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GRAMMAR REVIEW
PARTS OF SPEECH
NAMERS: nouns and pronouns
Nouns
Person
Place
Thing
State of being
Types of Nouns
Proper : Mrs. Westra, Dr. Jones,
Elmira
Common: car, student, building, flower
Concrete: desk, food
Abstract: hope, disappointment, hunger
Pronoun
Replaces a noun: he she, they, it,
ourselves, everyone, somebody, all
Actors
Verb
Verb
The action of the sentence
Action (jump, sing)
State of being ( am, feel, appear)
Can have more than one part: a
helper verb and an action verb ( will
study)
Can link the subject to a modifier
She was irritated.
DESCRIBERS
Adjectives
Adverbs
Adjectives
Adds to a noun
Many people
Orange shirt
Delicious pizza
Adverb
Adds to a verb, adverb or adjective
Walk gracefully
Walk very gracefully.
JOINERS
Preposition
Conjunction
Preposition
Positioned before a noun to connect it to
the sentence
Go to the office.
Conjunction
Connects two clauses, phrases or like
sentence parts together
You need a healthy diet, and you also
need exercise.
Expressers
Interjection
Expresses emotion
Ouch! That hurt.
Oh! How lovely!
PARTS OF A SENTENCE
Subject
Predicate
Object
Phrase
Clause
Subject
The someone/something that does
something in a sentence; this
someone/something in a sentence’s
main clause is called the bare subject
Who or what the sentence is about
The actor in the sentence
Predicate
What the subject is, or what the subject
did
Everything other than the subject
The main verb (the action that the
someone/something is doing) in the
predicate is called the bare predicate
Example
My best friend plays guitar.
Subject
predicate.
Direct Object
Receives the action of the main verb
Indirect Object
Receives the direct object
Example
Josh threw the ball to Amanda.
Direct object
indirect object
Phrases and Clause
Phrase does not have its own subject
and verb
into the forest
Clause has its own subject and verb
the children ran
Example
The
children ran into the forest.
clause
phrase
Phrase
A group of words in a sentence that acts
grammatically as a part of speech
It cannot stand alone as a sentence
because it has neither a subject or a
predicate
Main Clause
A group of words with a subject and a
predicate that contain the main subject
and the main verb (bare predicate) of the
entire sentence
It can be joined to another clause with a
coordinating conjunction (remember
FANBOYS) or stand alone as a
complete sentence
Subordinate Clause
A clause that begins with a subordinate
conjunction, making it less important
than the main clause in the same
sentence
It cannot stand alone as a sentence
Example
I went to the dentist because my tooth hurt.
Main clause
subordinate clause
Relative Clause
A clause that begins with a relative
pronoun such as who, that, or which that
cannot be separated from the word or
phrase it relates to.
The student who meets deadlines is
successful.
TYPES OF SENTENCES
Simple
Compound
Complex
Compound-complex
Simple
One subject and one verb ( one main
clause)
John built the house.
Compound
Two or more main clauses
I knocked at the door and rang the
doorbell, but no one seemed to hear me.
Complex
One main and one or more subordinate
clauses
When we returned, the fire was out.
Compound-Complex
Two or more main clauses, and one or
more subordinate clauses
I dropped my napkin, and I spilled my
drink while the speaker was proposing a
toast.