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Grammar and Language Structures

Subject: English Language
Topic: 5


Parts of Speech

Nouns

Naming words:

  • Common nouns (book, chair, person)
  • Proper nouns (London, Shakespeare, Monday)
  • Abstract nouns (happiness, courage, love)
  • Collective nouns (team, family, class)
  • Countable (one book, two books)
  • Uncountable (water, information, advice)

Pronouns

Word substitutes:

  • Personal (I, you, he, she, it, we, they)
  • Possessive (my, your, his, her, its, our, their)
  • Demonstrative (this, that, these, those)
  • Interrogative (who, whose, which, what)
  • Relative (who, whom, whose, which, that)
  • Reflexive (myself, yourself, himself)

Verbs

Action and being words:

  • Transitive (requires object): eat, build, write
  • Intransitive (no object): sleep, arrive, exist
  • Linking verbs: be, become, seem, appear
  • Auxiliary/helping: do, have, be, can, will
  • Regular: walk, walked, walked
  • Irregular: go, went, gone; eat, ate, eaten

Adjectives

Describing words:

  • Descriptive (beautiful, tall, angry)
  • Demonstrative (this, that, these, those)
  • Possessive (my, your, his, her)
  • Interrogative (which, what, whose)
  • Quantitative (some, many, few, several)
  • Comparative (bigger, more beautiful)

Adverbs

Modifying words:

  • Manner (slowly, quickly, carefully)
  • Time (now, yesterday, eventually)
  • Place (here, there, everywhere)
  • Frequency (always, never, sometimes)
  • Degree (very, quite, extremely)
  • Sentence adverbs (However, Thus)

Prepositions

Relationship words:

  • Location (in, on, at, under, above)
  • Time (before, after, during, since)
  • Direction (to, from, toward, through)
  • Relationship (with, without, except)
  • Comparison (like, as)
  • Common errors in usage

Conjunctions

Connecting words:

  • Coordinating (and, but, or, nor, for, yet, so)
  • Subordinating (because, since, although, while)
  • Correlative (both...and, either...or)
  • Transitional (however, therefore, meanwhile)
  • Joining equal clauses
  • Introducing dependent clauses

Articles

The, a, an:

  • Definite article (the)
  • Indefinite articles (a, an)
  • No article (zero article)
  • Usage rules and exceptions
  • Cultural variations
  • Common mistakes

Sentence Structure

Sentence Types

By purpose:

  • Declarative (statement)
  • Interrogative (question)
  • Imperative (command)
  • Exclamatory (exclamation)
  • Punctuation variation
  • Appropriateness context

Sentence Patterns

By structure:

  • Simple (one independent clause)
  • Compound (two independent clauses)
  • Complex (independent + dependent clauses)
  • Compound-complex (multiple of both)
  • Variation for interest
  • Purpose and effect

Clauses

Independent clauses:

  • Contains subject and verb
  • Can stand alone
  • Complete thought
  • Main or principal clause
  • Multiple in compound/complex

Dependent clauses:

  • Cannot stand alone
  • Incomplete thought
  • Requires independent clause
  • Subordinate clause
  • Various functions (noun, adjective, adverb)

Verb Tenses

Simple Tenses

Present simple:

  • Habitual action
  • General truth
  • Scheduled future
  • Form: base verb (I walk, he walks)

Past simple:

  • Completed action
  • Definite time in past
  • Form: base + ed or irregular
  • Examples: walked, went, saw

Future simple:

  • Planned future action
  • Prediction
  • Forms: will + verb, going to + verb
  • Examples: will walk, is going to leave

Continuous Tenses

Present continuous:

  • Action happening now
  • Temporary situation
  • Form: am/is/are + -ing
  • Example: I am walking

Past continuous:

  • Action in progress at specific past time
  • Interrupted action
  • Form: was/were + -ing
  • Example: I was walking when he called

Future continuous:

  • Action in progress at future time
  • Form: will be + -ing
  • Example: I will be walking at noon

Perfect Tenses

Present perfect:

  • Action starting in past, relevant to present
  • Unfinished time period
  • Form: have/has + past participle
  • Example: I have walked

Past perfect:

  • One past action before another
  • First to happen
  • Form: had + past participle
  • Example: I had walked before he arrived

Future perfect:

  • Action completed by future time
  • Form: will have + past participle
  • Example: I will have walked by noon

Subject-Verb Agreement

Basic Agreement

Subject and verb match:

  • Singular subject, singular verb
  • Plural subject, plural verb
  • Example: He walks (not He walk)

Complex Subjects

Challenging agreement:

  • Collective nouns (team is vs. team are)
  • Compound subjects (and = plural)
  • Either...or subjects (agrees with closest)
  • Each, every (singular)
  • Indefinite pronouns (someone is)
  • Tricky plurals (politics is)

Common Grammar Errors

Sentence Boundary Errors

Run-on sentences:

  • Two independent clauses without proper connection
  • Solution: period, conjunction, or semicolon
  • Example error: I went to the store, I bought milk
  • Correction: I went to the store. I bought milk.

Comma splice:

  • Two independent clauses joined with comma only
  • Solution: period, conjunction, or semicolon
  • Example error: I like pizza, my brother prefers pasta
  • Correction: I like pizza; my brother prefers pasta

Fragments:

  • Incomplete sentence
  • Dependent clause alone
  • Missing subject or verb
  • Correction: complete the thought
  • Can be stylistic (rarely)

Agreement Errors

Subject-verb disagreement:

  • Example: The group are meeting (should be is)
  • Solution: ensure subject and verb match
  • Check compound subjects
  • Identify true subject (not prepositional phrase)

Pronoun-antecedent disagreement:

  • Example: Everyone should bring their books (everyone is singular)
  • Solution: Everyone should bring his or her books
  • Note: singular they becoming acceptable

Verb Form Errors

Tense inconsistency:

  • Shifting tenses unnecessarily
  • Example: I walked to the store and buy milk
  • Solution: maintain consistent tense

Irregular verb errors:

  • Using regular form for irregular
  • Example: I goed (should be went)
  • Solution: memorize common irregulars

Pronoun Errors

Case errors:

  • Using object pronoun for subject
  • Example: Me and him went (should be He and I went)
  • Solution: use correct case

Vague pronouns:

  • Unclear antecedent
  • Example: The employees asked the manager for money, but he denied it
  • Solution: clarify what "it" refers to

Misplaced Modifiers

Wrong word order:

  • Example: Jumping off the platform, the dog chased him
  • Solution: place modifier near word it modifies
  • Creates confusing meaning
  • Can create humor unintentionally

Parallel Structure

Definition

Maintaining pattern:

  • Similar grammatical structures for related ideas
  • Lists, comparisons, series
  • Creates rhythm and clarity
  • Improves readability
  • Professional appearance

Examples

Parallel:

  • I like swimming, hiking, and cycling
  • She walks, runs, and jumps

Not parallel:

  • I like swimming, to hike, and cycling (mixing forms)
  • She walks, runs, and is jumping (mixing tenses)

Punctuation as Grammar

Apostrophes

Primary uses:

  • Possession (John's book, boys' books)
  • Contractions (don't, it's, we're)
  • Plurals of letters/numbers (A's, 1960's - optional)
  • Common error: its vs. it's

Semicolons

Usage:

  • Joining independent clauses
  • Complex list items
  • Different from period and comma
  • Proper connection
  • Professional punctuation

Colons

Usage:

  • Before lists
  • Before explanation
  • Between clauses (if explaining)
  • Formal introduction
  • Proper positioning

Dashes and Hyphens

Differences:

  • Hyphen (-) in compound words
  • Em dash (—) for interruption or emphasis
  • En dash (–) for ranges
  • Double hyphen or em dash effects
  • Stylistic choices

Key Points

  1. Parts of speech have specific functions
  2. Sentence patterns vary for effect
  3. Verb tenses express time relationships
  4. Subject-verb agreement essential
  5. Common errors create credibility loss
  6. Modifiers must be positioned correctly
  7. Parallel structure improves clarity
  8. Punctuation carries grammatical meaning
  9. Mastery requires practice and review
  10. Standard forms change over time

Practice Activities

  1. Parts of speech identification
  2. Sentence diagramming
  3. Tense conversion exercises
  4. Agreement practice
  5. Error correction
  6. Sentence combining
  7. Parallel structure exercises
  8. Punctuation practice
  9. Modifier placement
  10. Grammar review tests

Revision Tips

  • Study grammar rules systematically
  • Do practice exercises
  • Read and note patterns
  • Correct your errors
  • Keep error journal
  • Study your mistakes
  • Practice regularly
  • Get feedback
  • Review common errors
  • Build consistent habits