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The document provides examples of parts of speech, clauses, nouns, definite/indefinite articles, and sentences with grammatical errors/corrections. Section A lists parts of speech. Section B defines dependent and main clauses. Section C describes properties of nouns. Section D provides examples of nouns with definite/indefinite articles. Sections E-G give additional examples. Section H discusses rules for definite articles. The document serves as a reference for grammar, parts of speech, and article usage.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
141 views3 pages

LS1

The document provides examples of parts of speech, clauses, nouns, definite/indefinite articles, and sentences with grammatical errors/corrections. Section A lists parts of speech. Section B defines dependent and main clauses. Section C describes properties of nouns. Section D provides examples of nouns with definite/indefinite articles. Sections E-G give additional examples. Section H discusses rules for definite articles. The document serves as a reference for grammar, parts of speech, and article usage.

Uploaded by

Jason Reyes
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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A: 1. verb 2. noun 3. adjective 4. adverb 5. interjection ? 6. pronoun 7. preposition 8. conjunction 9. numeral 10. noun / verb 11.

noun / adjective 12. noun / conjunction / adjective 13. verb / adjective / noun 14. conjunction / noun / preposition 15. conjuntion / preposition / adverb B: C: 1. Dependant clause 2. Main clause 3. Dependant clause 4. Main Clause 5. Main Clause ? 6. Main Clause 7. Dependant Clause 8. Dependant Clause 9. Dependant Clause 10. Dependant Clause 11. Main Clause 12. Main Clause 13. Dependant Clause 14. Main Clause 15. Dependant Clause D: 1. Concrete, common, noncount, singular, invariable 2. concrete, common, countable, singular, variable 3. concrete, common, noncount, plural, variable 4. abstract, proper, noncount, singular, invariable 5. abstract, common, noncount, singular, variable 6. concrete, common, noncount, singular, invariable 7. abstract, common, countable, singular, variable 8. concrete, common, noncount, singular, variable 9. concrete, common, noncount, singular, invariable 10. concrete, common, noncount, singular, invariable 11. abstract, common, countable, plural, variable

12. concrete, common, countable, singular, variable E: 1. Leaves 2. Moose 3. Swiss 4. Wives 5. Lice 6. Women authors 7. Analyses 8. Sisters-in-law 9. Stimuli 10. Species 11. Criteria 12. Persons F: 1. The couple was in the restaurant. 2. Correct 3. Two miles is a long distance to crawl. 4. The Himalayas are in Asia. 5. Correct 6. Correct 7. Correct 8. Check out the news in today's paper. 9. The women's movement is still going strong. 10. Correct 11. Many important evidence is shown in the report. 12. He is a yodeller from Austria. 13. They went to bed having lost their interest in TV. 14. Communism is a political ideology. G: H: 1. A noun that does not change when it is pluralised, i.e cod, swedish, moose, japanese, sheep. 2. A: Engineer is a noun beginning with a vowel, therefore an is used. Engineer is also a profession, so it's not a definite article. Managing is a verb. B: ? C: Both Catholic and Protestant begin with a consonant. They are both groups. D: Professor is a profession that many people have, therefore an indefinite article is used. E: The person wants some coffee, not coffee as a whole. 3. A: The area that is polluted is known by both speaker and listener B: C: The doctors are not knows to the speaker, he is using the word to refer to doctors as a whole. D: The doctors are known to both the speaker and the listener. E: F: The speaker discusses a specific hospital G: History as a whole, not a specific part of it.

H: US is an acronym. A definite article would not be used for the word America. 4. EU: yes Internet: yes Winter: no Netherlands: yes Lake Michigan: no BBC: yes Rocky Mountains: yes New York Times: yes Kennedys: yes Easter: no Pacific Ocean: yes The definite article is normally not used with names. It is however used with countries, organisations, newspapers, geographical locations, families etc. 5. A. This is a normal answer B. Society has a great responsibility in these matters. C: USA has eight of the world's top ten universities. D: What nice weather! E: ?? F: He's in a good mood today. G: Parents sometimes feel that they can't affect their children's lives. H: There were a lot of damage to their car after the accident. I: Many people have lost their jobs during the recession. J: We often had homeworks consisting of a list of words that had to be learned by heart.

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