9 Parts of Speech in English English Grammar Lesson

Hi, I’m Kasia.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this lesson, you can learn about parts
of speech in English.

How many parts of speech are there in English?

Can you name them, and explain what they do?

Understanding parts of speech—nouns, verbs,
adjectives, and so on—can help you to understand

English sentence structure and how English
grammar works.

In this class, you’ll learn the basic information
about parts of speech, you’ll see some ways

that parts of speech can be more complicated
than you might expect, and you’ll have several

chances to practice!

So, first question: how many parts of speech
are there?

Well, I did a Google search, and many of the
top results said ‘eight’.

So there must be eight parts of speech in
English.

Wrong!

There are nine.

Ah, what are they?

Number one: nouns.

Nouns can be things, animals, or people, like
doctor, pencil, tree or cat.

Nouns can also be ideas or abstract things,
like idea, happiness, time or money.

Number two: verbs.

Verbs can be actions, like do, run, fly or
win.

Verbs can also describe states, like be, love,
believe or understand.

Number three: adjectives.

Adjectives describe nouns.

For example: red, big, metal, or beautiful.

Number four: adverbs.

Adverbs can describe verbs, meaning they describe
how someone does something.

For example, quickly, loudly, angrily or well.

Adverbs can also describe adjectives, other
adverbs, or even whole sentences.

For example, very is an adverb which can describe
an adjective—very slow—or another adverb—very

slowly.

Unfortunately or sometimes are adverbs which
can be used to add information to a whole

sentence.

For example:

Unfortunately, they missed the train and were
late to their own wedding!

Sometimes, I wish I’d made different choices
in life.

So, adverbs are a little more complicated.

Here’s a good way to remember it: adjectives
and adverbs both describe other words.

They are both used to add information to something
else.

Adjectives describe nouns, and adverbs describe
everything else: verbs, adjectives, adverbs

and whole sentences.

Number five: pronouns.

Pronouns replace or represent nouns.

For example, I, you, she or they are pronouns
which represent different people.

You use pronouns to avoid repeating the same
word, or to refer to something when it’s

obvious what you mean.

For example:

How was the weather there?

There is a pronoun which refers to a place.

If you’ve already mentioned the place you’re
talking about, you don’t need to say it

again.

Another example:

Give me two, please.

Two is a pronoun which refers to a quantity
of something which has already been mentioned.

The person you’re talking to already knows
what you’re talking about.

Number six: prepositions.

Prepositions usually go before a noun or noun
phrase.

What’s their job?

Prepositions can do two basic things: first,
they can add an idea of time, place, or movement

to a noun.

For example:

on Wednesday
in the corner

towards the door

Secondly, prepositions can connect other words
to a noun, or a pronoun.

For example, think about the verb depend on.

The preposition on connects the verb depend
to the object of the verb.

For example:

It depends on the cost.

Usually, the noun or noun phrase goes after
the preposition.

However, sometimes the preposition can link
to a noun (or pronoun) earlier in the sentence.

For example:

What does it depend on?

Here, on links to the pronoun what.

Conjunctions.

Conjunctions connect two things.

A conjunction can connect two words:

I like cake and ice-cream.

A conjunction can connect two phrases:

Do you want to go now or wait till this afternoon?

You can also use a conjunction to connect
two clauses:

Although I’ve been trying to learn for years,
I’m still really bad at drawing.

Number eight: determiners

Determiners go before a noun.

They include words like a, the, this or that,
which help to specify which noun you’re

talking about.

Words like my, your, his, her, etc. are also
determiners.

They specify which noun you’re talking about
by saying who something belongs to.

Determiners can also tell you how many of
something there are.

Look at three examples:

ten bananas
some people

both of my brothers

The words ten, some and both are determiners.

Number nine: interjections

Interjections are different, because they
aren’t normally part of a sentence.

Interjections are words or phrases which show
how you feel.

For example:

Wow!

Ah, crap!

No way!

So, now you know about the nine parts of speech
in English.

Let’s practice!

Look at three sentences.

Each sentence has five words.

They told me about it.

Look in the big cupboard.

Put it there, but carefully.

Can you identify which part of speech each
word is?

Pause the video and think about your answers.

How did you do?

Could you identify the parts of speech correctly?

Let’s look at one more.

I’m staying in this evening.

What part of speech are these words?

Think about it.

So, I is a pronoun, am is a verb, and staying
is also a verb.

What about in?

Did you say it’s a preposition?

It’s not a preposition; it’s an adverb.

How does this work?

We had the word in in one of the sentences
you saw before, and it was a preposition.

So, what’s going on?

Some words can only be one thing.

For example, the words independence or hair
can only be nouns.

Believe and destroy can only be verbs.

However, many words can be more than one part
of speech.

There are two things happening here.

First, a word can be two different things,
which have the same written form and the same

pronunciation.

Think about the word win.

Is it a noun or a verb?

It can be both.

I’m sure they’ll win the game this weekend.

We’ll be hoping for a win in the big game
this weekend.

Many words are like this.

Red can be an adjective or
a noun.

What do you think about this red for the kitchen?

I like that red top she was wearing.

This is very common: very often, a word with
one written form can be two (or more) different

parts of speech.

We told you there are two things happening
here; what’s the other?

Sometimes, a word can be different parts of
speech depending on its function in the sentence.

Look at two sentences:

I have a few photos of my grandparents.

Sure, you can have a few.

Here’s a question: what part of speech is
few in these sentences?

In the first sentence, few is a determiner;
in the second, it’s a pronoun.

Can you explain why this is?

Think about what few does in these two sentences.

In the first sentence, few adds a quantity
to the noun photos.

It tells us how many photos you have.

This makes it a determiner.

In the second sentence, few replaces a noun.

You don’t know which noun it replaces, but
in context, you would understand what the

person meant.

Maybe it was ‘a few biscuits’, or ‘a
few pieces of paper.’

We don’t know!

But, you do know that few replaces a noun,
which makes it a pronoun.

Another example is the sentence we saw before:

I’m staying in this evening.

Prepositions go with nouns, and connect nouns
to other words in the sentence.

In here doesn’t go with a noun, so it can’t
be a preposition.

In here means ‘at home’, and it adds information
to the verb stay.

What kind of words add information to verbs?

Adverbs!

So, in is an adverb.

Wait a minute, did we ever finish explaining
what parts of speech are in this sentence?

You’re right!

We didn’t.

Let’s do it now.

You need to say what parts of speech the words
this evening are.

Can you do it?

Maybe you said that this is a determiner,
and evening is a noun.

That’s technically correct, but it’s not
the best answer.

The best answer is that this evening is an
adverb.

How do you explain that?

Until now, you’ve seen single words, and
how single words can be nouns, verbs, etc.

However, when you’re thinking about parts
of speech, you can’t just think about single

words.

Phrases can also be nouns, verbs, adjectives,
and so on.

Let’s do an example:

Add a small spoonful of brown sugar, then
turn the heat down and stir the mixture gently.

Think about the first part of this sentence:
add a small spoonful of brown sugar.

What parts of speech do we have here?

Of course, you can go through it word by word.

You can say, add is a verb, a is a determiner,
small is an adjective and so on.

But, is that the most useful way of looking
at it?

It makes more sense to see this as a verb—add—and
a noun—a small spoonful of brown sugar.

The noun is made up of several parts of speech:
determiners, adjectives, prepositions and

nouns, but together they have one meaning.

These words refer to one thing.

You can analyse a sentence in several different
layers.

So, you can see a small spoonful of brown
sugar as six individual words, or one noun

phrase.

You could also see it as three parts: a determiner—a
small spoonful, a preposition—of, and a

noun—brown sugar.

Confused?

We understand!

You want to know the answer.

You want to know which way is ‘correct’.

There isn’t one ‘correct’ way to say
this.

There are different perspectives.

A better question is: which perspective makes
more sense?

In this sentence, a small spoonful of brown
sugar refers to one thing in the world.

So it makes sense to think of it as one part
of speech in the sentence.

What about the second part of the sentence?

How would you analyse the parts of speech?

As you saw before, there isn’t one right
answer, but here’s a suggestion.

The sentence contains a conjunction—then,
and then two verb phrases linked with the

conjunction and.

This makes sense because the sentence is telling
you to do two things: turn the heat down and

stir the mixture gently.

So, it makes sense to see turn the heat down
as one part of speech, because it’s telling

you do to one thing.

Let’s put these ideas together.

First, when you think about parts of speech,
you can’t just memorise information.

You have to look at each sentence individually,
and think about what each word is doing.

Secondly, always think about what the sentence
means in the real world.

Sentences aren’t abstract things; they refer
to real people, real things and real actions.

There is always more than one way to analyse
the parts of speech in a sentence: choose

the way that makes sense based on what the
sentence is telling you about real life!

Let’s do a more challenging practice exercise
so you can see these ideas in action.

Look at three sentences:

Amazing!

It’s way better than I ever thought it would
be.

She was an amazing clinician, who came up
with many innovative ways to treat patients.

I don’t believe it!

How would you analyse the parts of speech
in these sentences?

Think about the ideas we talked about in the
last section.

Does it make sense to break the sentences
into individual words, or is it better to

group words into phrases?

Pause the video and think about your ideas.

Ready?

Here are our answers.

You can pause the video again to look at these
in more detail.

Notice how the same word can be different
parts of speech in different sentences.

For example, amazing is an interjection in
one sentence, and an adjective in another.

Notice also the different layers of analysis.

For example, look at the phrase many innovative
ways.

You can see this as one noun phrase, or as
a determiner plus a noun phrase, or as three

individual parts: a determiner, an adjective
and a noun.

Which is correct?

They all are!

Choose the perspective which makes more sense
to you.

Want more practice with this topic?

Check out the full version of this lesson
on our website: Oxford Online English dot

com.

You can practice with a quiz to check your
understanding of parts of speech in English.

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!

大家好,我是卡西亚。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

在本课中,您可以学习
英语的词性。

英语有多少个词性?

你能说出它们的名字,并解释它们的作用吗?

理解词类——名词、动词、
形容词等——可以帮助你理解

英语句子结构和英语
语法的工作原理。

在本课程中,您将学习有关词性的基本信息
,您将看到一些

使词性变得比您想象的更复杂的方法
,并且您将有多次

练习的机会!

那么,第一个问题:有多少词性

好吧,我做了一个谷歌搜索,许多
排名靠前的结果都是“八”。

所以英语必须有八个词性

错误的!

有九个。

啊,他们是什么?

第一:名词。

名词可以是事物、动物或人,例如
医生、铅笔、树或猫。

名词也可以是想法或抽象事物,
如想法、幸福、时间或金钱。

第二:动词。

动词可以是动作,例如 do、run、fly 或
win。

动词也可以描述状态,例如是、爱、
相信或理解。

第三:形容词。

形容词描述名词。

例如:红色、大、金属或美丽。

第四:副词。

副词可以描述动词,这意味着它们描述
了某人如何做某事。

例如,快速、大声、愤怒或很好。

副词也可以描述形容词、其他
副词,甚至是整个句子。

例如,very 是一个副词,可以描述
一个形容词——非常慢——或者另一个副词——非常

慢。

不幸的是,有时是副词
可以用来为整个句子添加信息

例如:

不幸的是,他们错过了火车,并且
迟到了自己的婚礼!

有时,我希望我在生活中做出不同的选择

所以,副词要复杂一些。

这是记住它的好方法:形容词
和副词都描述其他词。

它们都用于向其他事物添加信息

形容词描述名词,副词描述
其他一切:动词、形容词、副词

和整个句子。

第五:代词。

代词代替或代表名词。

例如,我、你、她或他们是
代表不同人的代词。

你使用代词是为了避免重复同一个
词,或者在你的意思很明显时指代某事

例如:

那里的天气怎么样?

有一个代词是指一个地方。

如果你已经提到了你正在谈论的地方
,你不需要再说

一遍。

另一个例子:

请给我两个。

二是代词,指代
已经提到的事物的数量。

与您交谈的人已经
知道您在说什么。

第六:介词。

介词通常放在名词或名词
短语之前。

他们的工作是什么?

介词可以做两件基本的事情:首先,
它们可以为名词添加时间、地点或运动的概念

例如:

on Wednesday
in the corner to

the door

其次,介词可以将其他词连接
到名词或代词。

例如,想想动词依赖。

连接动词的介词
取决于动词的宾语。

例如:

这取决于成本。

通常,名词或名词短语在
介词之后。

但是,有时介词可以链接
到句子前面的名词(或代词)。

例如:

它取决于什么?

在这里,关于代词什么的链接。

连词。

连词连接两件事。

一个连词可以连接两个词:

我喜欢蛋糕和冰淇淋。

连词可以连接两个短语:

你想现在去还是等到今天下午?

你也可以用连词来连接
两个从句:

虽然我多年来一直在努力学习,
但我的绘画仍然很糟糕。

第八:

限定词 限定词放在名词之前。

它们包括诸如 a、the、this 或 that 之类的词,
这些词有助于指定您正在

谈论的名词。

像我的、你的、他的、她的等词也是限定词

他们通过说出某物属于谁来指定您正在谈论的名词

限定词还可以告诉你有多少
东西。

看三个例子:

十根香蕉
一些人

都是我的

兄弟 十、一些和两者都是限定词。

第九点:感叹词

感叹词是不同的,因为它们
通常不是句子的一部分。

感叹词是表达
您的感受的单词或短语。

例如:

哇!

啊,废话!

没门!

所以,现在你知道了英语的九个词性

让我们来练习!

看三句话。

每个句子有五个单词。

他们告诉我这件事。

看看大柜子。

放在那里,但要小心。

你能分辨出每个
词的词性吗?

暂停视频并思考你的答案。

你是怎么做的?

你能正确识别词性吗?

让我们再看一个。

我今晚住。

这些词是什么词类?

想想看。

所以,我是代词,am是动词,stay
也是动词。

在呢?

你说这是介词吗?

这不是介词; 这是一个副词。

这是如何运作的?

我们在你之前看到的一个句子中有这个词
,它是一个介词。

发生什么了?

有些词只能是一回事。

例如,独立或头发这两个词
只能是名词。

相信和破坏只能是动词。

但是,许多单词可以是不止一个
词性。

这里发生了两件事。

首先,一个词可以是两个不同的事物,
它们具有相同的书写形式和相同的

发音。

想想赢这个词。

它是名词还是动词?

两者都可以。

我相信他们会在本周末赢得比赛。

我们希望在本周末的大型比赛中获胜

很多词都是这样的。

红色可以是形容词
或名词。

你觉得厨房的这种红色怎么样?

我喜欢她穿的那件红色上衣。

这是很常见的:很多时候,
一个书面形式的单词可以是两个(或更多)不同

的词性。

我们告诉过你这里发生了两件事
; 另一个是什么?

有时,一个词可以是不同的
词性,这取决于它在句子中的功能。

看两句话:

我有几张我祖父母的照片。

当然,你可以有几个。

这里有一个问题:
这些句子中哪些词性很少?

在第一句中,很少是限定词;
第二,它是一个代词。

你能解释这是为什么吗?

想想很少人在这两句话中做了什么。

在第一句话中,很少
给名词照片添加数量。

它告诉我们你有多少张照片。

这使它成为一个决定因素。

在第二句中,很少替换名词。

你不知道它取代了哪个名词,但
在上下文中,你会明白这个

人的意思。

也许是“几块饼干”,或者“
几张纸”。

我们不知道!

但是,您确实知道很少有人代替名词,
这使它成为代词。

另一个例子是我们之前看到的那句话:

我今晚住。

介词与名词一起使用,并将名词
与句子中的其他单词联系起来。

in here 不带名词,所以不能
做介词。

这里的意思是“在家”,它
为动词stay增加了信息。

什么样的词给动词增加信息?

副词!

所以,in是副词。

等一下,我们有没有解释完
这句话的词性?

你说得对!

我们没有。

让我们现在就开始做吧。

你需要说出今晚的话是什么词类

你能做到吗?

也许你说这是一个限定词,
而晚上是一个名词。

这在技术上是正确的,但这
不是最好的答案。

最好的答案是今晚是一个
副词。

你怎么解释?

到目前为止,您已经看到了单个词,以及
单个词如何成为名词、动词等。

但是,当您考虑
词性时,您不能只考虑单个

词。

短语也可以是名词、动词、形容词
等。

举个例子:

加入一小勺红糖,然后把火关小
,轻轻搅拌混合物。

想想这句话的第一部分:
加一小勺红糖。

我们这里有哪些词性?

当然,你可以一个字一个字地看。

你可以说,add 是动词,a 是
限定词,small 是形容词等等。

但是,这是最有用的
看待它的方式吗?

将其视为动词(添加)
和名词(一小勺红糖)更有意义。

名词由几个词性组成
:限定词、形容词、介词和

名词,但它们合起来有一个意思。

这些话是指一件事。

您可以在几个不同的层次上分析一个句子

因此,您可以将一小勺
红糖视为六个单独的单词或一个名词

短语。

你也可以把它看成三个部分:一个
限定词——一小勺,一个介词——of,和一个

名词——红糖。

使困惑?

我们明白!

你想知道答案。

你想知道哪种方式是“正确的”。

没有一种“正确”的
说法。

有不同的观点。

一个更好的问题是:哪种观点
更有意义?

在这句话中,一小勺
红糖指的是世界上的一件事。

因此,将其视为
句子中的一个词性是有道理的。

句子的第二部分呢?

你会如何分析词性?

如您之前所见,没有一个正确的
答案,但这里有一个建议。

该句子包含一个连词-then,
然后是两个与连词and相连的动词短语

这是有道理的,因为这句话告诉
你要做两件事:把火关小,

轻轻搅拌混合物。

因此,将热度降低
作为演讲的一部分是有道理的,因为它告诉

你要做一件事。

让我们把这些想法放在一起。

首先,当你考虑词性时,
你不能只记住信息。

您必须单独查看每个句子,
并考虑每个单词在做什么。

其次,始终考虑
句子在现实世界中的含义。

句子不是抽象的东西; 它们指
的是真实的人、真实的事物和真实的行动。

分析
句子中的词性总是有不止一种方法:

根据
句子告诉您的现实生活选择有意义的方式!

让我们做一个更具挑战性的练习,
这样你就可以看到这些想法在行动。

看三句话:

太棒了!

这比我想象的要好得多

她是一位了不起的临床医生,她想出
了许多治疗患者的创新方法。

我不相信!

你会如何分析
这些句子中的词性?

想想我们在
上一节中谈到的想法。

将句子
分解成单个单词是否有意义,还是将

单词组合成短语更好?

暂停视频并思考您的想法。

准备好?

这是我们的答案。

您可以再次暂停视频
以更详细地查看这些内容。

注意同一个词是如何
在不同的句子中成为不同的词性的。

例如,amazing 在
一个句子中是感叹词,在另一个句子中是形容词。

还要注意不同的分析层。

例如,看这句话的许多创新
方式。

您可以将其视为一个名词短语,或将其视为一个限定词
加上一个名词短语,或将其视为三个

单独的部分:一个限定词、一个形容词
和一个名词。

哪个是对的?

他们都是!

选择对您更有意义的视角

想要更多地练习这个话题吗? 在我们的网站上

查看本课程的完整版本
:Oxford Online English dot

com。

您可以通过测验来检查您
对英语词性的理解。

感谢收看!

下次见!