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part of speech - Coggle Diagram
part of speech
DETERMINERS
Determiners are words placed in front of a noun to make it clear what the noun refers to
type of determiners
Definite article : the
Indefinite articles : a, an
Demonstratives: this, that, these, those
Pronouns and possessive determiners : my, your, his, her, its, our, their
Quantifiers : a few, a little, much, many, a lot of, most, some, any, enough
Numbers : one, ten, thirty
Distributives : all, both, half, either, neither, each, every
Difference words : other, another
Pre-determiners : such, what, rather, quite
example
He like that cake.
What superpower would you like?
Azman like that cake, but Saiful don't like that cake.
I'm not a panda. I'm the panda.
ADJECTIVE
An adjective describes or modifies noun/s and pronoun/s in a sentence. It normally indicates quality, size, shape, duration, feelings, contents, and more about a noun or pronoun.
type of adjective
Descriptive Adjectives
Quantitative Adjectives
Proper Adjectives
Demonstrative Adjectives
Possessive Adjectives
Interrogative Adjectives
Indefinite Adjectives
Articles
Compound Adjectives
example
There a seven days in a week.
The women is tall.
Abu is tall, but he is fat.
There a seven days in a week and there a four weeks in a month.
Verb
Is the word that in syntax conveys an action, an occurrence or a state of being. The basic form with or without particle to, is the infinitive. Verbs are inflected to encode tense, aspect, mood and voice.
Type of Verb
Action Verbs - Action verbs are words that express action (give, eat, walk, etc.) or possession (have, own, etc.). Action verbs can be either transitive or intransitive.
Transitive Verbs - A transitive verb always has a noun that receives the action of the verb, called the direct object. Transitive verbs sometimes have indirect objects, which name the object to whom or for whom the action was done.
Intransitive Verbs - An intransitive verb never has a direct or indirect object. Although an intransitive verb may be followed by an adverb or adverbial phrase, there is no object to receive its action.
Linking Verbs - A linking verb connects the subject of a sentence to a noun or adjective that renames or describes the subject. This noun or adjective is called the subject complement.
Helping Verbs -Helping verbs are used before action or linking verbs to convey additional information regarding aspects of possibility (can, could, etc.) or time (was, did, has, etc.). The main verb with its accompanying helping verb is called a verb phrase.