Parts of Speech
... My mom is going in the car to the store in Media. He told me that my dog dashed in his ...
... My mom is going in the car to the store in Media. He told me that my dog dashed in his ...
noun _________________________ can do it itʼs a verb
... can do it itʼs a verb (run, eat, jump) verb ...
... can do it itʼs a verb (run, eat, jump) verb ...
Adjective, Noun, Verb, Adverb
... Adjectives are describing words. They make nouns more interesting. Nouns are words that are used to name things (people, places, things). Verbs are doing words. Adverbs tell us more about verbs. They tell us how, when or where the action of the verb happens. ...
... Adjectives are describing words. They make nouns more interesting. Nouns are words that are used to name things (people, places, things). Verbs are doing words. Adverbs tell us more about verbs. They tell us how, when or where the action of the verb happens. ...
(1)Underline the verbs in the following sentences
... (1)Underline the verbs in the following sentences. When a main verb is combined with a helping verb, underline both. (2) Circle the nouns (3) Draw a triangle around the pronouns. Example: We are asking for your opinion. 1. Kathy Daniels was the winner of the scholarship. 2. The secretaries were keyb ...
... (1)Underline the verbs in the following sentences. When a main verb is combined with a helping verb, underline both. (2) Circle the nouns (3) Draw a triangle around the pronouns. Example: We are asking for your opinion. 1. Kathy Daniels was the winner of the scholarship. 2. The secretaries were keyb ...
subject-predicate-prepositional phrases
... • A, an, and the signal nouns • Is, am, was, were…are always verbs. • When you see –ed, it MIGHT mean it is a past tense verb. ...
... • A, an, and the signal nouns • Is, am, was, were…are always verbs. • When you see –ed, it MIGHT mean it is a past tense verb. ...
Chinese grammar
This article concerns Standard Chinese. For the grammars of other forms of Chinese, see their respective articles via links on Chinese language and varieties of Chinese.The grammar of Standard Chinese shares many features with other varieties of Chinese. The language almost entirely lacks inflection, so that words typically have only one grammatical form. Categories such as number (singular or plural) and verb tense are frequently not expressed by any grammatical means, although there are several particles that serve to express verbal aspect, and to some extent mood.The basic word order is subject–verb–object (SVO). Otherwise, Chinese is chiefly a head-last language, meaning that modifiers precede the words they modify – in a noun phrase, for example, the head noun comes last, and all modifiers, including relative clauses, come in front of it. (This phenomenon is more typically found in SOV languages like Turkish and Japanese.)Chinese frequently uses serial verb constructions, which involve two or more verbs or verb phrases in sequence. Chinese prepositions behave similarly to serialized verbs in some respects (several of the common prepositions can also be used as full verbs), and they are often referred to as coverbs. There are also location markers, placed after a noun, and hence often called postpositions; these are often used in combination with a coverb. Predicate adjectives are normally used without a copular verb (""to be""), and can thus be regarded as a type of verb.As in many east Asian languages, classifiers or measure words are required when using numerals (and sometimes other words such as demonstratives) with nouns. There are many different classifiers in the language, and each countable noun generally has a particular classifier associated with it. Informally, however, it is often acceptable to use the general classifier 个 [個] ge in place of other specific classifiers.Examples given in this article use simplified Chinese characters (with the traditional characters following in brackets if they differ) and standard pinyin Romanization.