* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download ELA Milestones
Kannada grammar wikipedia , lookup
Macedonian grammar wikipedia , lookup
Symbol grounding problem wikipedia , lookup
Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup
Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup
Comparison (grammar) wikipedia , lookup
Word-sense disambiguation wikipedia , lookup
Arabic grammar wikipedia , lookup
Japanese grammar wikipedia , lookup
Ojibwe grammar wikipedia , lookup
Lithuanian grammar wikipedia , lookup
Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup
Zulu grammar wikipedia , lookup
Agglutination wikipedia , lookup
Romanian numbers wikipedia , lookup
Untranslatability wikipedia , lookup
Romanian grammar wikipedia , lookup
Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Scottish Gaelic grammar wikipedia , lookup
Esperanto grammar wikipedia , lookup
Vietnamese grammar wikipedia , lookup
Russian declension wikipedia , lookup
Morphology (linguistics) wikipedia , lookup
French grammar wikipedia , lookup
Compound (linguistics) wikipedia , lookup
Pipil grammar wikipedia , lookup
Language Arts Study Guide Nouns – A person, place, or thing Common Noun – Any person, place, or thing Proper Noun – The NAME of a particular person, place or thing Possessive Noun – a noun that shows ownership or possession. To make a noun possessive add ‘s or s’. Singular noun – One person, place, or thing Plural noun – More than one person, place, or thing Verb – Action words- they tell what you do Adjectives – Words that describe nouns. They can tell how many, or they can describe the way something looks, smells, feels, taste, or sounds. A, an, and the are also considered adjectives. Pronouns – Words that take the place of a noun. Examples are: she, he, it, we, you, they, them Subject- Who or what a sentence is about Predicate – What the subject of the sentence does or is Compound subject – A sentence that has more than one subject. Example: John and Sarah went to the movies. Compound predicate – A sentence that has more than one predicate. Example: Tim played soccer and baseball. Compound sentence – A sentence that contains two complete ideas that are related. They are usually joined together with a conjunction: and, but, or, yet, so. Run-on sentence – Two or more sentences that run together Statement - A sentence that makes a statement; a telling sentence that ends with a period. Question – An asking sentence that ends with a question mark(?) Exclamation – A sentence said with excitement and expression(!) Command – A sentence that commands or orders you to do something; it ends with a period or an exclamation point. Synonym- a word that means the same as a word Antonym – a word that is the opposite of a word Compound word – two words joined together to make one Examples: playground, baseball, homework Contraction – two words joined together with an apostrophe to make the word smaller Examples: we are = we’re; is not = isn’t; cannot = can’t Prefix- an affix that comes before a root word Examples: unhappy; un means negative Redo, review; re means again Suffix – an affix that comes after a root word or stem word Examples: girls; s makes the word plural Cooked; ed makes the word past tense Guide words – the terms at the top of the page of a reference book. Guide words can be found in a dictionary, encyclopedia, or a thesaurus. Dictionary – contains words and their meanings in alphabetical order; also gives pronunciation and part of speech Thesaurus – a book of synonyms (words with like meanings) Encyclopedia – contains volumes of information about a person, place, or thing. It is arranged alphabetically by subject and a good resource for a research project. Atlas – a book of maps including illustrations, charts, and information Internet – an electronic communication network that connects computers around the world. A good source if you need to find updated information on people, places, or things. Title page – Located in the front of the book right after the front cover. Includes the title of the book, author, and illustrator. Table of Contents – located after the title page in the front of the book. Lists the various topics or chapters and corresponding page numbers. Glossary – Located at the back of a book. Is a minidictionary of words included in an information book. Index- Located at the very back of a book behind the glossary. Is an alphabetical list of words (topics) and the page number where the word can be found in the book.