Many students
finish primary/elementary school without really
learning all of the parts of speech, causing unecessary difficulties in middle and high school, and especially in college. If parents help
their children while they are still in elementary school, these children
will go further with their reading and writing skills and avoid
unnecessary problems later on.
The following parts of speech are
typically taught to students in 3rd - 6th Grade.
Noun
Adjective
Verb
Adverb
Pronouns
Preposition
Conjunction
Interjection
Noun
- a word that names a person, a place, a thing, or an idea.
- Person: Jane, friend, Caleb, parent
- Place: home, city, backyard
- Thing: baseball, homework, secret
- Idea: happiness, trouble, friendship
- Common Nouns: A common noun
is any noun that does not name a specific person, place, thing, or
idea. Common nouns are not capitalized: woman, park,
team, holiday
- Proper Nouns: A proper noun
names a specific person, place, thing, or idea. Proper nouns
are capitalized: Jane Buckley, Regent Park, All Blacks,
Anzac Day
Adjective
- Words that desribe a noun or pronoun. Adjectives tell what
kind, how many, or which one. They usually
appear immediately before the word they describe.
Verb
- A verb shows action: The
girls ran along the riverbank. (The verb ran shows
action). An action verb tells what the subject is doing. (Hint: If
a word ends in -ing, there's a good chance it's a verb!)
Adverb
- Words that desribe a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Adverbs
tell how, when, where, how often, and how much. (Hint:
A lot of words that end in -ly are adverbs)
Basically, most adverbs tell you how,
where, or when something is done. In other words, they describe the manner,
place, or time of an action.
Here are some examples:
Manner |
slowly |
Tom drives slowly. |
Place |
here |
The party is going to take place here. |
Time |
yesterday |
I called him yesterday. |
Pronouns
- Pronouns are used instead of
a nouns. They act exactly like nouns. So, instead of saying "Caleb
went fishing", you could say "He went fishing".
Commonly used pronouns: I, me, my,
mine, myself, you, your, ours, yourself, he, him, his, she, her, hers,
it, its, we, us, our, they, them, their, this, these, who, whom, whose,
which, that, one, ones, everybody, an
Preposition
- Prepositions link and
relate a noun or pronoun to another word in the sentence. They tell how,
where, when, and how something happens.
(Hint: One easy way to tell if a word
is a preposition, which almost always works, is to say, "The
mouse went _______ the fridge.)
Here are some examples to help you out:
about, above, across, after, against,
along, among, around, at, before, behind, below, beneath, beside,
besides, between, beyond, but, by, concerning, despite, down, during,
except, excepting, for, from, in, inside, into, like, near, of, off,
on, onto, out, outside, over, past, regarding, round, since, through,
throughout, till, to, toward, under, underneath, until, up, upon,
with, within, without
Conjunction
- connect individual
words or groups of words. 'The river is wide and
deep.'
and, but, or, for, nor, so, yet,
both-and, either-or, neither-nor, not only-but also, whether-or,
because, if, since, until, when, where, while
Interjection
- are words or phrases
that express strong emotion. They're
used to make someone notice them and to show excitement. They are
usually followed by and exclamation point (!) or sometimes a comma.
Here are a few interjections:
wow, ouch, oops, hey, watch, oh, yes, no, move, stop, help
'Ouch, I stubbed my toe.'
'Hey! Keep your eyes on the road!'
Ways to help your
child learn the Parts of Speech:
create
a grammar poster with your child. Put headings and cut out
examples from magazines, newspapers and their own personal writing to
put under the correct headings.
Try
telling a story without adjectives. Ask your child if the
story sounded different, discuss
what was missing and how it made the story sound. Tell the story
again adding five to ten adjectives. See if your child noticed a
difference and was able to locate which words were the adjectives. Once
your child has mastered this activity, ask them to write a story without
adjectives. When they have finished their story, read it with your
child, and then read it again but this time adding adjectives.
Repeat
this exercise again with nouns or verbs. If they have mastered these
concepts, they will find very quickly that the task is impossible.
Show
your child a piece of writing. Ask them to underline the nouns,
adjectives, verbs in different colors. Read the story, each time
missing one color and discuss what it sounds like.
Check
out the Parts of Speech resources & games available for you to print (see left
column)
Online Games to
help learn the Parts of Speech:
http://www.funbrain.com/grammar/
Parts
of Speech Poem
Every name is
called a noun,
As field
and fountain, street and town.
In place of noun
the pronoun stands,
As he and she
clap their hands.
The adjective
describes a thing
As magic
wand and bridal ring
The verb
means action, something done -
To read
and write, to jump and run,
How things done
the adverb tells
As quickly,
slowly, badly, well;
The preposition
shows relation,
As in the
street or at the station;
Conjunctions
join, in many ways
Sentences, words,
or phrase and phrase
The interjection
cries out "Hark!
I need an
exclamation mark."
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