Grammar With Ease.
Grammar With Ease.
to
Grammar
Parts of speech
Mood structure (2)
Clause type + / − Subject Order Example
Economy
consistency
Clarity
COMPOUND SENTENCE
A compound sentence contains two or
more independent clauses
To be contd.
5. For and From : For is used to indicate a period of time
and From is used to mean separation
For eg. (i) Mr. Shrivastava has been a teacher for fifteen years.
(ii) He has come from a long distance.
6. On and Onto: On indicates things at rest and Onto in motion.
For eg (i) There is a dog on the bench.
(ii) The cat jumped onto the roof of the house.
7. On and Over: On indicates contact and over above the object.
For eg. (i) There is a monkey on the tower.
(ii) A bird flew over the tower.
8. Out and Away: Away indicates distance and out does not so,
normally.
For eg. (i) He is out of home.
(It means he is not far away and may return after Some time.)
(ii) He is away from home.
(It shows distance and may not return soon.)
•______ •______ •____
_ _ _
•CHAIR
•CARPET
•Where is the television ?
•It is ___________ the chair.
•Where is the computer ?
•It is ________ the table.
•Where are the books ?
•They are ________ the table.
•Where are the flowers ?
•They are ________ the vase.
•Where is the vase ?
•It is ________ the table.
•Where is the guitar ?
•It is _________ the bed.
•Where is the ball ?
•It is _______ the chair.
ARTICLES
A, AN & THE
ARTICLES
• There are three Articles
• A and An are indefinite articles
• The is the definite article
• A occurs before the words that begin
with a consonant (sound)
• An before the words which begin with
a vowel (sound)
Usage of “A/An”
• Before a singular class noun which is referred to for the
first time and which is not known to the reader/listener
beforehand:
(a) I saw a bird.
(b)He left this place an hour ago.
• Before a singular class noun to refer to the whole class:
(a) An owl can see in darkness.
(b) A camel can live without water for many days.
• Before a proper noun in figurative use
(a) He wanted to be an Einstein.
• In certain expressions of quantity and number:
• He ate a lot of sweet
• She spent a couple of days in Nainital.
Usage of “The”
• Before a class noun which is already known to the
listener/reader.
For eg. I saw a snake. The snake was a cobra.
• Before a class noun to refer to the whole class. In such a
case the article a/an can also be used.
For eg. The elephant has a trunk.
• Before a proper noun in figurative sense:
For eg. Kalidas is the Shakespeare of India.
• Before surnames when more than one person is referred to:
For eg.The Smiths live next to my brother’s house.
• Before the nouns that are only one. (unique reference):
• The Sun, the Moon, the Sky, the Primeminister, the Milky way.
Usage of “The”
• Before material noun in specific sense. In other words, the
definite ‘article the is used before material noun when it is
specified and excluded from the rest.
For eg. The water of the Ganga.
• Before names of rivers, lakes, seas, oceans, groups of islands,
mountain ranges, newspapers, ships and some classical books.
For eg. The Thames, The Nile. The Volga
• Before a noun which is followed by the preposition “of”.
For eg. The front of my house.
For eg. The pages of my diary.
• Before an adjective in superlative degree:
For eg. She is the brightest girl in the class.
• With comparative degree when there is increase or decrease in
activity:
• For eg. The more he received the more he wanted.
• For eg. The sooner you start the better for you.
(a) Little over.......... year ago Rama Rao went out of
work when................... gramophone company, of which
he was................. Malgudi agent, went out of
existence. He has put into that agency ....................
little money he had inherited, as security.
(b) There is ................... enemy beneath our
feel,................ enemy more deadly for his complete
impartiality. He recognize no national binderies,
political parties. Every one in ............... world is
threatened by him ................ enemy is ...................Earth
itself. When..........................earthquake comes,
....................... whole world trembles .................. power
of ......... 'quake is greater that anything man himself
can produce.
Modal Auxiliareis and Modal verbs
There are 10 modal verbs in English:
will, would, must, can, could, may, might, shall, should, ought to
I am I was I shall be