Basic grammar - parts of speech

Grammar is the system and structure of a language. The rules of grammar help us decide the order we put words in and which form of a word to use.

When you're talking about grammar, it's useful to know some basic terms. The following are called parts of speech and they each have their own function.

Verbs

Verbs are often known as 'doing words'. They can also show 'having' or 'being'.

For example:

  • The horse jumped the fence.
  • The rider had a fall.
  • The rider is not hurt.

Nouns

Nouns are the names of people, places, things and ideas. There are four kinds of noun.

  • Common nouns - dog, computer, river, biscuit
  • Collective nouns (names of a group of something) - a herd of cows, a flock of sheep
  • Proper nouns (the names of people, places and so on) - London, Anne, Plain English Campaign
  • Abstract nouns (names of things we can't see or touch) - love, hope, fear, decision, poverty

Adjectives

Adjectives describe nouns.

For example:

  • She wore a blue dress.
  • The small dog barked at me.
  • A cool breeze made her shiver.

Adverbs

Adverbs give us extra information about how, where or when a verb happens. For example:

  • He drove slowly.
  • She spoke loudly.
  • The article is well written.

Pronouns

AdverbsPronouns are usually small words which stand in place of a noun, often to avoid repeating the noun. They include words such as I, you, he, we, hers, they, it.

Prepositions

Prepositions come before nouns or pronouns and usually show a connection.

For example:

  • Your pen is on the desk.
  • The children went to the park.
  • We rested under the tree.
  • Jim hid behind the door.

Conjunctions

Conjunctions link words, sentences or parts of a sentence together.

  • The rug is blue and cream.
  • The road was busy. And it was loud.
  • I closed the door but I didn't lock it because I thought she was still inside.

Articles

There are two kinds of article: definite and indefinite.

The definite article is 'the'. It is used to identify a specific thing.

The indefinite article is 'a' and 'an'. It is used to refer to something in general.

For example:

  • The cat sat on the mat. (We know which cat and which mat.)
  • I need a ruler. (We do not need a specific ruler, any will do.)
  • The car would struggle to get up a hill. (We can identify which car, but are referring to any hill.)

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