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The Parts of Speech
Presented By:
Rushda Ashraf
English Language instructor
The Parts of Speech
• There are mainly eight parts of speech in
English language. That are Nouns,
Pronouns, Verbs, Adjectives, Adverbs,
Conjunctions, Interjections, Prepositions.
• Parts of speech are identified by the place
they have in the sentence, not by their
meanings.
Nouns
• A noun is a person , place, thing or an
idea. Nouns are the subject of a sentence.
a teacher a lion Ali
Love is a beautiful
thing.
Classification of Nouns
• Nouns can be singular or plural.
• Singular nouns name only one person,
place, thing or idea ( an apple, the car, a
table).
• Plural nouns name two or more persons,
places, things or ideas ( pencils, chairs,
tables).
Proper and Common Nouns
• Proper nouns refer to specific persons,
places, things and ideas. They are always
capitalized ( Holy Quran, Lahore, Minar-e-
Pakistan).
• Common nouns are all other nouns. They
are not capitalizes unless they are the first
word in the sentence.
• Examples: cat, pencil, paper etc.
Collective Nouns
• Collective nouns are the nouns that are
grammatically considered singular, but
include more than one person, place,
thing or idea in their meaning. They
emphasize group as one unit.
family herd class
Countable and Un-Countable
Nouns
Countable nouns can Un- Countable nouns
be counted. cannot be counted.
bottles water
eggs sand
Abstract and Concrete Nouns
• Concrete nouns are nouns that you can
touch. They are people, places and
something. Person, court, pencil, hand,
paper are concrete nouns.
• Abstract nouns are nouns that you cannot
touch. Things like air, justice, safety,
democracy, faith, religion are abstract
nouns.
Nouns as Gerunds
• A gerund is an –ing form of the verb and
is used as a noun. For example:
Running is good for you.
Running is the noun/gerund and “is” is the
verb.
• My crying upset her.
Crying is the subject and upset is the
verb.
Pronouns
• A pronoun is a word that replaces a noun.
They eliminate the need for repetition.
• For Example:
Instead of talking “ Hina talked to Hina’s
child”, we might say “ Hina talked to her
child”.
Here “ her” is the pronoun. It renames “
Hina”.
Types of Pronouns
• There are several types of pronouns.
• Personal Pronouns: They refer to specific
persons or things. Personal Pronouns can
act as subjects, objects or possessives.
• Personal Pronouns can be singular or
plural.
• Singular: I , me , you, she, her, he, him, it
• Plural: we, us, you, they, them
Possessive and Reflexive
Pronouns
• Possessive pronouns indicate ownership
or possession. For example: my, mine,
your, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.
• Reflexive Pronouns name a receiver of an
action who is identical to the doer of the
action. For example: my self, yourself, him
self, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves.
• Ahmad congratulated himself on his good
grades.
Intensive and Reciprocal
Pronouns
• Intensive Pronoun emphasize a noun or
another pronoun. For example: myself,
himself, yourself, herself, themselves.
I saw Imran Khan himself in the ground.
• Reciprocal Pronouns express shared
actions or feelings.
• For example: each other, one another
Maria and Saba help each other in their
homework.
Indefinite and Demonstrative
Pronouns
• Indefinite Pronouns refer to non- specific
persons and things. For example: all,
another, other, anyone, both, each, etc.
• Nobody knows that where is the pencil.
• Demonstrative Pronouns are considered
noun markers. They “point” toward nouns.
• That woman attends the party.
• This is a wonderful story.
Interrogative and Relative
Pronouns
• Interrogative Pronouns introduce
questions.
Who is going on vacation?
• Relative pronouns introduce dependent
clauses and refers to a person or thing
already mentioned in a sentence. ( who,
whoever, whom ,that, whose, which)
• The English that we learn in class will help
us pass the exam.
Adjectives
• An adjective modifies(describes) a noun
or pronoun. Normally in English adjective
comes before noun. For example: The
smart student earned an “A”.
• They also come after linking
verbs.
• For Example:
I feel happy.
Cont…
• Adjectives can be used to make
comparisons(between two things).
• For more adjectives with one or two
syllables, you can add –er. For example:
greater, faster, longer.
• For adjectives longer than two syllables,
you should use the word “more”.
He was more intelligent then his sister.
Cont…
• Adjectives can also be used as
superlatives(comparing more than two
things). This is usually done by adding –
est to the end of an adjective that has one
or two syllables.( loudest, coolest,
smartest)
• If the adjective is three or more syllables
long, you must use the word “most”.
She is the most intelligent girl in the class.
Cont…
• There are some irregular adjective and
verb forms.
Adjective Adverb Comparing two Comparing three
or more
bad badly worse worst
good well better best
little - less least
much many more most
Cont…
• If three or more adjectives come in a
sentence, the arrangement of them will be
like:
Determi-
ner
Opinion Size Age Color Origin Material Noun
The, This Pretty Big New Blue Blochi Leather bag
My Precious Small Ancient Black Chinese Silk Scarf
Adverbs
• An adverb is a word that modifies an
action verb, an adjective or another
adverb.
The teacher carefully graded the
homework.
• You need an adjective after linking verbs,
not an adverb.
Types of Adverbs
• Adverbs of Manner tell us that in which
manner the action occurs or how the
action occurs or will occur.
She speaks loudly.
He was driving slowly.
• Adverbs of time tell us about the time of
the action.
I will buy a computer tomorrow.
Do it now.
Cont…
• Adverbs of Place tell us about the place of
the action.
He will come here.
She went upstairs.
• Adverbs of Frequency tell us how many
times the action occur.
He goes to school daily.
He is always late for school.
Conjunctions
• These are the scotch tape of the
grammatical world. They join together
words and phrases.
• There are three types of conjunctions:
• Coordinating Conjunctions
• Correlative Conjunctions
• Subordinating Conjunctions
• There are seven Coordinating
Conjunctions: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so
Fahad likes to eat but Zohaib likes to play.
• You can remember these conjunctions by
“FANBOYS”
Cont…
• Correlative Conjunctions also join ideas,
but they work in pairs.
(Both…and, neither…nor, whether…or,
either…or, not only…but also)
Not only I am happy about the grades, but
I am also excited that you are learning.
Cont…
• Subordinating conjunctions join an
independent clause with a subordinate
clause. That is, they join a clause that can
stand alone with the clause that cannot
stand alone.
(after, although, as, as if, because, before,
even if, even before, if, since, unless) etc.
Although the students were tired, they still
come in the class.
Interjections
• Interjections are words used to express
emotional states.
• Oh! Wow! Ouch! Oops! Hey!
• They are usually found in spoken English.
Prepositions
• Prepositions are words that, like
conjunctions, join a noun or pronoun to
another word in a sentence.
• Some prepositions are: About, before,
down, into through, above, behind, during,
like, to, across, below, except, toward,
after, beneath, of, for, off, under, among,
beside, from, on, up, around, between etc.
Verbs
• Verbs generally express action or a state
of being. There are several classification
for verbs- action verbs/ linking verbs/ main
verbs/ auxiliary verbs, transitive/
intransitive verbs and phrasal verbs.
• Action verbs show action.
He runs.
He plays.
Cont…
• Linking verbs link a subject to an adjective.
Butterfly is beautiful.
• Main verbs can stand alone.
Run, eat, work
• Auxiliary verbs, also called helping verbs,
serve as support to the main verbs( Have, has,
had, do, does, did, be, am, is, are, was, were,
been, being, should, could, would, will, might,
can, may, must ,ought(to), shall).
Cont…
• Transitive verbs need a direct object in
order to make sense.
Shaheer takes medicine for his headache.
• Intransitive verbs do not need direct
objects to make them meaningful.
Hanzala swims.
• Phrasal verbs are made up of a verb and
a preposition. The preposition gives the
verb a different meaning.
Cont…
• For example verb “look” has a different
meaning from the phrasal verb “look up”.
• Some examples are:
Thanks for your Consideration

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Parts of speech in English

  • 1. The Parts of Speech Presented By: Rushda Ashraf English Language instructor
  • 2. The Parts of Speech • There are mainly eight parts of speech in English language. That are Nouns, Pronouns, Verbs, Adjectives, Adverbs, Conjunctions, Interjections, Prepositions. • Parts of speech are identified by the place they have in the sentence, not by their meanings.
  • 3. Nouns • A noun is a person , place, thing or an idea. Nouns are the subject of a sentence. a teacher a lion Ali Love is a beautiful thing.
  • 4. Classification of Nouns • Nouns can be singular or plural. • Singular nouns name only one person, place, thing or idea ( an apple, the car, a table). • Plural nouns name two or more persons, places, things or ideas ( pencils, chairs, tables).
  • 5. Proper and Common Nouns • Proper nouns refer to specific persons, places, things and ideas. They are always capitalized ( Holy Quran, Lahore, Minar-e- Pakistan). • Common nouns are all other nouns. They are not capitalizes unless they are the first word in the sentence. • Examples: cat, pencil, paper etc.
  • 6. Collective Nouns • Collective nouns are the nouns that are grammatically considered singular, but include more than one person, place, thing or idea in their meaning. They emphasize group as one unit. family herd class
  • 7. Countable and Un-Countable Nouns Countable nouns can Un- Countable nouns be counted. cannot be counted. bottles water eggs sand
  • 8. Abstract and Concrete Nouns • Concrete nouns are nouns that you can touch. They are people, places and something. Person, court, pencil, hand, paper are concrete nouns. • Abstract nouns are nouns that you cannot touch. Things like air, justice, safety, democracy, faith, religion are abstract nouns.
  • 9. Nouns as Gerunds • A gerund is an –ing form of the verb and is used as a noun. For example: Running is good for you. Running is the noun/gerund and “is” is the verb. • My crying upset her. Crying is the subject and upset is the verb.
  • 10. Pronouns • A pronoun is a word that replaces a noun. They eliminate the need for repetition. • For Example: Instead of talking “ Hina talked to Hina’s child”, we might say “ Hina talked to her child”. Here “ her” is the pronoun. It renames “ Hina”.
  • 11. Types of Pronouns • There are several types of pronouns. • Personal Pronouns: They refer to specific persons or things. Personal Pronouns can act as subjects, objects or possessives. • Personal Pronouns can be singular or plural. • Singular: I , me , you, she, her, he, him, it • Plural: we, us, you, they, them
  • 12. Possessive and Reflexive Pronouns • Possessive pronouns indicate ownership or possession. For example: my, mine, your, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs. • Reflexive Pronouns name a receiver of an action who is identical to the doer of the action. For example: my self, yourself, him self, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves. • Ahmad congratulated himself on his good grades.
  • 13. Intensive and Reciprocal Pronouns • Intensive Pronoun emphasize a noun or another pronoun. For example: myself, himself, yourself, herself, themselves. I saw Imran Khan himself in the ground. • Reciprocal Pronouns express shared actions or feelings. • For example: each other, one another Maria and Saba help each other in their homework.
  • 14. Indefinite and Demonstrative Pronouns • Indefinite Pronouns refer to non- specific persons and things. For example: all, another, other, anyone, both, each, etc. • Nobody knows that where is the pencil. • Demonstrative Pronouns are considered noun markers. They “point” toward nouns. • That woman attends the party. • This is a wonderful story.
  • 15. Interrogative and Relative Pronouns • Interrogative Pronouns introduce questions. Who is going on vacation? • Relative pronouns introduce dependent clauses and refers to a person or thing already mentioned in a sentence. ( who, whoever, whom ,that, whose, which) • The English that we learn in class will help us pass the exam.
  • 16. Adjectives • An adjective modifies(describes) a noun or pronoun. Normally in English adjective comes before noun. For example: The smart student earned an “A”. • They also come after linking verbs. • For Example: I feel happy.
  • 17. Cont… • Adjectives can be used to make comparisons(between two things). • For more adjectives with one or two syllables, you can add –er. For example: greater, faster, longer. • For adjectives longer than two syllables, you should use the word “more”. He was more intelligent then his sister.
  • 18. Cont… • Adjectives can also be used as superlatives(comparing more than two things). This is usually done by adding – est to the end of an adjective that has one or two syllables.( loudest, coolest, smartest) • If the adjective is three or more syllables long, you must use the word “most”. She is the most intelligent girl in the class.
  • 19. Cont… • There are some irregular adjective and verb forms. Adjective Adverb Comparing two Comparing three or more bad badly worse worst good well better best little - less least much many more most
  • 20. Cont… • If three or more adjectives come in a sentence, the arrangement of them will be like: Determi- ner Opinion Size Age Color Origin Material Noun The, This Pretty Big New Blue Blochi Leather bag My Precious Small Ancient Black Chinese Silk Scarf
  • 21. Adverbs • An adverb is a word that modifies an action verb, an adjective or another adverb. The teacher carefully graded the homework. • You need an adjective after linking verbs, not an adverb.
  • 22. Types of Adverbs • Adverbs of Manner tell us that in which manner the action occurs or how the action occurs or will occur. She speaks loudly. He was driving slowly. • Adverbs of time tell us about the time of the action. I will buy a computer tomorrow. Do it now.
  • 23. Cont… • Adverbs of Place tell us about the place of the action. He will come here. She went upstairs. • Adverbs of Frequency tell us how many times the action occur. He goes to school daily. He is always late for school.
  • 24. Conjunctions • These are the scotch tape of the grammatical world. They join together words and phrases. • There are three types of conjunctions: • Coordinating Conjunctions • Correlative Conjunctions • Subordinating Conjunctions
  • 25. • There are seven Coordinating Conjunctions: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so Fahad likes to eat but Zohaib likes to play. • You can remember these conjunctions by “FANBOYS”
  • 26. Cont… • Correlative Conjunctions also join ideas, but they work in pairs. (Both…and, neither…nor, whether…or, either…or, not only…but also) Not only I am happy about the grades, but I am also excited that you are learning.
  • 27. Cont… • Subordinating conjunctions join an independent clause with a subordinate clause. That is, they join a clause that can stand alone with the clause that cannot stand alone. (after, although, as, as if, because, before, even if, even before, if, since, unless) etc. Although the students were tired, they still come in the class.
  • 28. Interjections • Interjections are words used to express emotional states. • Oh! Wow! Ouch! Oops! Hey! • They are usually found in spoken English.
  • 29. Prepositions • Prepositions are words that, like conjunctions, join a noun or pronoun to another word in a sentence. • Some prepositions are: About, before, down, into through, above, behind, during, like, to, across, below, except, toward, after, beneath, of, for, off, under, among, beside, from, on, up, around, between etc.
  • 30. Verbs • Verbs generally express action or a state of being. There are several classification for verbs- action verbs/ linking verbs/ main verbs/ auxiliary verbs, transitive/ intransitive verbs and phrasal verbs. • Action verbs show action. He runs. He plays.
  • 31. Cont… • Linking verbs link a subject to an adjective. Butterfly is beautiful. • Main verbs can stand alone. Run, eat, work • Auxiliary verbs, also called helping verbs, serve as support to the main verbs( Have, has, had, do, does, did, be, am, is, are, was, were, been, being, should, could, would, will, might, can, may, must ,ought(to), shall).
  • 32. Cont… • Transitive verbs need a direct object in order to make sense. Shaheer takes medicine for his headache. • Intransitive verbs do not need direct objects to make them meaningful. Hanzala swims. • Phrasal verbs are made up of a verb and a preposition. The preposition gives the verb a different meaning.
  • 33. Cont… • For example verb “look” has a different meaning from the phrasal verb “look up”. • Some examples are:
  • 34. Thanks for your Consideration