the BOLD word from the following questions.

1. Let us play, Shall We?

       a. Conjunction

       b. Pronoun

       c. Verb

2.  It is a good practice to arrange books on shelves.

      a. Verb

      b. Noun

      c. Adjective

3. Whose books are these?

      a. Pronoun

     b. Preposition

     c. verb

4.  Father, please get me that toy. 

     a. Pronoun

     b. Adverb

     c. Adjective

5.  His mentality is rather obnoxious.

     a. Adverb

     b. Adjective

     c. Noun

6.  He is the guy whose money got stolen.

      a. Pronoun

      b. Conjunction

      c. Adjective

7. I will have finished my semester by the end of this year.

      a. Interjection

      b. Conjunction

      c. Preposition

8. Bingo! That’s the one I have been looking for

    a. Interjection

     b. Conjunction

     c. Preposition

Quiz Answers

1. c,  2. b,  3. a,  4. c,  5. a,  6. b,  7. c,  8. a

FAQs on Parts of Speech

Q1. What are Parts of Speech?

Ans. A word is assigned to a category as per its function, and those categories are together known as Parts of Speech.

Q2. What are the 8 Parts of Speech?

Ans. Noun, Pronoun, Adjective, Verb, Adverb, Preposition, Conjunction, Interjection.

Q3. How many Parts of Speech are there?

Ans. There are a total of 8 parts of Speech.

Q4. What Part of Speech is “our”?

Ans. Adjective. Eg. Our car.

Q5. What Part of Speech is “Quickly”?

Ans. Adverb. let us understand it with this example – Milk sours quickly in warm weather.

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