English, asked by khushi7976, 8 months ago

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?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

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

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