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GRAMMAR REVIEW

Grammar review

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Page 1: Grammar review

GRAMMAR REVIEW

Page 2: Grammar review

Nouns: Person, Place, Thing, Idea

There are many different types of nouns:• Common• Proper• Concrete• Abstract• Compound • Collective

Page 3: Grammar review

Types of Nouns

Common Noun: names any person, place, or thing.• Worker, state, documentProper Noun: names a particular person, place, or thing.• Rob Warner, Florida, Bill of Rights

Page 4: Grammar review

Types of Nouns

Concrete Noun: names a person, place, or an object that you can actually see, touch, taste, hear, or smell.• Hat, fur, newspaper, children, bell.Abstract Noun: names a quality, condition, or an idea.• Love, anger, liberty, success, hope.

Page 5: Grammar review

Types of Nouns

Compound Nouns: nouns made up of more than one word, and can be written in different ways.• Viewpoint, stagecoach, airstrip, double-talk, brother-in-law, living room, golf course.

Collective Nouns: names a group of people or things.• Band, class, committee, family, crowd, nation, orchestra, team.

Page 6: Grammar review

Pronouns: take the place of one or more nouns

• The word that the pronoun replaces or refers back to is called the antecedent.

• Personal Pronouns: first, second, and third person

Page 7: Grammar review

Verbs: tells what action a subject is performing.

• Ice hockey began in Canada.• In baseball, home plate has five sides.• Johnny Vander Meer pitched two straight no-hitters in 1938.

• The game of soccer probably first occurred in England in A.D. 217.

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Adjectives: is a word that modifies (describes) a noun or pronoun.

Ask the following questions:• What kind?• Which one?• How many?• How much?

Page 9: Grammar review

Adverbs: Most adverbs modify verbs. To find an adverb, ask

the following questions• Where?• When?• How?• To what extent?

Page 10: Grammar review

Prepositions: shows the relationship between a noun or a pronoun, or another word in the sentence.

• Above, across, against, along, among, around, behind, below, beneath, beside, between, beyond, by, down, in, inside, near, on, outside, over, through, toward, under, underneath, up, upon.

• COMPOUND PREPOSITIONS (can also be used as internal transitions): according to, ahead of, apart from, aside from, as of, because of, by means of, in back of, in front of, in place of, in spite of, instead of, in view of, next to, on account of, out of, prior to.

Page 11: Grammar review

Conjunctions: connect words or groups of words

• And, but, for, so, or nor, yet.• Both/and• Either/or• Neither/nor• Not only/but also• Whether/or(THESE CAN ALSO BE USED FOR INTERNAL TRANSITIONS)

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Interjections: is a word that expresses strong feeling or emotion

• Yes, Elvis Presley was once a truck driver.• Wow! That’s a really low price!• Well, I had no idea.• Imagine! No homework this weekend! Not!• Ouch! Charlie you bit me!