A noun....
Names a person, place, thing, or idea.
A pronoun is....
A word that replaces the noun.
A verb is....
A word that describes the action of the sentence.
An adjective are...
Used to describe a noun or a pronoun.
Use an HOW OFTEN adverb in this sentence:
The lion roared ______.
Some examples:
rarely
sometimes
often
daily
Singular: Just ONE
Plural: More than one.
The verb that does not follow the usual rules for verb forms is....
An irregular verb
Adverbs.....
tells you where, why, or how much something is done.
Use a WHEN adverb in this sentence:
The penguins swam _______________.
Some examples:
yesterday
last week/month/year.
There are ____ rules for plural nouns.
There are FOUR rules.
What is a Possessive Pronoun?
There are ______ verb tenses. They are.....
There are THREE. They are PAST, PRESENT and FUTURE.
Add an adjective to this sentence:
The _____ water felt good on the _____ day.
Some examples:
cold/hot
warm/cold
Identify the VERB and ADVERB in this sentence.
Liam shouted loudly at the BTS concert.
Verb: shouted
Adverb: loudly
The difference between a COMMON and PROPER noun is....
Common nouns: Name any person, place, thing, or idea and is not capitalized
Proper nouns: Name a specific person, place, thing or idea and is capitalized.
Subject: uses a pronoun to act as the subejct of the sentence.
OBJECT: uses a pronoun to recieve the action
The difference between an AUXILIARY and LINKING verbs is...
Auxiliary: helps the main verb by adding more details.
Linking: they link verbs to describe the 5 senses and reflect a state of being.
Add an adjective to this sentence:
Taylor Swift is a ________ singer.
Some can be:
Tall
great
famous
etc.
Some examples:
Cat-> Cats
The difference between CONCRETE and ABSTRACT nouns is....
Concrete: Names something you can see, feel, hear, smell, or taste.
Abstract: Names something you can NOT see, feel, hear, smell, or taste
The difference between a DEMONSTRATIVE and RELATIVE pronoun is....
Demonstrative: replaces a noun
Relative: combine sentences that share a common noun
We add -ed or -d to the end.
The difference between a COMMON and PROPER adjective.
COMMON: adjective that do not name anything and not capitalized.
PROPER: adjective that name something and are always capitalized.