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Parts of speech - Coggle Diagram
Parts of speech
Nouns
- A naming word of something we can
see, fell, touch and sometimes draw.
Common noun
A naming word of things that are "common."
These are things we see on a daily basis.
They are not written with capital letters.
Proper noun
A proper noun is a name of something specific - places, people or things.
They are always written with a capital letter.
Abstract noun
A name of a feelings or emotion. This is not something that is tangible.
Example: Freedom
We do not write these nouns with a capital letter.
Concrete noun
This is the name of something tangible. It can be touched, in other words.
We do not write these words in capital letters.
Countable and Uncountable nouns
A countable noun is a noun that can be counted.
An uncountable noun is a noun we can not count.
Regular verbs
A verb which only gets the suffix "-ed" at the end when written in the past tense.
Walk - walked
-
Auxiliary verb
Helping verb
This type of verb is always written in a sentence together with another verb.
This type of verb tells us in which tense the sentence is written in.
is/am/are, was/were, has/have/had
Adverb
- A word that tells us more about the verb.
It "adds" to the verb.
-
-
-
-
-
Adjective
- A word that modifies or gives us more information about the noun.
Degrees of comparison
That tells us when compared to other nouns, what the degree is.
Positive - fat
Comparative - fatter (-er)
Superlative - fattest (-est)
Conjunction
- A word that joins sentences, paragraphs or ideas together.
Coordinating conjunctions: FANBOYS
- for
- and
- not
- but
- or
- yet
- so
Interjection
- A word that shows intense emotion.
- WOW! Ouch! Stop!