Sunday, 21 April 2013

Parts of Speech Table


This is a summary of the 8 parts of speech*. You can find more detail if you click on each part of speech.
part of speech
function or "job"
example words
example sentences
action or state
(to) be, have, do, like, work, sing, can, must
English Club.com is a web site. I like English Club.com.
thing or person
pen, dog, work, music, town, London, teacher, John
This is my dog. He lives in my house. We live in London.
describes a noun
a/an, the, 69, some, good, big, red, well, interesting
My dog is big. I like big dogs.
describes a verb, adjective or adverb
quickly, silently, well, badly, very, really
My dog eats quickly. When he is very hungry, he eats really quickly.
replaces a noun
I, you, he, she, some
Tara is Indian. She is beautiful.
links a noun to another word
to, at, after, on, but
We went to school on Monday.
joins clauses or sentences or words
and, but, when
I like dogs and I like cats. I like cats and dogs. I like dogs but I don't like cats.
short exclamation, sometimes inserted into a sentence
oh!, ouch!, hi!, well
Ouch! That hurts! Hi! How are you? Well, I don't know.
* Some grammar sources categorize English into 9 or 10 parts of speech. At English Club.com, we use the traditional categorization of 8 parts of speech. Examples of other categorizations are:
  • Verbs may be treated as two different parts of speech:
    • Lexical Verbs (work, like, run)
    • Auxiliary Verbs (be, have, must)
  • Determiners may be treated as a separate part of speech, instead of being categorized under Adjectives

·         Parts of Speech Examples
·         Here are some sentences made with different English parts of speech:
verb
Stop!

noun
verb
John
works.

noun
verb
verb
John
is
working.
·          
pronoun
verb
noun
She
loves
animals.

noun
verb
adjective
noun
Animals
like
kind
people.
·          
noun
verb
noun
adverb
Tara
speaks
English
well.

noun
verb
adjective
noun
Tara
speaks
good
English.
·          
pronoun
verb
preposition
adjective
noun
adverb
She
ran
to
the
station
quickly.
·          
pron.
verb
adj.
noun
conjunction
pron.
verb
pron.
She
likes
big
snakes
but
I
hate
them.
·         Here is a sentence that contains every part of speech:
interjection
pron.
conj.
adj.
noun
verb
prep.
noun
adverb
Well,
she
and
young
John
walk
to
school
slowly.
Words with More than One Job
Many words in English can have more than one job, or be more than one part of speech. For example, "work" can be a verb and a noun; "but" can be a conjunction and a preposition; "well" can be an adjective, an adverb and an interjection. In addition, many nouns can act as adjectives.
To analyze the part of speech, ask yourself: "What job is this word doing in this sentence?"
In the table below you can see a few examples. Of course, there are more, even for some of the words in the table. In fact, if you look in a good dictionary you will see that the word "but" has six jobs to do:
  • verb, noun, adverb, pronoun, preposition and conjunction.
word
part of speech
example
work
noun
My work is easy.
verb
I work in London.
but
conjunction
John came but Mary didn't come.
preposition
Everyone came but Mary.
well
adjective
Are you well?
adverb
She speaks well.
interjection
Well! That's expensive!
afternoon
noun
We ate in the afternoon.
noun acting as adjective
We had afternoon tea.

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