10 oraciones en ingles con noun, pronoun, verb, adjetive, adverb, determiners, preposition, conjuntion end interjection
Respuestas
Respuesta:esta es con nous 10 oraciones en ingles con noun, pronoun, verb, adjetive, adverb, determiners, preposition, conjuntion end interjection
Pronouns
A pronoun takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
There are seven different kinds of pronouns.
1. The personal pronoun takes the place of a specific or named person or thing. Personal pronouns come in three different cases: nominative, objective, and possessive.
he, she, it, they (nominative)
her, him, you, them (objective)
his, hers, yours, ours, its, theirs (possessive)
2. The reflexive pronoun adds information by pointing back to a noun or another pronoun.
myself, yourself, herself, ourselves, themselves, etc.
Students who cheat are only hurting themselves.
3. The intensive pronoun adds emphasis to a noun or pronoun.
myself, yourself, herself, ourselves, themselves, etc.
I, myself, am unsure of the procedure.
Your Turn: In your notes, write the reflexive and intensive pronouns in the example sentences above.
4. The demonstrative pronoun points out a specific person, place, or thing.
this, that, these, those, such
This is incredible!
5. The relative pronoun begins a subordinate clause and relates the clause to a word in the main clause.
who, whoever, which, that
The student who studies the hardest usually does the best.
Your Turn: In your notes, write the demonstrative and relative pronouns in the examples above.
6. The interrogative pronoun is used to ask a question. The personal interrogative pronouns come in the same three cases as the personal pronouns.
7. Indefinite pronouns refer to persons, places, or things without specifying for certain which one.
everybody, anybody, somebody, all, each, every, some, none, one
whoever, whomever, whatever (indefinite relative pronouns)
Everyone is wondering if any is left.
Your Turn: In your notes, write the indefinite pronouns in the example sentence above.
Verbs
Action Verb
An action verb expresses a mental or physical action.
run, jump, working, sits
He tasted the ice cream. (action)
Your Turn: In your notes, write a sentence that uses an action verb.
Linking Verb
A linking verb is a verb which links or establishes a relationship between the subject and a term in the predicate which describes or renames the subject.
It does not show action, but, rather, it links. One way of testing for a linking verb is to replace the verb with the appropriate form of seem. If the sentence is still saying pretty much the same thing, the verb is a linking verb.
The common linking verbs are:
be, appear, become, feel, seem, smell, taste, and sound
Judge Bianca is an expert at matters of family law.
The ice cream tasted good.
(Tasted is used to help good describe the subject.)
Your Turn: In your notes, write a sentence that uses a linking verb.
Auxiliary Verbs
An auxiliary verb combines with another verb to help form the tense, mood, voice, or condition of the verb it combines with.
The verbs to have, to be, to do, will, shall, would, should, can, may, might, and could are the common auxiliary verbs in English.
Auxiliary verbs are sometimes called helping verbs. In the last sentence, are is the auxiliary verb in the passive verb phrase are called.
Your Turn: In your notes, write the common auxiliary, or helping, verbs listed above.
The Difference Between an Adjective and Adverb
An adjective describes or modifies nouns or pronouns.
strong horses
An adverb modifies verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.
extremely strong horses
Your Turn: In your notes, write the adjectives in the examples above. Write down the adverb and circle it.
Prepositions
Prepositions are words which relate a noun or pronoun (called the object of the preposition) to another word in the sentence.
The preposition and the object of the preposition together with any modifiers of the object is known as a prepositional phrase.
The following is a list of a few of the prepositions used in English today. Note that many of the words may also function as other parts of speech. Also note that some prepositions are compound, made up of more than one word.
across, among, at, beside, between, but, of, to, with
Your Turn: In your notes, write down all the prepositional phrases used in the paragraphs above.
Prepositional Phrases
A prepositional phrase is a phrase beginning with a preposition and ending with a noun or pronoun. The phrase relates the noun or pronoun to the rest of the sentence. The noun or pronoun being related by the preposition is called the object of the preposition. In this paragraph the prepositional phrases are red. The objects of the prepositions are italicized.
Your Turn: In your notes, list the prepositions used in the paragraph above.
Conjunctions
Conjunctions are words that join words, phrases, or sentence parts.
In English there are three kinds of conjunctions.
Explicación:
amigo me desmoremucho en esto pero ay tienes tu respuesta
Respuesta:
no sé mano enserio eso es lo que quiero saber