Grammar terms Flashcards
Adjectival modifier
A word, phrase, or clause that acts as an adjective in qualifying the meaning of a noun or pronoun. Ex. YOUR country; a TURN-OF-THE-CENTURY STYLE; people WHO ARE ALWAYS LATE.
Adjective
A word that modifies, quantifies, or otherwise describes a noun or pronoun. Ex. Midnight DREARY.
ADVERB
A word that modifies or otherwise qualifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Ex. gestures GRACEFULLY.; EXCEPTIONALLY quiet engine.
Adverbial phrase
A phrase that functions as an adverb. Ex. Landon laughs WITH ABANDON.
Agreement
The correspondence of a verb with its subject in person and number(Cally goes to Berkeley; her brothers GO to UCLA), and of a pronoun with its antecedent in person, number, and gender (As soon a Karen finished the exam, SHE picked up HER books and left the room).
Antecedent
The noun which a pronoun refers. A pronoun and its antecedent must agree in person, number, and gender. Michael and HIS teammates moved off campus.
appositive
A noun or noun phrase that renames or adds identifying information to a noun it immediately follows. His brother, THE ACCOUNTANT WITH PRICE, WATERHOUSE, was recently promoted.
articles
The words a , an , and the, which signal or introduce nouns. The definite article THE refers to a particular item: THE REPORT. The indefinite articles A and AN refer to a general item or one not already mentioned: AN APPLE.
Auxiliary verb
A verb that combines with the main verb to show differences in tense, person, and voice. The most common auxiliaries are forms of BE, DO, and HAVE. Ex. I AM going; we DID not go; they HAVE gone.
Case
The form of a noun or pronoun that reflects its grammatical function in a sentence as subject (they), object (them), or possessor (their). She gave HER employees a raise that pleased THEM greatly.
Clause
A group of related words that contains a subject and predicate. EX. MOTHS SWARM around a burning candle. While SHE WAS TAKING the test, Karen MUTTERED to herself.
Colloquialism
A word or expression appropriate to informal conversation but not usually suitable for academic or business writing. Ex. They wanted to GET EVEN.
Complement
A word or phrase (especially a noun or adjective) taht completes the predicate.
Subject complements
complete linking verbs and rename or describe the subject: Martha is my NEIGHBOR. She seems SHY.
Object Complements
complete transitive verbs by describing or renaming the direct object: They found the play EXITING. Robert considers Mary A WONDERFUL WIFE.
Compound sentence
Two or more independent clauses joined by a coordinating junction, a correlative conjunction, or a semicolon. EX. Ceaser conquered Gaul, but Alexander the Great conquered the world.
Compound subject
Two or more simple subjects joined by a coordinating or correlative conjunction. Ex. HEMINGWAY and FITZGERALD had little in common.
Coordination conjunction
A word that joins words, phrases, clauses, or sentences. The coordination conjunctions, and, but, or, nor, so, for join grammatically equivalent elements.
Correlative conjunctions
(both and; either, or; neither, nor) join the same kinds of elements.
contraction
A shortened form of a word or group of words: CAN’T for cannot;THEY’RE for there are.
dependent clause
A group of words that includes a subject and verb but it subordinate to an independent clause in a sentence. Dependent clauses begin with either a subordination conjunction, such as IF, BECAUSE, SINCE, or a relative pronoun, such as WHO, WHICH, THAT. EX. WHEN IT GETS DARK, we’ll find the restaurant THAT HAS MUSIC.
Direct object
A noun or pronoun that receives the action of a transitive verb. Ex. Pearson publishes BOOKS.
Gerund
The -ing form of a verb that functions as a noun. Ex. HIKING is a good exercise. She was praised for her PLAYING.
Indefinite pronoun
A pronoun that refers to an unspecified person (anybody or thing (something)
Independent clause
A group of words with a subject and verb that can stand alone in a sentence. EX. Raccoons steal food.
Indirect object
A noun or pronoun that indicates to whom or for whom, to what or for what the action of a transitive verb is performed. EX. I asked HER a question. Ed gave the DOOR a kick