Nouns
A noun is a word that denotes a
person, place, or thing. In a sentence, nouns answer the questions who and
what.
Example: The dog ran after
the ball.
In the sentence above, there are two
nouns, dog and ball. A noun may be concrete (something you can
touch, see, etc.), like the nouns in the example above, or a noun may be
abstract, as in the sentences below.
Example 1: She possesses integrity.
Example 2: He was searching for love.
The abstract concepts of integrity
and love in the sentences above are both nouns. Nouns may also be
proper.
Example 1: She visited Chicago
every year.
Example 2: Thanksgiving is in
November.
Chicago, Thanksgiving, and November are all proper
nouns, and they should be capitalized. (For more information on proper nouns
and when to capitalize words, see our handout on Capital Letters.)
You may also visit our handout on Count and Noncount Nouns.
Learn how to spot verbs that act as
nouns. Visit our handout on Verbals: Gerunds, Participles, and Infinitives.
Pronouns
A pronoun is a word that takes the
place of a noun in a sentence.
Example: She decided to go to
a movie.
In the sentence above, she is
the pronoun. Like nouns, pronouns may be used either as subjects or as objects
in a sentence.
Example: She planned to ask him
for an interview.
In the example above, both she
and him are pronouns; she is the subject of the sentence while him
is the object. Every subject pronoun has a corresponding object form, as shown
in the table below.
Subject and Object Pronouns
|
|
Subject Pronouns
|
Object Pronouns
|
I
|
Me
|
We
|
Us
|
You
|
You
|
She
|
Her
|
He
|
Him
|
It
|
It
|
They
|
Them
|
For more information on pronouns, go
to our handout on Pronouns.
To find out what part of speech are that,
which, and whom? Visit our handout on Relative Pronouns.
Articles
Articles include a, an,
and the. They precede a noun or a noun phrase in a sentence.
Example 1: They wanted a
house with a big porch.
Example 2: He bought the blue
sweater on sale.
In example 1, the article a
precedes the noun house, and a also precedes the noun phrase big
porch, which consists of an adjective (big) and the noun it describes
(porch). In example 2, the article the precedes the noun phrase blue
sweater, in which sweater is the noun and blue the adjective.
For more information, go to our
handouts on Articles: A vs. An and How to Use Articles (a/an/the).
Adjectives
An adjective is a word that
modifies, or describes, a noun or pronoun. Adjectives may precede nouns, or
they may appear after a form of the reflexive verb to be (am, are, is, was,
etc.).
Example 1: We live in the red
brick house.
Example 2: She is tall for
her age.
In example 1, two consecutive
adjectives, red and brick, both describe the noun house. In
example 2, the adjective tall appears after the reflexive verb is
and describes the subject, she.
For more on adjectives, go to our
handouts Adjective or Adverb and How to Use Adjectives and Adverbs.
Verbs
A verb is a word that denotes
action, or a state of being, in a sentence.
Example 1: Beth rides the bus
every day.
Example 2: Paul was an avid
reader.
In example 1, rides is the
verb; it describes what the subject, Beth, does. In example 2, was
describes Paul’s state of being and is therefore the verb.
There may be multiple verbs in a
sentence, or there may be a verb phrase consisting of a verb plus a helping
verb.
Example 1: She turned the key
and opened the door.
Example 2: Jackson was studying
when I saw him last.
In example 1, the subject she
performs two actions in the sentence, turned and opened. In
example 2, the verb phrase is was studying.
Some words in a sentence may look
like verbs but act as something else, like a noun; these are called verbals.
For more information on verbs that masquerade as other parts of speech, go to
our handout on Verbals: Gerunds, Participles, and Infinitives.
To learn more about conjugating
verbs, visit our handouts on Verb Tenses, Irregular Verbs, and Two-Part (Phrasal) Verbs (Idioms).
Adverbs
Just as adjectives modify nouns,
adverbs modify, or further describe, verbs. Adverbs may also modify adjectives.
(Many, though not all, adverbs end in -ly.)
Example 1: He waved wildly to
get her attention.
Example 2: The shirt he wore to the
party was extremely bright.
In the first example, the adverb wildly
modifies the verb waved. In the second example, the adverb extremely
modifies the adjective bright, which describes the noun shirt.
While nouns answer the questions who and what, adverbs answer the
questions how, when, why, and where.
For a more detailed discussion of
adverbs, visit our handout Adjective or Adverb and become an expert.
Conjunctions
A conjunction is a word that joins
two independent clauses, or sentences, together.
Example 1: Ellen wanted to take a
drive into the city, but the cost of gasoline was too high.
Example 2: Richard planned to study
abroad in Japan, so he decided to learn the language.
In the examples above, both but
and so are conjunctions. They join two complete sentences with the help
of a comma. And, but, for, or, nor, so, and yet can all act as
conjunctions.
Prepositions
Prepositions work in combination
with a noun or pronoun to create phrases that modify verbs, nouns/pronouns, or
adjectives. Prepositional phrases convey a spatial, temporal, or directional
meaning.
Example 1: Ivy climbed up the
brick wall of the house.
There are two prepositional phrases
in the example above: up the brick wall and of the house. The
first prepositional phrase is an adverbial phrase, since it modifies the verb
by describing where the ivy climbed. The second phrase further modifies the
noun wall (the object of the first prepositional phrase) and describes
which wall the ivy climbs.
For a more detailed discussion on
this part of speech and its functions, click on Prepositions.
Below is a list of prepositions in
the English language:
Aboard, about, above, across, after,
against, along, amid, among, around, at, before, behind, below, beneath,
beside, between, beyond, by, down, during, except, for, from, in, into, like,
near, of, off, on, onto, out, over, past, since, through, throughout, to,
toward, under, underneath, until, unto, up, upon, with, within, without.
Source : https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/730/01/
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