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Sunday, November 13, 2016

PARTS OF SPEECH


This report arranged to complete one of Grammar assignments.






Arranged by:

                                       Name                       : Dede Sulaeman
                                       Student Number    : 151101010843




ENGLISH EDUCATION PROGRAM
FACULTY OF TEACHER TRAINING AND EDUCATION
BOGOR IBN KHALDUN UNIVERSITY
2016


PREFACE


First of all, thanks to Allah SWT who has given His bless to the writer for finishing the English paper assignment entitled “Parts of Speech” on time.
The writer also wish to express his deep and sincere gratitude for those who have guided in completing this paper. This English paper contains summary of Parts of Speech that can help the students to give more simple explanations. In this paper describes 6 kinds of parts of speech : nouns, pronouns, verbs and auxiliaries, adjectives, adverbs, and prepositions. And 5 kinds of phrases: noun phrases, verb phrases, adjective phrases, adverb phrases, and prepositional phrases.
Those explanations also can be used as the guidance for those who want to more simple explanations. Hopefully, this paper can help the readers to expand their knowledge about Parts of Speech.









                                                                                                                      Bogor, May 2016



                                                                                                                      Dede Sulaeman



CONTENTS






A.                NOUNS

Noun is one of the most important parts of speech, it may function as the chief or “head” word in many structures modification.

Types of Nouns

      1.      Proper Nouns
A proper nouns begins with capital letter in writing. It includes personal names (Mr. John), name of geographic units (Holland), name of nationalities and religion (Dutchman), names of holidays (Easter) names of time units (Sunday), and words used for personification (Liberty).
      2.      Concrete and Abstract Nouns
A concrete noun is a word for physical object that can be perceived by the senses (flower, girl). An abstract noun is a word for a concept, it is an idea that exist in our mind only (beauty, justice).
      3.      Countable and Non-countable Nouns
A countable noun can usually made plural by the addition of –s (two girls). A non-countable noun is not used in a plural for concrete stated in an undivided quantity (coffee).
      4.      Collective Nouns
A collective noun is a word for a group of people, animal, or objects considered as a single unit (class, crew, family).
      5.      Noun Compounds
The term compound, as it used for a part of speech, refers to a group of words-usually two, but sometimes more-joined together in one vocabulary unit that functions as a single part of speech (grammar book).

Function of Nouns

      1.      Subject of Verb
Who or what is being talked about. (The girl is resting).
      2.      Complement of Verb
This completes the predication after the verb. (Please give that man some money)
      3.      Subjective Complement (Predicate Noun)
Used after a linking verb to refer back to the subject. (Washington was the first President of the United States).

Position of Nouns

The position of a noun is determined by its function in the sentence. The usual position for a subject is before the verb, in some cases the subject comes after the verb (Does your wife like candy?).

Form of Nouns

      1.      Inflectional form (gender, case and number),
      2.      Plural inflectional form. The general rule of writing of English noun is to add –s to singular form         (boy-two boys),
      3.      Possessive inflectional form. A singular noun is changed to possessive form by the addition of ‘s         (boy’s mother), and
      4.      Derivational form. The derivational forms of nouns consist of the following suffixes.
            (arrangement, happiness, dancing, relationship, etc.).

Markers of Nouns

      1.      Determiner
a)        Articles. Indefinite (a pencil, an eraser) and indefinite (the pen)
b)        Possessives (my aunt, John’s book)
c)        Demonstratives (this child, those boys)
d)       Numbers (four girls, fifth girl)
e)        Words of indefinite quantity (some people, more books)
      2.      Prepositions (in the house, after the storm)

B.                 PRONOUNS

The traditional definition  of a pronoun as “a word that takes the place of a noun” is applicable to some types of pronouns but not to others.

Types of Pronoun

       1.      Personal Pronouns and Impersonal Pronoun
Personal Pronoun refers to:
a.       The speaker, called the first person.
Singular (I) and Plural (we)
b.      The person spoken to, called the second person.
Singular (you) and Plural (you)
c.       The person or thing is being spoken of.
Singular (he, she and it) and Plural (they)
            The impersonal pronoun one is used to generalize for all persons.
       2.      Interrogative Pronouns
There are three interrogative pronouns (who, what, and which)  introduce direct and indirect questions.
      3.      Relative Pronouns
Relative pronouns introduce adjective clauses in which they serves as subjects or objects. Relative pronouns (who, which, that) refer to noun antecedents which immediately precede them.
      4.      Demonstrative Pronouns
Demonstrative pronouns point out someone or something. This (plural these) generally refers to what is near at hand and that (plural those) to what is farther away.
      5.      Reflexive Pronouns
The reflexive pronoun is a combination of –self with one of the personal pronoun or with the impersonal pronoun. The reflexive pronouns generally refer to an animate being, usually a person.
      6.      Reciprocal Pronouns
The reciprocal pronouns indicates that the individual members of a plural subject mutually react one on the other. The reciprocal pronouns are each other and one another.
      7.      Indefinite Pronouns
Indefinite persons or things. These pronouns are all singular in form and are used without noun antecedents. (somebody, anything, nothing, everyone). Indefinite quantities. All of these pronouns (all, few, lots of, many, neither, plenty, etc.) also function as an adjective except none.

Function of Pronouns

Pronouns have most of the same functions as nouns.
      1.      Subject of Verb (They were late for their appointment).
      2.      Object of Verb (We enjoyed ourselves at the party).
      3.      Subjective Complement (That’s the one).
      4.      Appositive (The men all got into the boat).

Position of Pronouns

Pronouns subjects appear before the verbs, pronouns objects appear after the verbs or after the prepositions. A third-person pronouns, a demonstrative pronouns, or a relative pronouns generally appear in some position after the noun it refers to.

C.                VERBS

The verbs grammatical properties are tense, voice, mood, and aspect. Verbs are word that usually express an action.

Types of Verbs

      1.      Predicating or Linking Verbs
A predicating verb is a chief of word in the predicate that says something about the subject (The girl is pretty). The predicating word has traditionally been called verb of “action” (He comes late).
      2.      Transitive or Intransitive Verbs
A transitive verbs take a direct object (She is reading a book); an intransitive verbs do not require an object (They are walking in the park).
      3.      Reflexive Verbs
A reflexive verb requires one of the compounds with –self as its object, some verbs may be used with or without reflexive pronoun object (washed yourself and dressed myself quickly).
      4.      Auxiliary or Lexical Verbs
The lexical verb (arrived) carries the chief burden of semantic content. The auxiliary (will open)  acts as a “helping” verb to the lexical verb by adding either structural elements and a semantic coloring such as ability.
      5.      Finite or Non-Finite Verbs
A finite verb is a lexical verb with or without auxiliaries that act as the full verb in the predicate. Non-finite verbs are incomplete verb forms that functions as other parts of speech than verbs.

Function of Verbs

The verb function as the grammatical center of the predication about the subject. The verb is so basic that other functions are determined in relation to it.

Position of Verbs

The verbs is used after subject, or before an object or complement. The verb appears before the subject in most questions, and in sentences or clauses that begins with certain types of negative adverbs.

Grammatical Form of Verbs

The grammatical form of verbs is usually discussed in connection with tense. The most common interpretation of tense is a semantic one; each tense roughly indicates a kind of time. On the basis interpretation by meaning, some grammarians give three tense system but most grammarians give a six tense system.

Irregular Verbs

The types of principal parts of the irregular verbs are:
1.      All Three Principal Parts Are Different (begin – began – begun),
2.      Second and Third Principal Parts Are Alike (cling – clung – clung),
3.      All Three Principal Parts Are Alike (hit – hit – hit),
4.      First and Third Principal Parts Are Alike (come – came – come), and
5.      First and Second Principal Parts Are Alike (beat – beat – beaten).

Regular Verbs

Most verbs are regular. If a verb is regular, the past simple and past participle end in –ed. Example ( clean – cleaned – cleaned ).

D.                AUXILIARIES

Auxiliary verbs are “helping” verbs that add structural meaning or semantic coloring to verbs carrying the full burden of lexical meaning.

Types of Auxiliaries

      1.      Tense Auxiliaries
The tense auxiliaries (be, have, will/shall) performed a structural function only.
      2.      Do Auxiliary
The do auxiliary is accompanied by the simple form of the verb. It is used only in the simple present tense and in the simple past tense.
      3.      Modal Auxiliaries
These auxiliaries add to the adverb a special semantic component such as ability, obligation, and possibility. Modal auxiliaries have no –s suffix for third person and have two formal tenses, there are the present and the past.
a)        Ability. Three kinds of ability may be indicated by can and be able to.
b)        Permission. Strict schoolbook rules say we must only may for permission.
c)        Obligation or Advisability. Should and ought to occur in statements about one’s duty or one’s advantage which one is free to accept or reject.
d)       Necessity. Must and have to suggest a more urgent course of action which does not allow for the possibility of rejection.
e)        Possibility, may is the regular auxiliary expressing possibility.

E.                 ADJECTIVES

The adjective is a modifier that has the grammatical property of comparison.

Types of Adjectives

      1.      Determiners
a)        Articles (the, a-an),
b)        Demonstrative adjectives (this [plural these] and that [plural those]),
c)        Possessive adjectives (from pronoun [my] and from noun [John’s]),
d)       Numeral adjectives (cardinal [four] and ordinal [first]),
e)        Adjectives for indefinite quantity (some, few, all, more, etc.), and
f)         Relative of interrogative adjectives (whose, what, which).
      2.      Descriptive Adjectives
Descriptive adjectives usually indicate an inherent quality (beautiful and intelligent), or the physical state such as age, size and color. Some adjectives take form of proper adjectives, participle adjectives, adjective compounds.

Function of Adjectives

The adjective modifies a noun (The small boy) or pronoun (The is small).

Position of Adjectives

      1.      In Relation to Nouns.
Pre-Position (The tall man) and Post-Position (Two months ago),
      2.      In Relation to Verb.
After linking verb (The boy is small), after certain time (The storm has made me uneasy), and in the special verb-adjective combinations that express a state (She held the child tight), and
      3.      In Relation to Pronoun.
After the pronoun (He is looking for something new and exciting to do) and before the pronoun (Did you buy the blue one?).

Form of Adjectives

      1.      Inflectional form
Descriptive adjectives have special forms only for comparison. Some adjectives form the comparative and superlative with –er and –est, and some with more, most, others in either of these ways.
      2.      Derivational Form
Most adjective derivational suffixes have little semantic content, they merely serve as part-of-speech indicator (ending –ful, ending –able).

Markers of Adjectives

Adjectives are signaled by adverbs of degree like very, quite, rather (very, quite, rather useless, quite pretty).

F.                 ADVERBS

Adverbs range in meaning from words having a strong lexical content to those that are used merely for emphasis.

Types of Adverbs

      1.      Manner
The manner adverb has characteristic adverbial form –ly (quickly).
      2.      Place and Direction
Among the adverbs of place and direction (here, left) may be included some prepositional forms appearing after the verb (He came in).
      3.      Time
Definite time, these adverbs have a fixed boundary in time (today) and Indefinite time, this kind has no fixed boundary (recently, soon).
      4.      Intensifying Adverbs
Adverbs of degree, denoting how much and how complete (very and almost) and  distinguishing adverbs, emphasize particular words or grammatical constructions (even, only).
      5.      Sentence Adverbs
These adverbs have a loose grammatical connection with the rest of sentence and are locked upon as modifying whole sentence (actually).
      6.      Conjunctive Adverbs
These adverbs establish relationship between one sentence or clause and preceding sentence or clause (however).
      7.      Explanatory
 These adverbs illustrate or enumerate (e.g. = for example).
      8.      Relative and Interrogative Adverbs
To introduce adjective clauses and questions (when, where, why and how).
      9.      Exclamatory
This adverb is used with adjective and adverbs (how).

Function of Adverbs

     1.      Adverb as modifier of verb (The boy threw the ball quickly).
     2.      Adverb as modifier of an adjective or an adverb (The very small boy threw the ball very quickly).
     3.      Adverb as modifier of an entire sentence (fortunately, the boy threw the ball).

Position of Adverbs

     1.      Initial-position. Before the subject (sometimes she comes late).
     2.      Mid-position. With the verb (she sometimes comes late).
     3.      Final-position. After the verb object (she comes late sometimes).

Punctuation of Adverbials

Commas used to set off adverbials are determined by whether the writer would pause in speech.
1.      Adverbials in Initial-Position. Commas occur after adverbials in initial position (Actually, She doesn’t care).
2.      Adverbials in Final-Position. Commas generally don’t cut off adverbials of time and place in final position (I saw him there Sunday night).
3.      Adverbials in Mid-Position. Such commas must appear before and after the adverbials element (Mr. Jones, obviously, doesn’t care to work).

Form of Adverbs

Short adverbs that have the same form as adjectives are compared by the addition of –er and –est. the –ly adverbs of manner are compared by the use of more-than, the most. Less-than, the least are also used in the comparison of manner adverbs.

Markers of Adverbs

Adverbs of degree mark the adverb, just as they do the adjective (very quickly, too slowly, quite well, much more pleasantly).

G.                PREPOSITIONS

Preposition range in meaning from such definite semantic notions as time, place, etc. to such purely structural meanings as those shaped (of, in, above).

Types of Prepositions

      1.      Time
a)        One pint of time (in, on, at),
b)        Extended time (since, by, from-to, for, during, in or within), and
c)        Sequence of time (before, after).
      2.      Place (Direction and Position)
a)         Position. The point itself (in or inside, on, at), higher or lower than a point (over, above, under, and below) neighboring the point (near, next to, beside, between, opposite).
b)         Direction. (Movement in regard to a point) The kind of movement designated by each preposition given below is illustrated by the diagram below. (to-from, towards, into-out of, up-down, around, through, past, as far as).

Function of Prepositions

The preposition has the function of connecting a noun or a pronoun to another word, usually a noun, verb or adjective. (they arrived in the morning).

Position of Prepositions

In certain informal usages, the object of the preposition may appear in initial position in the clause, and the preposition final position. (what is this dress made of?).

H.                PHRASES

Words can be organized in to higher units, known as phrases. A phrases may consist of a single word or a group of words.

Type of Phrases

      1.      Noun Phrases
A noun phrase can consist of a noun alone (audiences, John), a determiner, one or more adjectives, and a noun (a man, the car). But, A noun phrase can consist of just a pronoun (I, he, them, etc.).
      2.      Verb Phrases
A verb phrase is a combination of main verb and its auxiliaries in a sentence (she has been sleeping for two hours).
      3.      Adjective Phrases
An adjective phrase has an adjective as its head that can be followed by modifier adverbs and also take complements (so lucky, slow to respond).
      4.      Adverb Phrases
Adverb phrase has an adverb as its head, optional modifier may follow the adverb head and they typically express degree. (pretty soon).
      5.      Prepositional Phrase
The preposition and its noun phrase form a unit which is called a prepositional phrase (in the closet).


REFERENCES

Frank, Marcella. 1972. Modern English: a practical reference guide, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc.
Sri Redjeki, Indah. 2016. Grammar One, Bogor: University of Ibn Khaldun Bogor.


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