What do you mean by parts of speech?

Parts of Speech Table

This is a summary of the 8 parts of speech*. You can find more detail if you click on each part of speech.

part of speech function or "job" example words example sentences
Verb action or state (to) be, have, do, like, work, sing, can, must EnglishClub.com is a web site. I like EnglishClub.com.
Noun thing or person pen, dog, work, music, town, London, teacher, John This is my dog. He lives in my house. We live in London.
Adjective describes a noun a/an, the, 2, some, good, big, red, well, interesting I have two dogs. My dogs are big. I like big dogs.
Adverb describes a verb, adjective or adverb quickly, silently, well, badly, very, really My dog eats quickly. When he is very hungry, he eats really quickly.
Pronoun replaces a noun I, you, he, she, some Tara is Indian. She is beautiful.
Preposition links a noun to another word to, at, after, on, but We went to school on Monday.
Conjunction joins clauses or sentences or words and, but, when I like dogs and I like cats. I like cats and dogs. I like dogs but I don't like cats.
Interjection short exclamation, sometimes inserted into a sentence oh!, ouch!, hi!, well Ouch! That hurts! Hi! How are you? Well, I don't know.

* Some grammar sources categorize English into 9 or 10 parts of speech. At EnglishClub.com, we use the traditional categorization of 8 parts of speech. Examples of other categorizations are:

  • Verbs may be treated as two different parts of speech:
    • Lexical Verbs (work, like, run)
    • Auxiliary Verbs (be, have, must)
  • Determiners may be treated as a separate part of speech, instead of being categorized under Adjectives
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In

grammar

, a

part of speech

s a linguistic category of wordswhich is generally defined by the

syntactic

or

morphological

behaviour of the lexical item in question. Commonlinguistic categories include

noun

and

verb

, among others. There are

open word classes

, which constantly acquire new members, and

closed word classes

, which acquire new members infrequently if at all.Almost all languages have the lexical categories noun and verb, but beyond these there are significant variations in differenanguagesFor example,

Japanese

has as many as three classes of

adjectives

where

English

has one;

Chinese

,

Korean

and Japanese have

nominal classifiers

whereas European languages do not; many languages do not have a distinction between adjectives and adverbs, adjectives and verbsor adjectives and nouns etc. This variation in the number of categories and their identifying properties entails that analysis be done for each individual language. Nevertheless the labels for each category are assigned on the basis of universal criteria.

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i am basically from indai

living in kuwait

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