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
- Parts of speech have specific functions
- Sentence patterns vary for effect
- Verb tenses express time relationships
- Subject-verb agreement essential
- Common errors create credibility loss
- Modifiers must be positioned correctly
- Parallel structure improves clarity
- Punctuation carries grammatical meaning
- Mastery requires practice and review
- Standard forms change over time
Practice Activities
- Parts of speech identification
- Sentence diagramming
- Tense conversion exercises
- Agreement practice
- Error correction
- Sentence combining
- Parallel structure exercises
- Punctuation practice
- Modifier placement
- 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