Parts of Speech

Rumman Ansari   Software Engineer   2023-05-20   5871 Share
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Table of Content:


What Information Do All of These Parts of Speech Give?

The parts of speech are the primary categories of words according to their function in a sentence.

Parts of speech

What Jobs Can All of These Parts of Speech Do?

Part Two will build on what you learn in Part One. In many chapters, Part Two explains the jobs that different parts of speech perform in a sentence, as well as the relationships between different words within a sentence. A thorough understanding of the concepts covered in Part One will make Part Two seem much easier!

All the words in English language are divided into nine great classes. These classes are called parts of speech. They are

  1. Articles
  2. Noun
  3. Adjective
  4. Pronoun
  5. Verb
  6. Adverb
  7. Preposition
  8. Conjunction
  9. Interjection

 

Each part of speech explains not what the word is, but how the word is used, In fact, the same word can be noun in one sentence and a verb or adjective in the next.

Parts of sentence

Description

Adjective

Describes things or people.

Adverb

Alters the meaning of the verb slightly.

Article

a, an – indefinite articles

the – definite articles

Conjunction

Joins words or sentences together.

Interjection

A short word showing emotion or feeling

Noun

Names things

Preposition

Relates one thing to another

Pronoun

Used instead of a noun to avoid repetitions

Proper noun(subject)

The actual names of people or places

Verb

Actions or doing word

Learn parts of speech with a childhood poem

I discovered this childhood poem that I hadn’t read before.

Every name is called a  noun as field and fountain, street and town.
In place of a noun the  pronoun stands as he and she clap their hands.
The  adjective describes a thing, as magic wand or bridal ring.
The  verb means action, something done, to read and write to jump and run.
How things are done the  adverbs tells us as quickly, slowly, badly or well.
Preposition shows relation as in the street or at the station.
Conjunction joins in many ways, sentences, words or phrase and phrase.
The  interjection cries out hark! I need an exclamation mark!

There are other variations of this childhood poem on the internet. Pity it doesn’t include determiners.

It’s a bit like my childhood version of parts of speech:

  • Nouns are naming words
  • Verbs are doing words
  • Adjectives are describing words
  • Adverbs tell you how and when
  • Conjunctions are joining words
  • Prepositions are usually little words that tell you where
  • Pronouns replace nouns

This doesn’t include determiners either.

Determiners are words that identify or quantify the nouns that follow. The articles thea and an are the most common determiners.