Parts of speech: Difference between revisions
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* B) advocated to use | * B) advocated to use | ||
** "Burland advocated to use..." = he advocates "to use" (he advocates the action) | ** "Burland advocated to use..." = he advocates "to use" (he advocates the action) | ||
* A) NO CHANGE is correct because it is the object of the sentence, "soil extraction," that Burland advocates, not the action of its use (to use") | |||
</div> | </div> | ||
* Click EXPAND to see an example from Practice Test 6, Writing Q21 | |||
* See | * See |
Revision as of 20:24, 11 March 2021
Parts of Speech
nouns[edit | edit source]
- persons, places, things
- proper nouns
- nouns as modifiers
- ex. "dog food"
- see Nouns as Modifiers (meg.com)
- nouns as modifiers
verbs[edit | edit source]
- express action/s
- verb phrases
- verb forms
- infinitive
- conjugations
- participles
- verb forms that act like an adjective
- "past participle"
- use the -ed forms
- where the simple past tense of a verb is used to show a condition of something
- examples:
- "Boiled water is sanitized" ("boiled" and "sanitized" are both adjectives that describe the noun, "water")
- "present participle"
- uses the -ing form
- examples:
- "The boiling water is hot" ("boiling" describes the water)
- gerunds
- verbs that act as nouns
- use the -ing form
- examples
- "to swim" + -ing = "swimming" = a noun for the act of swimming
- "Boiling water sanitizes it" ("boiling" is an act, therefore a noun, from the verb "to boil")
- gerunds are often interchangeable with infinitives
- "I hate doing math" versus "I hate to do math"
- however, note that gerunds and infinitives may act differently in terms of the object of the sentence
- ex. see College Board Practice Test 6, Writing section question 21:
"Burland advocated using soil extraction:"
- A) NO CHANGE
- "Burland advocated using..." = he advocates for the use of soil extraction (he advocates the the object)
- B) advocated to use
- "Burland advocated to use..." = he advocates "to use" (he advocates the action)
- A) NO CHANGE is correct because it is the object of the sentence, "soil extraction," that Burland advocates, not the action of its use (to use")
- Click EXPAND to see an example from Practice Test 6, Writing Q21
- See
conjugations[edit | edit source]
adverbs[edit | edit source]
adjectives[edit | edit source]
- modify nouns
articles[edit | edit source]
- definite
- the
- refers to a specific noun, usually already stated or defined
- indefinite
- a or an
- refers to a general noun, usually not already stated or defined
- indefinite articles are not used to refer to a general noun or one that cannot be counteed
- ex. "water" cannot be counted, so "a water" is incorrect
- "may I have a water" should be instead "may I have some water"
- ex. "water" cannot be counted, so "a water" is incorrect
- zero articles
- when the noun represents a generic idea, the article can be omitted
- ex.
- "They went on vacation" as opposed to "they went on a vacation "
- see
- [https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/grammar/using_articles.html Purdue OWN Using Articles}
- What Are Articles?
pronouns[edit | edit source]
- "pro" = for; "noun"
- refer to a noun in oder to avoid repetition
- pronoun forms
- subject
- object
- possessive
- comparisons
- see How to Pick Pronouns for Comparisons (Dummies)
prepositions[edit | edit source]
- express relationship in time, place, or sequence
interjections[edit | edit source]
- aside remarks or interruptions
- exclamation
- expresses a spontaneous reaction or emotion
- examples
- "no!"
- "okay"
- "damn!"
- "heh!"
- examples
- expresses a spontaneous reaction or emotion