English, asked by sanyasrivastava07, 10 months ago

make a calendar of parts of speech.​


nk9341990: Noun
nk9341990: Pronoun
nk9341990: Verb
nk9341990: Adverb
nk9341990: Adjective
nk9341990: Preposition
nk9341990: Counjection
nk9341990: Interjection

Answers

Answered by sahilklakra
8

Answer:

Explanation:Parts of Speech:

The words that we use can be divided into these classes:

noun - A noun is a type of word that represents a person, thing, or place, like mother, apple, or valley.

verb - A verb is a type of word that describes an action or a state of being, like wiggle, walk, run, jump, be, do, have, or think.

pronoun - A pronoun is a substitute for a noun. Some pronouns are: I, me, she, hers, he, him, it, you, they, them, etc.

adjective - An adjective is a word that describes something (a noun). Some adjectives are: big, cold, blue, and silly. One special type of adjective is an article, a word that introduces a noun and also limits or clarifies it; in English, the indefinite articles are a and an, the definite article is the.

adverb - An adverb is a word that tells "how," "when," "where," or "how much". Some adverbs are: easily, warmly, quickly, mainly, freely, often, and unfortunately.

preposition - A preposition shows how something is related to another word. It shows the spatial (space), temporal (time), or logical relationship of an object to the rest of the sentence. The words above, near, at, by, after, with and from are prepositions.

conjunction - A conjunction is a word that joins other words, phrases, clauses or sentences. Some conjunctions are: and, as, because, but, or, since, so, until, and while.

interjection - An interjection is a word that expresses emotion. An interjection often starts a sentence but it can be contained within a sentence or can stand alone. Some interjections are oh, wow, ugh, hurray, eh, and ah.

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