nouns
person, place, thing, or idea
proper nouns
used to name a specific person, place, or thing. Proper nouns begin with a capital letter. Examples: Sarah, Los Angelas, Mars, Cafe Río
common nouns
used to name people, places, or things in general. Examples: house, dog, broom, happy
concrete nouns
refers to people or things that exist physically and that at least one of the senses can detect. Examples: cat, desk, baby, bike
abstract nouns
have no physical existence. They refer to ideas, emotions and concepts you cannot see, touch, hear, smell, or taste. Example: love, time, fear, freedom
plural nouns
More than one of a noun. Examples: wombats, candies, mice
possessive nouns
Expresses ownership. Examples: Blake's notebook, Alan's sock, Makayla's fruit roll-up
pronouns
Replaces a noun. Examples: I, he, she, they, it, his
adjectives
Tell us more about a noun or pronoun. Describes the noun or pronoun. Examples: green slow, five, stinky, tall, round, a, an, the (what kind? which one? how many? how much?)
prepositions
Words we use before nouns or pronouns to show their relationship with other words in the sentence. (above, by, in spite of, according to, for, of, at, from, on, before, in, to, below, in addition to, until)
verbs (main verbs)
Words that show action or a state of being
linking verbs
Verbs that don't show action. They link the subject to words or groups of words that identify or describe the subject. Examples: (appear, seem, look, become, smell, remain, feel, sound, taste, grown, stay, turn)
helping verbs
Helps the main verb express an action or a state of being. (have, has, had, do, does, did, may, might, must, can, will, shall, could, would, should, and forms of "be")
adverbs
describes a verb, an adjective, or another adverb (How? when? where? to what extent?--how much, how long, or how often)
conjunctions
joins words and phrases
interjections
Expresses strong emotions. Followed by an exclamation point or a comma depending on the strength of emotion. Examples: Wow!, Yuck!, Yes!, Sure
action verbs
expresses either physical or mental activity
coordinating conjunctions
FANBOYS: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so