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Teach English in Outing Jiedao - Shantou Shi
English grammar is pretty wide. It includes eight main parts of speech: nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions and articles. A noun is a part of speech used to identify any of a class of people (a woman), places (Downing Street), things (a bed), or ideas (beauty). Nouns can be devided into common (a boy), personal (Tom), compound (a boyfriend) and collective (a crowd). They also can be countable (a bottle) or uncountable (milk). A verd is a part of speech that means an action (to do) or state (to seem). The last group of verbs can't be used in Present Continious form. Spesial verb form is Gerund, it is formed by adding -ing to an Infinitive form, and denotes action as a noun (like Playing football is fun). Verbs can be regular or irregular. An adjective is a part of speech that describes nouns. If we want to compare objects by some attribute we should use comparative or superlative forms of adjectives (more beautiful or the hottest). An adverd describes verbs (abverbs of manner - badly, frequency - often, time - later, place - around) or other abverbs\\adjectives (degree - very). Pronouns are used as substitutes for nouns or noun phrases. There are four types of pronouns: personal (I), reflexive (myself), possessive (mine), relative (who). Prepositions link words within one sentence (live in Tokyo) and show relations between them. Conjunctions link subjects, objects or clauses within compound sentence. Articles can be definite or indefinite. They are used to designate whether the object is general or particular (a cup of tea is wonderful after a long day or the cup of tea is wonderful after the long day).