Uses
To
form verb forms
Participles are used with
the auxiliary verbs be and have to make progressive, perfect and
passive verb forms.- She was crying.
(present progressive)
- I have written
a novel. (present perfect)
- We have been waiting
for ages. (present perfect progressive)
- They were having
dinner when we called. (past progressive)
- He had left before
I called. (past perfect)
- They were forced
to give up their claim. (passive)
- It was broken
in the storm. (passive)
As
adjectives
Participles can be used as adjectives before nouns, or
after be and other copular verbs. - A rolling stone
gathers no moss.
- Barking dogs
seldom bite.
- A burnt child
dreads fire.
- He looked tired.
- The village
appeared deserted.
- The children
were excited.
As
adverbs
Sometimes participles are used like adverbs. - She came running
into the room.
- He ran screaming
out of the room.
Clauses
Participles can combine with other words into clause-like
structures.- Driven by rain, they
took shelter under a tree.
- Stricken with
grief, she threw herself on the body.
- The thief
admitted having stolen the money.
- Deceived by his
friends, he lost all hope.
Nouns
Nouns are most often the
names of people, places or things. Personal names (e.g. John and Alice) and
place-names (e.g. Mumbai and Chennai) are called proper nouns; they are
usually used without articles.Nouns can be divided into several sub classes:
Proper noun (e.g. India, Italy, Alice)
Common noun (e.g. boy, girl, child, man, tree)
Collective noun (e.g. class, jury, army, team)
Abstract noun (e.g. truth, beauty, honesty, sleep)
Proper
noun
A noun denoting a particular person, place or thing is
called a proper noun. Proper nouns are normally written with initial
capital letters, and most proper nouns do not take an article. Examples: Alice,
India, John, Sydney, Mt Everest. - Jawaharlal Nehru
was
the first Prime Minister of independent India.
- John is a
clever boy.
- Alice is a
journalist.
Examples: The Stone Age, The French Revolution, The United States, The United Nations Organization
Collective
noun
A noun which denotes a collection of individual persons or
objects is called a collective noun. Examples are: crowd, mob, team, flock, herd, army, fleet, jury, nation, family, committee, government etc.
In British English, a collective noun may be treated either as singular (if the whole group is being thought of as a unit) or as plural (if the group is being regarded as a collection of individuals).
- The jury has
announced its verdict. (The jury is regarded as a unit.)
- The jury are
divided on this issue. (The jury is regarded as a group of individuals.)
Common
noun
A common noun refers to a class of things, such as
dog, pencil, boy, tree or book. It does not refer to a particular person or
thing.- Solomon was a
wise king.
- Alice is a
cleaver girl.
- John is a boy.
Common nouns include what are called collective nouns and abstract nouns.
Abstract
noun
An abstract noun denotes something which is not
physical and cannot be touched, such as pleasure, happiness, beauty,
kindness, honesty, anger and idea. Sometimes the term is extended to
include nouns denoting events and actions, such as arrival and explosion. An abstract noun can be countable or uncountable. Uncountable abstract nouns are followed by singular verbs. We do not use articles or numbers before them.
- Death
(uncountable) keeps no calendar.
- Several deaths
(countable) have been reported from the city.
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire