Parts of Speech in English: A Comprehensive Guide with Examples & Tables



Words are just like bricks; you pile them together to make phrases, then clauses, and then sentences.

Parts of Speech

All words in the English language are categorized into eight parts of speech: nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjections. If you have an inability to recognize these parts of speech, then you won't be able to understand the English grammar properly.

Nouns and Types of Nouns

A noun is a word that names a person, place, thing, activity, or idea. Recognition of various kinds of nouns is essential to correct capitalization and subject-verb agreement. Nouns can be categorized into the following:

Common Nouns

Nouns that describe a type of person, thing, or place or that names a concept. They are not capitalized unless they appear at the start of a sentence.

  • chair
  • office
  • desk
  • men
  • women
  • customer
  • manager

Proper nouns

Nouns that refer to a specific person, place, or thing by its name. They are always capitalized at any part of a sentence.

  • May
  • Sunday
  • London
  • New Year's Day
  • Mary
  • Tokyo
  • Google

Collective Nouns

Nouns that are used to name any group of something. (A collection of people, animals, or things)

  • staff
  • group
  • team
  • crowd
  • cattle
  • herd
  • gaggle

Concrete Nouns

Nouns that refer to a physical thing, person, or place. (Things that can be sensed)

  • money
  • computer
  • sugar
  • salt
  • laundry
  • ball
  • tree

Abstract Nouns

Nouns that refer to things you can't perceive with your five senses.

  • problem
  • freedom
  • love
  • attitude
  • situation
  • politics
  • theory

Verbs and Types of Verbs

A verb is a word that shows action, being, or state of being. A verb is a word that shows what someone or something hasdoes, or is. Verbs have three principal parts: presentpast, and past participle.

Regular Verbs

(formed by adding -d or -ed)

present → past → past participle.

 

  • talk → talked → talked
  • walk → walked → walked
  • cover → covered → covered
  • hire → hired → hired
  • mark → marked → marked
  • call → called → called
  • invite → invited → invited

Irregular Verbs

Memorize them as they are.

present → past → past participle.

 

  • go → went → gone
  • do → did → done
  • write → wrote → written
  • begin → began → called
  • sit → sat → set
  • break → broke → broken
  • drive → drove → driven

Adjectives and Types of Adjectives

Adjectives are words that describe, number, point out, or in some way tell more about nouns or pronouns. They answer the questions, "Which one?" What kind? How many? How much? The following words are adjectives.

  • perplexing
  • condemning
  • flimsy
  • ridiculous
  • angry
  • bright
  • short

Most adjectives have three degrees of comparison: positive, comparative, and superlative.

 

1. Positive adjectives don't compare anything to anything.

  • My report is short. (positive)

2. Comparative adjectives compare two things.

  • My report is shorter than your report. (comparative)

3. Superlative adjectives compare three or more things.

  • My report is the shortest report ever submitted. (superlative)

👉 Most adjectives (one syllable) are compared by simply adding -er or -est.


Positive Comparative Superlative
quick quicker quickest
bright brighter brightest
short shorter shortest
tall taller tallest

 

👉 Some adjectives (longer than one syllable) are compared with the help of some adverbs like: moremostless. and least.


Positive Comparative Superlative
beautiful more beautiful most beautiful
perplexing more perplexing most perplexing
explicit more explicit most explicit
enjoyable less enjoyable least enjoyable

👉 Some adjectives are compared in irregular forms.


Positive Comparative Superlative
good better best
bad worse worst
ill worse worst
much more most

👉 Some adjectives are absolute (have no comparative or superlative form).

  • perfect
  • empty
  • dead
  • square
  • round
  • unique

Adverbs and Types of Adverbs

Most adverbs tell us more about the main verb of a sentence. They may also describe or explain more about an adjective, another adverb, or the whole sentence. They usually answer the questions, "How?" Why? When? Where? Many adverbs end in -ly.

  • firmly
  • blatantly
  • briskly
  • candidly
  • bitterly
  • daily
  • quickly
  • approximately
  • mistakenly
  • sharply
  • carefully

Adverbs describing or limiting Verbs

Here are some examples of adverbs describing or limiting verbs:

  1. She walked outside and exhaled billows of smoke. (Where did she walk?)
  2. The receptionist is resigning immediately after she pushes her last button. (When will she resign?)
  3. Looking at our organizational flowchart will always confuse you about who really has the final say. (To what extent?)
  4. He expressed his opinion honestly and forthrightly. (How did he express it?)
  5. The committee answered deceptively and dogmatically. (How did the committee answer?)

Adverbs Describing or Limiting Adjectives

Here are some examples of adverbs describing or limiting adjectives:

  1. She is a blatantly disgruntled boss. (To what extent is the boss disgruntled?)
  2. He delights in presenting management with recently reported customer problems. (Reported when?)
  3. This is a more appealing report than the first one; who cares if it is inaccurate? (To what extent is it appealing?)
  4. Bill Gates is a highly respected person. (Respected to what extent?)
  5. she is clearly upset that he isn't a respected person. (Upset to what extent?)

Adverbs Describing or Limiting Other Adverbs

Here are some examples of adverbs describing or limiting other adverbs:

  1. He would very much appreciate your returning his phone call sometime this year. (Appreciate how much?)
  2. He talks his way out of promotions more quickly than any employee I've trained. (Quick to what extent?)

Adverbs Describing or Limiting Sentences

Here are some examples of adverbs describing or limiting sentences:

  1. Candidly, I haven't worked for a guy I admire less.
  2. Frankly, I wouldn't rubber stamp anything that committee decided.

Pronouns and Types of Pronouns

Pronouns take place of nouns or other pronouns. For example, if you don't want to say chair, you can refer to the chair as it. If you don't want to say doctor, you can refer to the doctor with pronouns such as he or himshe or her.

Personal Pronouns

Subject Object Possessive Reflexive
I me mine myself
you you yours yourself
he him his himself
she her hers herself
it it its itself
we us ours ourselves
they them theirs themselves

Interrogative Pronouns

  • what
  • why
  • whose
  • which
  • how
  • who
  • whom

Demonstrative Pronouns

  • this
  • that
  • these
  • those

Indefinite Pronouns

  • all
  • another
  • any
  • anybody
  • anyone
  • anything
  • anywhere
  • both
  • each
  • either
  • every
  • everybody
  • everyone
  • everything
  • few
  • many
  • more
  • most
  • neither
  • no one
  • nobody
  • none
  • nothing
  • nowhere
  • one
  • others
  • several
  • some
  • somebody
  • someone
  • something
  • somewhere

Relative Pronouns

  • that
  • what
  • whatever
  • where
  • wherever
  • which
  • whichever
  • who
  • whoever
  • whom
  • whomever
  • why

Reciprocal Pronouns

  • each other
  • one another

Prepositions and Types of Prepositions

Prepositions link the nouns that follow them to other words in the sentences. There are about 150 prepositions in the English language. Here is a list of the most commonly used prepositions in English.

 

  • about
  • above
  • across
  • after
  • against
  • along
  • among
  • around
  • at
  • before
  • behind
  • below
  • beneath
  • beside
  • besides
  • between
  • beyond
  • by
  • down
  • during
  • except
  • for
  • from
  • in
  • inside
  • into
  • like
  • near
  • of
  • off
  • on
  • onto
  • out
  • over
  • past
  • since
  • through
  • throughout
  • to
  • toward
  • under
  • underneath
  • until
  • unto
  • up
  • upon
  • with
  • within
  • without

Prepositions formed with two or more words

  • according to
  • ahead of
  • along with
  • as well as
  • because of
  • by means of
  • down from
  • in addition to
  • in spite of
  • instead of
  • on account of
  • out of
  • regardless of
  • together with
  • with respect to

Conjunctions and Types of Conjunctions

Conjunctions connect words, phrases, and clauses. They are of three categories: coordinate conjunctionssubordinate conjunctions, and correlative conjunctions.

  • Coordinate conjunctions: link things of equal importance.
  • Subordinate conjunctions: link a less important word, phrase, or idea to a more important word, phrase, or idea.
  • Correlative conjunctions: are used in pairs to connect equal things.

Coordinate Conjunctions

(fanboys)

  • for
  • and
  • nor
  • but
  • or
  • yet
  • so

Coordinating Conjunction Examples

  1. He who pays his tuitions, studies hard, and graduates with highest honors may find a job. (Three equal verbs: pays, studies, graduates)
  2. John and Sophie need more help than they can give each other. (Equal nouns: John and Sophie)
  3. Clever advertising may sell a mediocre product, but a mediocre product can kill a good ad. (Two equal ideas)

Subordinate Conjunctions

  • after
  • although
  • inasmuch as
  • as
  • as if
  • as long as
  • as soon as
  • because
  • before
  • how
  • if
  • in order that
  • since
  • so that
  • than
  • till
  • unless
  • until
  • when
  • whereas
  • whether
  • while
  • why

Subordinate Conjunction Examples

  1. He insists on a bonus until I leave the project. (Until introduces the minor idea)
  2. I can't leave because she has the key to my washroom. (Because introduces the lesser idea of the two)
  3. She told me her answer before I asked the question. (Before links the minor idea to the major idea)

Correlative Conjunctions

  • both/and
  • either/or
  • neither/nor
  • not only/but also
  • whether/if
  • whether/or

Correlative Conjunction Examples

  1. Whether she goes or stays will make little difference in our reorganization plans.
  2. Either you or I will have to put in a full day's work today.
  3. This assertiveness seminar presented me with both the confidence and the stupidity to ask the boss he thinks I'm worth.

Interjection Definition and Examples

Interjections are words or phrases that show strong emotions, something that most people show only after they leave a job. That's why interjections are seldom used in business English. Interjections are grammatically independent from the words around them.

 

  • ah
  • bingo
  • hmm
  • hurray
  • oops
  • ouch
  • wahoo
  • wow

 

We've just finished the eight parts of speech. If you are going to have difficulty in recognizing them, the problem will likely be with a word that can be more than one part of speech.

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