Articles
Article Rules
Numeral Adjectives
Pronominal Adjectives
Miscellaneous
100

Name the article(s) in the sentance below.

I saw exactly the pair of boots I wanted.

"The" is the article

100

TRUE OR FALSE: The following word is an article

That

FALSE

100

Name the Numeral Adjective(s) in the sentence.

There are eleven people in the classroom.

Eleven is the numeral adjective.

100

Name the demonstrative adgective(s)

This cat belongs to my mom.

"This" is the demonstrative adjective

100

List the two types of articles.

(BONUS POINT: Tell me what the numeral adjective is in the sentence above for 50 extra points!)

Definite and indefinite

(BONUS POINT ANSWER: two)

200

Name the article(s) in the sentance below.

The story of Hansel and Gretel teaches a very important lesson.

(BONUS POINT: Gain 50 extra points by summarizing the story of Hansel and Gretel)

"A" is the article

(BONUS ANSWER: Summery of the story was approved by either Mrs. Krys or one of the people teaching this lesson.)

200

TRUE OR FALSE: The following sentence is a rule applied to articles.

Definite articles "a" and "an" may be used with any kind of noun.

FALSE

Why? "A" and "an" are indefinite articles that can ONLY be used with singular nouns.

200

Name the Numeral Adjective(s) in the sentence.

Millions of people go to the art gallery to see the many pictures on display.

Millions is the numeral adjective.

200

Name the possesive adjective(s).

His pet dog is bigger than my cat.

"His" and "my" are both possesive adjectives.

200

List articles that you learned about from the slideshow

A, an, the

300

Name the article(s) in the sentance below.

The man tried to buy a sculpture and an eagle statue.

"The", "a", and "an"

300

TRUE OR FALSE: The following sentence is a rule applied to articles.

Article "a" is used after a consonant sound

FALSE

Why? Article "a" is used BEFORE a consonant sound not after.

300

Name the Numeral Adjective(s) in the sentence.

There were very many chickens on the roof.

There is no numeral adjectives

300

Name the distributive adjective(s).

Neither of them are the imposter.

"Neither" is the distrubutive adjective.

300

How many classes are Prominal adjectives divided into?

Five

400

Name the indefinite article(s) in the sentance below.

An eagle landed on the porch during a zombie invasion.

"An" and "a" are the indefinite articles.

400

TRUE OR FALSE: The following sentence is a rule applied to articles.

The article "an" is used before a vowel sound.

TRUE

400

Name the Numeral Adjective(s) in the sentence.

There were seven patients in the doctor's waiting room and Max was the first.

(BONUS POINT: What part of speech is "Max?")

"Seven" and "first" are the Numeral Adjectives.

(BONUS ANSWER: Noun)

400

Name the indefinite adjective(s).

All of the students were in the classroom along with many other children.

(BONUS POINTS: Name the article in the sentence above for 50 points!)

Both "All" and "many" are the indefinite adjectives.

(BONUS ANSWER: "the" is the article.)

400

What kind of adjective is "that?"

Use "that, these, those," and "this" in a sentence. (Yes you can do more than one sentence and yes you may use more than one of the words in a sentance.)

Demonstrative adjective

500

Name the definite article(s) in the sentance below.

The boy had become a hypocrite.

"The" is the definite article.

500

TRUE OR FALSE: The following sentence is a rule applied to articles.

The definite article "the" may be used with either singular or plural nouns.

TRUE

500

Name the Numeral Adjective(s) in the sentence.

My mother gave me one hundred dollars and told me to go to the grocery store and get two dozen eggs, a carton of milk, a single bag of flour, chocolate cake mix, four bars of chocolate, and nothing else.

One hundred, two dozen, four, and single

500

Name the interrogative adjective(s).

Which child is yours and what is their name?

Both "Which" and "what" are the interrogative adjectives.

500

Name the five classes of Prominal Adjectives.

Demonstrative, possessive, distributive, indefinite, and interrogative.

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