find words to fill in the blanks that end with able able spelling service in some cases you may have to add a prefix.
something that you cannot see?
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Answer:
Grammar A–Z
Some grammatical terms may be familiar to you, but others can be confusing or hard to remember. Clicking on any term below will give you a quick and clear definition. Below the categorized section you’ll find all the terms listed from A–Z, so you can browse that way if you prefer.
Nouns
Noun
Abstract noun
Collective noun
Common noun
Concrete noun
Countable noun
Gerund
Mass noun
Proper noun
Uncountable noun
Verbal noun
Verbs
Verb
Active
Agent
Auxiliary verb
Finite verb
Infinitive
Intransitive
Irregular
Modal verb
Non-finite verb
Object
Participle
Passive
Phrasal verb
Regular
Split infinitive
Subject
Transitive
Adjectives
Adjective
Attributive
Classifying
Comparative
Positive
Postpositive
Predicative
Qualitative
Superlative
Pronouns
Pronoun
Personal pronoun
Possessive pronoun
Articles
Article
Definite article
Indefinite article
Tenses and Moods
Aspect
Conditional
Continuous
Future
Imperative
Indicative
Interrogative
Mood
Past
Perfect
Present
Progressive
Subjunctive
Tense
Sentences
Sentence
Syntax
Clauses
Clause
Conditional clause
Coordinate clause
Defining relative clause
Main clause
Non-restrictive relative clause
Relative clause
Restrictive relative clause
Subordinate clause
Speech
Direct speech
Indirect speech
Reported speech
Other parts of speech
Part of speech
Adverb
Conjunction
Determiner
Exclamation
Interjection
Preposition
Quantifier
Word class
Other useful terms
Adjunct
Adverbial
Affirmative
Cohesion
Cohesive device
Complement
Compound
Connective
Consonant
Contraction
Coordination
Corpus
Digraph
Ellipsis
Etymology
First person
Formal
Fronting/fronted
GPC
Grapheme
Grapheme-phoneme correspondences
Homograph
Homonym
Homophone
Inflection
Informal
Modifier
Morpheme
Morphology
Negative
Phrase
Phoneme
Plural
Possessive
Prefix
Root Word
Schwa
Second person
Slang
Split digraph
Standard English
Stress
Subordination
Suffix
Syllable
Third person
Trigraph
Unstressed
Vowel
Word
Word family
abstract noun
A noun which refers to an idea, quality, or state (e.g. warmth, liberty, happiness), rather than a physical thing that can be seen or touched. Compare with concrete noun.
active
An active verb has a subject which is performing the action of the verb, for example:
John ate the apple.
The opposite of passive. Find out more about active and passive verbs.
adjective
A word, such as heavy, red, or sweet, that is used to describe (or modify) a noun. Learn more about adjectives.
adjunct
A type of optional adverbial that adds extra information to a sentence, for instance:
I can’t sleep at night.
Read more about adverbials and adjuncts.
adverb
A word, such as very, really or slowly, that is used to give more information about an adjective, verb, or other adverb. Learn more about how to use adverbs.
adverbial
An adverb, phrase, or clause which changes, restricts, or adds to the meaning of a verb, for instance:
I put my bag on the floor.
Read more about adverbials