English, asked by priankaarora002, 1 month ago

tell me one article from newspaper and make a table of noun pronoun adjective adverb prepositions and conjunction​

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Answered by poonampandey78910
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Answer:

Nouns

Concrete - names an object that can be seen, touched, tasted, etc.

Collective - names a multiple subject or group

Common - general name for a person, place, or thing

Compound - a noun formed from two words

Your Turn: Is a collective noun, as in "a flock of geese," considered singular or plural?

Pronouns

A pronoun takes the place of a noun in a sentence.

There are seven different kinds of pronouns.

1. The personal pronoun takes the place of a specific or named person or thing. Personal pronouns come in three different cases: nominative, objective, and possessive.

he, she, it, they (nominative)

her, him, you, them (objective)

his, hers, yours, ours, its, theirs (possessive)

2. The reflexive pronoun adds information by pointing back to a noun or another pronoun. myself, yourself, herself, ourselves, themselves, etc.Students who cheat are only hurting themselves.

3. The intensive pronoun adds emphasis to a noun or pronoun. myself, yourself, herself, ourselves, themselves, etc.I, myself, am unsure of the procedure.

4. The demonstrative pronoun points out a specific person, place, or thing. this, that, these, those, such This is incredible!

5. The relative pronoun begins a subordinate clause and relates the clause to a word in the main clause.who, whoever, which, that

The student who studies the hardest usually does the best.

6. The interrogative pronoun is used to ask a question. The personal interrogative pronouns come in the same three cases as the personal pronouns. what, which, who/whom/whose

7. Indefinite pronouns refer to persons, places, or things without specifying for certain which one.everybody, anybody, somebody, all, each, every, some, none, onewhoever, whomever, whatever (indefinite relative pronouns)Somebody is wondering if any is left.

The Difference Between an Adjective and an Adverb

An adjective describes or modifies nouns or pronouns. It can give the size, shape, condition, color, or amount of the noun.strong horses

An adverb modifies verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs. It can tell you how, when, or where, or to what extent the action, being, or condition is happening extremely strong horses.

Prepositions

Prepositions are words which relate a noun or pronoun (called the object of the preposition) to another word in the sentence.

The preposition and the object of the preposition together with any modifiers of the object is known as a prepositional phrase.

The following is a list of a few of the prepositions used in English today. Note that many of the words may also function as other parts of speech. Also note that some prepositions are compound, made up of more than one word.across, among, on, at, beside, between, for, of, to, with

Conjunctions

Conjunctions are words that join words, phrases, or sentence parts.

In English there are three kinds of conjunctions.

1. Coordinate conjunctions join similar words, phrases, or clauses to each other. In English the main coordinate conjunctions are and, or, for, but, nor, so and yet. (Note the use of or and and in the last two sentences.)

2. Correlative conjunctions also join similar words, phrases, or clauses, but act in pairs. In modern English these are main correlative conjunctions:either/or, neither/nor, both/and, whether/or, not/but, not only/but also.

3. Subordinating conjunctions join subordinate clauses to main clauses. The following is a list of the most common subordinating conjunctions.

Common Subordinating Conjunctions

after

although

as

as if

as long as

as though

because

before

even if

even though if

if only

in order that

now that

once

rather than

since

so that

than

that though

till

unless

until

when

whenever

where

whereas

wherever

while.

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