Basic English
Basic English
1) SYNECDOCHE - an association of some important part with the whole it represents. Example: The face
who launched a thousand ships.
7) IRONY - the contrast between what was expected and what actually happened.
😎 HYPERBOLE - an exaggeration.
12) APOSTROPHE - a direct address to an abstract things or a person who passed away.
9 Parts of Speech
1. Nouns are a part of speech that comprise words that are used to name people, places, animals,
objects and ideas. Anything we can touch, see, smell, taste, hear and hold can be referred to as nouns.
2. A pronoun is defined as ‘a word that is used instead of a noun or a noun phrase’, according to the
Cambridge Dictionary. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines pronouns as ‘any of a small set of words
(such as I, she, he, you, it, we, or they).
3. A verb is a word that expresses action, state of being, or a relation between two things in a sentence.
5. An adverb is a word that modifies (describes) a verb (“he sings loudly”), an adjective (“very tall”),
another adverb (“ended too quickly”), or even a whole sentence (“Fortunately, I had brought an
umbrella.”). Adverbs often end in -ly, but some (such as fast) look exactly the same as their adjective
counterparts.
6. A preposition is a word—and almost always a very small, very common word—that shows direction,
location, or time, or that introduces an object.
8. Interjection are a part of speech used to convey or express sudden feelings and emotions.
9. An article is a determiner that precedes a noun or noun phrase and identifies it as either specific or
nonspecific. The definite article is the, and the indefinite articles are a and an.
ENGLISH NOTES
✍🏻
EIGHT PARTS OF SPEECH
▪ARTICLES -the, a, an
▪INTERJECTIONS -exclamation
NOUN
Types:
Functions of noun:
-subjects
-direct objects
-indirects objects
-objects of preposition
-predicate nominatives
-object complements
PRONOUN
•Personal
VERB
Intransitive No object
Infinitive to + Verb
Modal may/might/will
Moods of Verb
Verb Tenses
•Simple
•Continuous (Progressive)
•Perfect
•Perfect Continuous
ADJECTIVE
Clean Good
Adjective clause
ADVERB
Degrees of Comparison
Quickly
PREPOSITIONS
CONJUNCTIONS
INTERJECTIONS
SENTENCE
Types:
1. SIMPLE SENTENCE has only one clause and obe independent variable.
4. COMPLEX COMPOUND SENTENCE has many clauses, atleast one of which is a telative clause.
The dog, which is eating the bone, is happy but the cat is sad.
Purposes:
Phrase -word or group of words that function as a single unit in the syntax of a sentence.
Clause -verb, its necessary grammatical arguments and any adjuncts affecting them.
SENTENCE PATTERNS
Independent clause- contains subject, verb and a complete thought.
1. Independent Clause
The way people write has changed ; more people are writing than ever before.
The way people write has changed; in addition, more people are writing than ever before.
The way people write has changed, and more people are writing than ever before.
Writing, which humans have done for thousands of years, has changed.
Because the way people write has changed, the way we teach writing has also changed.
The way people write has changed though many people claim otherwise.
GRAMMAR RULES
• A sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a period , question or exclamation mark.
- John teaches.
• When using two or more adjectives together, the usual order is opinion--adj.+fact--adj.+noun.
• The words its and it's are two different words with different meanings.
• The words there, their and they're are three different words with different meanings.
- He's finished.
- He is working.
- Is China in Asia?
• Use a or an for countable nouns in general, the for specific countable nouns and all uncountable
nouns.
• Use a with words beginning with a consonant sound. Use an with words beginning with a vowel sound.
• Use many or few with countable nouns, use much or little for uncountable nouns.
1. Articles
2. Opinion
3. Size
4. Age
5. Shape
6. Color
7. Material
8. Purpose