Sentences using Yes‚ it is/No‚ it isn’t • Sentences using Yes‚ they are/No‚ they aren’t • Singular Plural • Punctuation • My Favorite Fruit (Essay) • This is‚ There is/These are‚ There are • My Mom (Essay) • Noun • Proper Nouns • Verb • Sentences using can/can’t • My Pet (Essay) • Words/Opposites • Masculine/Feminine • Comprehension Unit 0: Topic 1: A or an Definition: Exercise: (in copy) Q1: Fill in the blanks
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THE NOUN The definition of a noun is a word that is used to define a person‚ animal or living object‚ place or quality. There are many different kinds of nouns in English. PROPER NOUNS – nouns that refer to a specific name of a person‚ corporation‚ company‚ product such as Mr. David Green‚ Microsoft ‚ IBM. COMMON NOUNS – general nouns such as cat‚ hand‚ clock etc. COUNTABLE NOUNS – nouns that can be counted‚ such as car- cars‚ child – children
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CLAUSES Seminar paper Contents: 1. Introduction 3 2. Independent clauses 3 2.1 Declarative clauses 4 2.2 Interrogative clauses 4 2.3 Exclamative clauses…………………………………………………………………………….. 6 2.4 Imperative clauses 6 2.5 Non-clausal material 7 3. Finite dependent clauses 7 3.1 Complement clauses 7 3.2 Adverbial clauses 8 3.3 Relative clauses 8 3.4 Comparative clauses 9 3.5 Peripheral clauses 9 4. Non-finite
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Plural Nouns www.grammar.cl A) Change each of the singular nouns below into plural nouns. 1. Book: 2. Table: _________________________ _________________________ 3. Day: 4. Car: _________________________ _________________________ B) Change each of the singular nouns below into plural nouns. 1. Watch: 2. Fox: 3. Glass: _________________________ _________________________ _________________________ 4. Quiz: 5. Class: 6. Bus: _________________________ _________________________ _________________________
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Countable and Uncountable Nouns * Nouns can be countable or uncountable. * Countable nouns are the names of separate objects‚ people‚ etc. which we can count; they have singular and plural forms. e.g.‚ one book two books a man some men * Uncountable nouns are the names of things which we do not see as separate‚ and which we cannot count; they do not have plural forms. e.g.‚ milk rice weather * Countable Nouns can take singular or plural verbs This book is expensive. These books
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ADJECTIVE CLAUSES/ Relative Clauses An adjective clause is a subordinate (dependent)` clause used as an adjective. Like single-word adjectives‚ adjective clauses describe and modify nouns. The following relative pronouns introduce adjective clauses. Who refers only to persons. The man is a police officer. He lives next door. The man who lives next door is a police officer. Whom is the objective form of who and refers only to persons. He is one police officer. I respect him very much
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Noun Clauses A NOUN CLAUSE is a group of words with a subject and a verb WHO WHEN WHOM You can recognize a noun clause by one of the relative pronouns or adverbs that begin the clause A noun clause consists of three components: A relative pronoun or adverb A subject A verb Noun clauses function like Uses of Noun Clauses After some verbs and adjectives To include a question in a statement (embedded questions) To report what someone has said or asked Noun clauses
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CLAUSE A clause is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb. Some clauses are dependent: they can’t stand alone and need an independent clause‚ or sentence‚ to support them. These dependent clauses can be used in three ways: as adjectives‚ as adverbs and as nouns. This article focuses on noun clauses. NOUN CLAUSE A noun clause is a dependent clause that acts as a noun. Noun clauses most often begin with the subordinating conjunction that. Other words that may begin a noun clause are if
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Noun Phrases Making a comparison of Noun Phrases between the Chapter 6.2 from ’’ English Sentence Analysis: An Introductory Course’’ by M. & K. Sauter and Chapter 7 from ’’ Analysing Sentences: An Introduction to English Syntax’’ by Noel Burton - Roberts‚ I can highlight several similarities and differences of the Noun Phrases. In both chapters the authors look into more detail at the internal structure of the Noun Phrase and the elements that can be found within the Noun Phrase. In
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speak‚ with (demonstrative pronoun‚ adjective‚ lexical verb‚ preposition She made a sign pers. pronoun lex ind. art. noun She signed a lettre pers. pronoun lex. ind. art. noun this is a hard sign dem. pronoun lex. ind. art. noun they worked hard pers. pronoun lex. adverb 9because it says something about work) Snow white had an evil stepmother noun lex. indef. art. adj. noun They discussed the evils of the western world pers. pr. lex. def. art.
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