English, asked by Menonmeenakshi09, 4 months ago

conjunction, preposition, phrasal verb, anagram, direct and indirect object, binomial pair, transitive and intransitive verb, verb-noun colocation, indefinite pronoun, interrogative pronoun, homonym, homophone, homograph, interjection, contraction, coordinating conjunction, subordinating conjuction nominalisation

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Answered by dineshwari8
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Answer:

Conjunction:-

A word used to connect clauses or sentences or to coordinate words in the same clause (e.g. and, but, if ).

Preposition:-

A word governing, and usually preceding, a noun or pronoun and expressing a relation to another word or element in the clause, as in ‘the man on the platform’, ‘she arrived after dinner’, ‘what did you do it for ?’.

phrasal verb:-

A phrasal verb is a verb that is made up of a main verb together with an adverb or a preposition, or both. Typically, their meaning is not obvious from the meanings of the individual words themselves. For example: She has always looked down on me.

anagram:-

a word, phrase, or name formed by rearranging the letters of another, such as spar, formed from rasp.

direct and indirect object:-

The direct object is the thing that the subject acts upon, so in that last sentence, “cereal” is the direct object; it's the thing Jake ate. ... An indirect object is an optional part of a sentence; it's the recipient of an action.

binomial pair:-

A binomial pair is an expression containing two words which are joined by a conjunction (usually and or or). The word order of a binomial pair is usually fixed. Here are some of the most common binomials, split into five categories: 1. Binomial pairs joined by and.

transitive and intransitive verb:-

A verb can be described as transitive or intransitive based on whether it requires an object to express a complete thought or not. A transitive verb is one that only makes sense if it exerts its action on an object. An intransitive verb will make sense without one. Some verbs may be used both ways.

verb-noun colocation:-

verb-noun collocations Collocation: a word or phrase that is often used with another word or phrase, in a way that sounds correct to people who have spoken the language all their lives, but might not be expected from the meaning.

indefinite pronoun:-

a pronoun that does not refer to any person, amount, or thing in particular, e.g. anything, something, anyone, everyone.

interrogative pronoun:-

The five interrogative pronouns are what, which, who, whom, and whose. What – Used to ask questions about people or objects. Examples: What do you want for dinner? I wonder what we're doing tomorrow.

homonym, homophone, homograph:-

Depending on whom you talk to, homonym means either: A word that is spelled like another but has a different sound and meaning (homograph); a word that sounds like another but has a different spelling and meaning (homophone)

interjection:-

an abrupt remark, especially as an aside or interruption

contraction:-

the process of becoming smaller.

coordinating:-

matching or harmonizing attractively

conjunction:-

a word used to connect clauses or sentences or to coordinate words in the same clause (e.g. and, but, if ).

subordinating:-

treat or regard as of lesser importance than something else.

subordinating conjuction :-

A subordinating conjunction is a word or phrase that links a dependent clause to an independent clause. ... A dependent clause, also known as a subordinate clause, is a clause with two specific qualities. Firstly, it does not express a complete unit of thought on its own; it cannot stand as its own sentence.

Nominalisation:-

In linguistics, nominalization or nominalisation is the use of a word which is not a noun (e.g., a verb, an adjective or an adverb) as a noun, or as the head of a noun phrase, with or without morphological transformation. ... Writing advice sometimes focuses on avoiding overuse of nominalization.

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