Grammar Pack
Grammar Pack
Grammar Pack
2013-2014
BIBLIOGRAFIE
www.englishclub.com
2. Arhire, Mona, Micu Anamaria, Limba engleza 1600 teste grila, editura Aula,
Brasov, 2004
1.
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Contents
Contents.................................................................................................................................................................. 3
1.Adjectives............................................................................................................................................................ 4
1.1 Determiners...................................................................................................................................................4
Articles:...........................................................................................................................................................4
1.2 Possessive Adjectives....................................................................................................................................5
1.2.1 Other determiners:......................................................................................................................................5
1.3 Adjective Order.............................................................................................................................................7
1.4 Adjective Before Noun..................................................................................................................................7
1.5 Adjective After Certain Verbs.......................................................................................................................7
1.6 Comparative Adjectives................................................................................................................................8
1.6.1 Formation of Comparative Adjectives....................................................................................................8
1.6.2 Use of Comparative Adjectives..............................................................................................................9
1.7 Superlative Adjectives...................................................................................................................................9
1.7.1 Formation of Superlative Adjectives......................................................................................................9
1.7.2 Use of Superlative Adjectives..............................................................................................................10
1.8 Gradable and Non-gradable Adjectives.......................................................................................................10
1.8.1 Gradable Adjectives.............................................................................................................................10
1.8.2 Non-gradable Adjectives......................................................................................................................11
1.8.3 Adjectives that can be gradable and non-gradable................................................................................12
1.9 Exercises.....................................................................................................................................................12
2.What is an Adverb?............................................................................................................................................14
2.1 Adverb Form...............................................................................................................................................14
2.2 Kinds of Adverbs........................................................................................................................................14
2.3 Adverb Position...........................................................................................................................................15
2.4 Adverbs of Frequency.................................................................................................................................16
2.5Exercises .........................................................................................................................................................16
3.Pronouns............................................................................................................................................................ 18
3.1 Personal Pronouns.......................................................................................................................................18
3.2 Demonstrative Pronouns.............................................................................................................................19
3.3 Possessive Pronouns....................................................................................................................................19
3.4 Interrogative Pronouns................................................................................................................................20
3.5 Reflexive Pronouns.....................................................................................................................................21
3.6 Intensive pronouns......................................................................................................................................22
3.7 Reciprocal Pronouns...................................................................................................................................22
3.8 Indefinite Pronouns.....................................................................................................................................22
3.9 Relative Pronouns.......................................................................................................................................24
3.10 exercises........................................................................................................................................................26
4. Nouns................................................................................................................................................................ 27
4.1 Countable Nouns.........................................................................................................................................27
4.2 Uncountable Nouns.....................................................................................................................................28
4.3 Nouns that can be Countable and Uncountable...........................................................................................29
4.4 Proper Nouns (Names)................................................................................................................................29
4.4.1 Using Capital Letters with Proper Nouns.............................................................................................29
4.4.2 Proper Nouns without THE..................................................................................................................29
4.4.3 Proper Nouns with THE.......................................................................................................................31
4.5 Possessive 's................................................................................................................................................32
4.6 Noun as Adjective.......................................................................................................................................32
4.7 Compound Nouns........................................................................................................................................34
4. 8 Execises:....................................................................................................................................................36
5.TESTS................................................................................................................................................................ 37
5.1 Test 1A........................................................................................................................................................37
5.2 TEST 2........................................................................................................................................................37
5.3 TEST 3........................................................................................................................................................39
5.4 TEST4.........................................................................................................................................................42
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1. Adjectives
An adjective is a word that tells us more about a noun. (By "noun" we include pronouns and noun
phrases.)
An adjective "qualifies" or "modifies" a noun (a big dog).
Adjectives can be used before a noun (I like Chinese food) or after certain verbs (It is hard).
We can often use two or more adjectives together (a beautiful young French lady).
It is sometimes said that the adjective is the enemy of the noun. This is because, very often, if we use
the precise noun we don't need an adjective. For example, instead of saying "a large, impressive house"
(2 adjectives + 1 noun) we could simply say "a mansion" (1 noun).
1.1 Determiners
Determiners are words like the, an, my, some. They are grammatically similar. They all come at the
beginning of noun phrases, and usually we cannot use more than one determiner in the same noun
phrase.
Articles:
A, An or The?
When do we say "the dog" and when do we say "a dog"? (On this page we talk only about singular, countable
nouns.)
The and a/an are called "articles". We divide them into "definite" and "indefinite" like this:
Articles
Definite Indefinite
the
a, an
the
a, an
Of course, often we can use the or a/an for the same word. It depends on the situation, not the word.
Look at these examples:
We want to buy an umbrella. (Any umbrella, not a particular umbrella.)
Where is the umbrella? (We already have an umbrella. We are looking for our umbrella, a
particular umbrella.)
This little story should help you understand the difference between the and a, an:
A man and a woman were walking in Oxford Street. The woman saw a dress that she liked in a shop.
She asked the man if he could buy the dress for her. He said: "Do you think theshop will
accept a cheque? I don't have a credit card."
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person
gender
possessive
adjective
example sentence
singular
1st
male/female
my
This is my book.
2nd
male/female
your
3rd
male
his
female
her
neuter
its
1st
male/female
our
2nd
male/female
your
3rd
male/female/neuter
their
The students
thanked theirteacher.
1st/2nd/3rd
male/female (not
neuter)
whose
plural
singular/plural
Compare:
your = possessive adjective
you're = you are
its = possessive adjective
it's = it is OR it has
their = possessive adjective
they're = they are
there = adverb (I'm not going there / look over there / there is a car outside)
whose = possessive adjective
who's = who is OR who has
Be careful! There is no apostrophe (') in the possessive adjective "its". We use an apostrophe to write
the short form of "it is" or "it has". For example:
it's raining = it is raining
it's finished = it has finished
I'm taking my dog to the vet. It's broken its leg.
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Some, Any
any
+ I
have somemoney.
example situation
I have $10.
I don't
have anymoney.
Do you
have anymoney?
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verb adj.
1 I like big
cars.
My car is
big.
noun
nice
colour
candles
When we want to use two colour adjectives, we join them with "and":
Many newspapers are black and white.
She was wearing a long, blue and yellow dress.
The rules on this page are for the normal, "natural" order of adjectives. But these rules are not rigid, and
you may sometimes wish to change the order for emphasis. Consider the following conversations:
Conversation 1
A "I want to buy a round table."
B "Do you want a new round table or an old round table?"
Conversation 2
A "I want to buy an old table".
B "Do you want a round old table or a square old table?"
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1-syllable adjectives
old, fast
happy, easy
old older
late later
big bigger
happy happier
Long adjectives
modern, pleasant
expensive, intellectual
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Mars
Diameter (km)
12,760
6,790
150
228
24
25
Moons
22
-23
Although we use comparative adjectives when talking about two things (not three or more things), in
fact one or both of the things may be a group of things.
Mt Everest is higher than all other mountains.
Here, we are talking about hundreds of mountains, but we are still comparing one thing (Mt Everest) to
one other thing (all other mountains).
old, fast
happy, easy
Long adjectives
2-syllable adjectives not ending in -y
modern, pleasant
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expensive, intellectual
Mars
Jupiter
Diameter (km)
12,760
6,790
142,800
150
228
778
24
25
10
Moons
16
Surface temp.
(degrees Celcius)
22
-23
-150
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grading adverbs
a little, dreadfully, extremely, fairly, hugely,
immensely, intensely, rather, reasonably,
slightly, unusually, very
+ gradable adjectives
angry, big, busy, clever, cold, deep, fast, friendly,
good, happy, high, hot, important, long, popular, rich,
strong, tall, warm, weak, young
awful
utterly
excellent
completely
terrified
totally
dead
nearly
impossible
virtually
unique
essentially
chemical
mainly
digital
almost
domestic
extreme
absolute
classifying
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common =
gradable
not young
gradable
vulgar
gradable
prevalent
gradable
non-gradable
adjective
quite =
gradable
fairly, rather
alive, awful, black, boiling, certain, correct, dead, domestic, enormous, environmental, excellent,
freezing, furious, gigantic, huge, immediately, impossible, miniscule, mortal, overjoyed, perfect,
pregnant, principal, ridiculous, superb, terrible, terrified, unique, unknown, white, whole
Non-grading adverbs
Again, no need to learn lists. Here are a few examples. There are many more. Remember that you
cannot use all non-grading adverbs with all non-gradable adjectives. Some collocate (go together). Some
don't.
absolutely, almost, completely, entirely, exclusively, fully, largely, mainly, nearly, perfectly, practically,
primarily, utterly, virtually
1.9 Exercises
1 participant was given a sheet containing the agenda of the meeting.
a) All; b) Each; c) Some
2......................witnesses were not really well-meant.
a) All; b) Every; c) Some
3.
There isn't....................water for all the citizens of the village.
a) enough; b) no; c) some
4.
Mary welcomed us this time. She is...........................her mother.
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castles.
He
builds
them
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2. What is an Adverb?
An adverb is a word that tells us more about a verb. It "qualifies" or "modifies" a verb (The man ran
quickly). In the following examples, the adverb is in bold and the verb that it modifies is in italics.
John speaks loudly. (How does John speak?)
Afterwards she smoked a cigarette. (When did she smoke?)
Mary lives locally. (Where does Mary live?)
But adverbs can also modify adjectives (Tara is really beautiful), or even other adverbs (It
works verywell). Look at these examples:
Modify an adjective:
- He is really handsome. (How handsome is he?)
- That was extremely kind of you.
Modify another adverb:
- She drives incredibly slowly. (How slowly does she drive?)
- He drives extremely fast.
Note that adverbs have other functions, too. They can:
Modify a whole sentence: Obviously, I can't know everything.
Modify a prepositional phrase: It's immediately inside the door.
do this
adjective
adverb
most adjectives
add -ly
quick
nice
sole
careful
quickly
nicely
solely
carefully
-able or -ible
change -e to -y
regrettable
horrible
regrettably
horribly
-y
change -y to -ily
happy
happily
-ic
economic
economically
But not all words that end in -ly are adverbs. The words friendly, lovely, lonely and neighbourly, for
example, are all adjectives.
And some adverbs have no particular form. Look at these examples:
well, fast, very, never, always, often, still
Note that the form of an adverb can also change to make it comparative or superlative.
Adverbs of Place
Adverbs of Place tell us the place where something happens. They answer the question "where?". Adverbs of
Place mainly modify verbs.
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Adverbs of Time
Adverbs of Time tell us something about the time that something happens. Adverbs of Time mainly
modify verbs.
She entirely agrees with him. (How much does she agree with him?)
Mary is very beautiful. (To what degree is Mary beautiful? How beautiful is Mary?)
He drove quite dangerously. (To what degree did he drive dangerously? How dangerously did
he drive?)
I often
I read books
read books.
carefully.
When an adverb modifies an adjective or another adverb, it usually goes in front of the word that it
modifies, for example:
adverb
She gave him a really
adverb
We quite
adjective
dirty
look.
adverb
often
study English.
The position of an adverb often depends on the kind of adverb (manner, place, time, degree). The
following table gives you some guidelines for placement based on the kind of adverb.
Warning: these are guidelines only, and not complete. There are many exceptions.
kind of adverb
mainly
modifies
sentence
usual position
adverb
manner
verbs
END
place
verbs
END
time definite
verbs
frequency
degree
verbs,
adjectives and
adverbs
I nearly
It was terribly
He works really
END
go to Paris.
MID
died.
MID
funny.
before adjective
fast.
before adverb
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for example:
Every day, more than five thousand people die on our roads.
Adverbs of indefinite frequency
Examples:
never, seldom, sometimes, often, always
Adverbs of indefinite frequency mainly go in MID position in the sentence. They go before the main verb
(except the main verb "to be"):
2.5
Exercises
1. Unfortunately, her health was growing..................
a) worse and worse; b) worser and worser; c) worse and worst
2.Jane doesn't drive.............her husband.
a) so fast as; b) as fastly as; c) faster as
3.She sings..........her sister.
a) as good as; b) so good as; c) as well as
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4.These students have ............... made any progress since the beginning of the semester.
a) hardy; b) hard; c) hardly
5.He has been doing............work, that's why he's so tired.
a) hardy; b) hard; c) hardly
The food tastes...............
a) deliciously; b) delicious; c) deliciously
6.She feels.........for having made such a blunder.
a) badly; b) bed; c) bad
7.He took a fast train; it runs very................indeed.
a) fast; b) fastly; c) fasty
8.Look at her! She looks..............
a) beautifuly; b) beautifully; c) beautiful
9. They were urged to play.............
a) fair; b) fairy; c) fairly
10.The dog was running..........about the surroundings of their house.
a) free; b) freely; c) for free
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3. Pronouns
Pronouns are small words that take the place of a noun. We can use a pronoun instead of a noun.
Pronouns are words like: he, you, ours, themselves, some, each... If we didn't have pronouns, we
would have to repeat a lot of nouns. We would have to say things like:
Do you like the president? I don't like the president. The president is too pompous.
With pronouns, we can say:
Do you like the president? I don't like him. He is too pompous.
singular
plural
person
gender
personal pronouns
subject
object
1st
male/female
me
2nd
male/female
you
you
3rd
male
he
him
female
she
her
neuter
it
it
1st
male/female
we
us
2nd
male/female
you
you
3rd
male/female/neuter
they
them
Examples (in each case, the first example shows a subject pronoun, the second an object pronoun):
I like coffee.
John helped me.
Do you like coffee?
John loves you.
He runs fast.
Did Ram beat him?
She is clever.
Does Mary know her?
It doesn't work.
Can the engineer repair it?
We went home.
Anthony drove us.
Do you need a table for three?
Did John and Mary beat you at doubles?
They played doubles.
John and Mary beat them.
When we are talking about a single thing, we almost always use it. However, there are a few
exceptions. We may sometimes refer to an animal as he/him or she/her, especially if the animal is
domesticated or a pet. Ships (and some other vessels or vehicles) as well as some countries are often
treated as female and referred to as she/her. Here are some examples:
This is our dog Rusty. He's an Alsation.
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The Titanic was a great ship but she sank on her first voyage.
My first car was a Mini and I treated her like my wife.
Thailand has now opened her border with Cambodia.
For a single person, sometimes we don't know whether to use he or she. There are several solutions to
this:
If a teacher needs help, he or she should see the principal.
If a teacher needs help, he should see the principal.
If a teacher needs help, they should see the principal.
We often use it to introduce a remark:
It is nice to have a holiday sometimes.
It is important to dress well.
It's difficult to find a job.
Is it normal to see them together?
It didn't take long to walk here.
We also often use it to talk about the weather, temperature, time and distance:
It's raining.
It will probably be hot tomorrow.
Is it nine o'clock yet?
It's 50 kilometres from here to Cambridge.
far
singular
this
that
plural
these
those
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be subject or object
refer to a singular or plural antecedent
number
person
possessive pronouns
singular
1st
male/female
mine
2nd
male/female
yours
3rd
male
his
female
hers
1st
male/female
ours
2nd
male/female
yours
3rd
male/female/neuter
theirs
plural
person
subject
object
who
whom
thing
what
person/thing
which
person
whose
(possessive)
Notice that whom is the correct form when the pronoun is the object of the verb, as in "Whom did you
see?" ("I saw John.") However, in normal, spoken English we rarely usewhom. Most native speakers
would say (or even write): "Who did you see?"
Look at these example questions. In the sample answers, the noun phrase that the interrogative pronoun
represents is shown in bold.
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question
answer
subject
I told Mary.
object
What's happened?
An accident's happened.
subject
I want coffee.
object
subject
object
subject
object
Note that we sometimes use the suffix "-ever" to make compounds from some of these pronouns
(mainly whoever, whatever, whichever). When we add "-ever", we use it for emphasis, often to show
confusion or surprise. Look at these examples:
Whoever would want to do such a nasty thing?
Whatever did he say to make her cry like that?
They're all fantastic! Whichever will you choose?
myself
yourself
himself, herself, itself
plural
ourselves
yourselves
themselves
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We blame you.
We blame ourselves.
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pronoun
meaning
example
another
anybody/anyone
anything
each
either
enough
Enough is enough.
everybody/everyone
all people
everything
all things
less
a smaller amount
little
a small amount
much
a large amount
neither
nobody/no-one
no person
nothing
one
an unidentified person
other
somebody/someone
something
singular
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you
both
few
fewer
many
others
several
they
all
All is forgiven.
All have arrived.
any
more
most
Most is lost.
Most have refused.
none
some
an unspecified quantity of
Here is some.
something; an unspecified number Some have arrived.
of people or things
such
plural
singular or plural
* Some people say that "none" should always take a singular verb, even when talking about countable
nouns (eg five friends). They argue that "none" means "no one", and "one" is obviously singular. They
say that "I invited five friends but none has come" is correct and "I invited five friends but
none havecome" is incorrect. Historically and grammatically there is little to support this view. "None"
has been used for hundreds of years with both a singular and a plural verb, according to the context and
the emphasis required.
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Who (subject) and whom (object) are generally only for people. Whose is for possession. Which is for
things. That can be used for people** and things and as subject and object in defining relative clauses
(clauses that are essential to the sentence and do not simply add extra information).
Relative pronouns can refer to singular or plural, and there is no difference between male and female.
Look at these examples showing defining and non-defining relative clauses:
defining
example sentences
S=subject, O=object, P=possessive
notes
That is preferable
That is preferable
nondefining
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3.10 exercises
1. I wrote the letter myself. Indeed, it is................................who wrote it.
a) me; b) I; c) myself
2. .....................was last week that I heard the news.
a) There; b) That; c) It
3.I find.......................wrong of him to be rude to his elderly relatives.
a) it; b) him; c) there
4.
The little money.....................she has is too little to pay her rent.
a) which; b) that; c) whom
5.
Nothing................I care about has been recently made available.
a) who; b) which; c) that
6......................are the months of the year?
a) Which; b) What; c) Who
7. I don't like that dress.........................do you mean, the one over there?
a) What; b) Which; c) Whom
8. One of them has to admit.............................fault after all.
a) their; b) her; c) his
9.
Every student has to carry out........................assignment.
a) one's; b) their; c) him
10. Take this handkerchief, it's............................
a) your; b) you; c) yours
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4. Nouns
It's not easy to describe a noun. In simple terms, nouns are "things" (and verbs are "actions"). Likefood.
Food (noun) is something you eat (verb). Or happiness. Happiness (noun) is something you want
(verb). Or human being. A human being (noun) is something you are (verb).
The simple definition is: a person, place or thing. Here are some examples:
person: man, woman, teacher, John, Mary
place: home, office, town, countryside, America
thing: table, car, banana, money, music, love, dog, monkey
The problem with this definition is that it does not explain why "love" is a noun but can also be a verb.
Another (more complicated) way of recognizing a noun is by its:
1. Ending
2. Position
3. Function
1. Noun Ending
There are certain word endings that show that a word is a noun, for example:
-ity > nationality
-ment > appointment
-ness > happiness
-ation > relation
-hood > childhood
But this is not true for the word endings of all nouns. For example, the noun "spoonful" ends in -ful, but
the adjective "careful" also ends in -ful.
2. Position in Sentence
We can often recognise a noun by its position in the sentence.
Nouns often come after a determiner (a determiner is a word like a, an, the, this, my, such):
a relief
an afternoon
the doctor
this word
my house
such stupidity
Nouns often come after one or more adjectives:
a great relief
a peaceful afternoon
the tall, Indian doctor
this difficult word
my brown and white house
such crass stupidity
3. Function in a Sentence
Nouns have certain functions (jobs) in a sentence, for example:
subject of verb: Doctors work hard.
object of verb: He likes coffee.
subject and object of verb: Teachers teach students.
But the subject or object of a sentence is not always a noun. It could be a pronoun or a phrase. In the
sentence "My doctor works hard", the noun is "doctor" but the subject is "My doctor".
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Uncountable
dollar
money
song
music
suitcase
luggage
table
furniture
battery
electricity
bottle
wine
report
information
tip
advice
journey
travel
job
work
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view
scenery
When you learn a new word, it's a good idea to learn whether it's countable or uncountable.
Uncountable
hair
paper
time
work
Drinks (coffee, water, orange juice) are usually uncountable. But if we are thinking of a cup or a glass,
we can say (in a restaurant, for example):
Two teas and one coffee please.
A proper noun is the special word (or name) that we use for a person, place or organization, like
John, Marie, London, France or Sony. A name is a noun, but a very special noun - a proper
noun. Proper nouns have special rules.
common noun
proper noun
man, boy
John
woman, girl
Mary
country, town
England, London
company
Ford, Sony
shop, restaurant
Maceys, McDonalds
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Clinton
Gates
banks
Barclays Bank
hotels, restaurants
continents
islands
Corsica
mountains
Everest
the United States, the US, the United States of America, the USA
Lake Victoria
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We live beside Lake Victoria. We have a fantastic view across the lake.
We do not normally use "the" for roads, streets, squares, parks etc:
streets etc
Many big, important buildings have names made of two words (for example, Kennedy Airport). If the
first word is the name of a person or place, we do not normally use "the":
people Kennedy Airport, Alexander Palace, St Paul's Cathedral
places Heathrow Airport, Waterloo Station, Edinburgh Castle
seas
island groups
mountain ranges
cinemas, theatres
museums
buildings
newspapers
organisations
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plural noun
my child's dog
my children's dog
teacher
small
office
black
horse
Sometimes we use a noun to describe another noun. In that case, the first noun "acts as" an adjective.
noun
as adjective noun
history
teacher
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ticket
office
race
horse
Wrong
boat race
boat races
toothbrush
toothbrushes
shoe-lace
shoe-laces
boat-race
bathroom
car production costs: we are talking about the costs of producing cars
noun as noun as
noun
adjective adjective
costs
production costs
car production costs
England football team coach: we are talking about the coach who trains the team that plays football
for England
noun as noun as noun as noun
adjective adjective adjective
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coach
team coach
football
team coach
England football
team coach
Note: in England football team coach can you see a "hidden" "noun as adjective"? Look at the word
"football" (foot-ball). These two nouns (foot+ball) have developed into a single noun (football). This is
one way that words evolve. Many word combinations that use a "noun as adjective" are regarded as
nouns in their own right, with their own dictionary definition. But not all dictionaries agree with each
other. For example, some dictionaries list "tennis ball" as a noun and other dictionaries do not.
government road accident research centre: we are talking about a centre that researches into
accidents on the road for the government
noun as
noun as noun as noun as noun
adjective
adjective adjective adjective
centre
research centre
accident research centre
road accident research centre
government
road accident research centre
Newpapers often use many nouns together in headlines to save space. Look at this example:
BIRD HEALTH RESEARCH CENTRE MURDER MYSTERY
To understand headlines like these, try reading them backwards. The above headline is about a
MYSTERY concerning a MURDER in a CENTRE for RESEARCH into the HEALTH of BIRDS.
Note, too, that we can still use a real adjective to qualify a "noun as adjective" structure:
empty coffee jar
honest car salesman
delicious dog food
rising car production costs
famous England football team coach
adjective
+ noun
verb(-ing) + noun
fire-fly
football
full moon
blackboard
software
breakfast
washing
machine
+ verb(-ing)
sunrise
haircut
train-spotting
verb
+ preposition
check-out
noun
+ prepositional
mother-in-law
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phrase
preposition + noun
underworld
noun
+ adjective
truckful
We need 10 truckfuls of bricks.
Pronunciation
Compound nouns tend to have more stress on the first word. In the phrase "pink ball", both words are
equally stressed (as you know, adjectives and nouns are always stressed). In the compound noun "golf
ball", the first word is stressed more (even though both words are nouns, and nouns are always
stressed). Since "golf ball" is a compound noun we consider it as a single noun and so it has a single
main stress - on the first word. Stress is important in compound nouns. For example, it helps us know if
somebody said "a GREEN HOUSE" (a house which is painted green) or "a GREENhouse" (a building
made of glass for growing plants inside).
British/American differences
Different varieties of English, and even different writers, may use the open, hyphenated or closed form
for the same compound noun. It is partly a matter of style. There are no definite rules. For example we
can find:
container ship
container-ship
containership
If you are not sure which form to use, please check in a good dictionary.
Plural forms of compound nouns
In general we make the plural of a compound noun by adding -s to the "base word" (the most
"significant" word). Look at these examples:
singular
plural
a school teacher
a mother-in-law
two mothers-in-law
our toothbrushes
a woman-doctor
four women-doctors
a doctor of philosophy
a passerby, a passer-by
two passersby, two passers-by
Note that there is some variation with words like spoonful or truckful. The old style was to say
spoonsful or trucksful for the plural. Today it is more usual to say spoonfuls or truckfuls. Both the old
style (spoonsful) and the new style (spoonfuls) are normally acceptable, but you should be consistent in
your choice. Here are some examples:
old style plural
new style plural
(very formal)
teaspoonful 3 teaspoonsful of sugar 3 teasponfuls of sugar
truckful
5 trucksful of sand
5 truckfuls of sand
bucketful
2 bucketsful of water
2 bucketfuls of water
cupful
4 cupsful of rice
4 cupfuls of rice
Some compound nouns have no obvious base word and you may need to consult a dictionary to find the
plural:
higher-ups
also-rans
go-betweens
has-beens
good-for-nothings
grown-ups
Note that with compound nouns made of [noun + noun] the first noun is like an adjective and therefore
does not usually take an -s. A tree that has apples has many apples, but we say an apple tree, notapples
tree; matchbox not matchesbox; toothbrush not teethbrush.
With compound nouns made of [noun + noun] the second noun takes an -s for plural. The first noun
acts like an adjective and as you know, adjectives in English are invariable. Look at these examples:
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20 tool boxes
10 bus stops
4. 8 Execises:
1. This is my pen............is over there.
a) That of George; b) The one of George; c) George's
2. Don't touch that scarf; it's..........
a) of my mother-in law; b) my mother 's-in-law; c) my mother-in-law's
3. Where did you buy these delicious apples? At the....
a) green-grocer; b) green-grocer's; c) green-grocers
4. Let's accept...........invitation and go to the party tonight.
a) Mr. and Mrs. Green's; b) Mr. and Mrs.' Green;
c) Mr.'s and Mrs.' Green
5. The two people over there are.......parents.
How many..........have you got lately?
a) informations; b) information; c) pieces of information
6. They have dug through several......of soil.
a) stratra; b) stratum; c) stratus
7. Could you give me a.........of chocolate, please?
a) item; b) bar; c) lump
8. Look! There's a...........of fish swimming among the stones!
a) shoal; b) flock; c) crowd
9...............is not a game for little children.
a) Billiard; b) Billiards; c) Billiardes
10........................................................They say they'd like to have a
a) billiards-table; b) billiard-table; c) billardes-table
at home.
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5.TESTS
5.1 Test 1A
A.
Fill in the appropriate word(s) from the list. Use the word(s) only once. (30p)
mentally, elf-like, to reduce, works, hayfever, carnival, live, to shake, to burst into, crime
1 .prevention
2 . anxiety
3 a(n)..face
4 season
5 ...disturbed
6 ......of a-:
7 ...sufferers the screen
8 . .hands
9 ..broadcast
10 a(n)
B. Fill in the gaps with the appropriate word(s) from the list below(30p)
inspiration, trend, overwhelming, munched, compassion, flocked, naive
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
She's so........................................you could tell her anything and she'd believe you.
Everyone.......................................to the summer sales; the shops were so busy!
The donkey happily........................................on the carrot.
The.......................................at the moment is to wear bright, cheerful colours.
The sight of the injured children filled her with............................................
The beautiful French countryside was the.........................................for many of Monet's paintings.
The party was a(n)........................................success; everyone said they enjoyed it.
C. Fill in the correct word derived from the words in bold. (30p)
5.2
BONUS 10p
can
you
buy
from
thes
e
shop
s
(50p
):
1. F
i
s
h
m
o
n
g
e
r
125
BONUS
10p
2. Chemist
a. lettuce, b. olives, c. aspirin
3. Delicatessen
a. padlocks, b. sunglasses, c. sandwiches
4. Boutique
a. blouse, b. toothpaste, c. postcards
5. Tuck shop
a. melons, b. biscuits, c. TV guides
6. Department store
a. envelopes, b. keys, c. sheets
7. Newsagent
a. magazines, b. olives, c. buckets
8. Stationary shop
a. lettuce, b. contact lenses, c. paper clips
9. Locksmith
a. cod, b. padlocks, c. melons
10. Optician
a. contact lenses, b. paper clips, c. toothpaste
11. Ironmonger
a. biscuits, b. buckets, c. cod
12. Greengrocers
a. TV guides, b. keys, c. lettuce
II.
Fill in the correct words: widespread, empty, buying, to get out, to give, to
go on, to start all, the debts (40p)
1. ..pile up
2. .your way out
3. .. for years
4. .. the illusion
5. of control
6. an emotionally . Life
7. the .. use
8. .. over again
125
5.3
T
E
S
T
3
I.
Fil
l
in
the
co
rre
ct
wo
rds
fro
m
the
list
bel
ow
(6
0p
)
Ad
dic
tio
n,
de
bts
,
wi
de
spr
ea
d,
ba
nk
ru
ptc
y,
ch
or
e,
pr
on
e
to,
tar
get
ed,
pil
e
up
125
4. Th
e
de
al
wa
sa
rea
l
..
a. off
er,
b.
re
du
cti
on
, c.
ba
rg
ain
5. Yo
u
ca
n
bu
y
it
on
.
An
d
pa
y
lat
er.
125
Bonus 10p
125
5.4 TEST4
A. Circle the correct item.(30p)
1. In order for this appliance to function ., the safety screws must be
removed.
A virtually
C properly
B immediately D urgently
2. Jack Brown is a good employer. He is renowned .
his even
temper and patience.
A about B for
C of
D to
3. The carpets are really dirty; will you .. them?
A tidy
B mop
C iron
D vacuum
4. The flat has a small dining room, but the living room is quite
A average
B normal
C roomy
D ideal
5. There is a(n) .
view of the whole valley from my
bedroom window.
A winding
B quaint C bustling
D imposing
6. She . working really hard to get the garden into shape before
it gets too hot.
A is B has
C does
D will
7. What time .. the train for Edinburgh leave?
A is B does C has
C had
8. Despite his age, he was still able to give a(n)..
performance on stage.
A quaint B lively C lovely D idyllic
9. I must have a word John about his timekeeping;
this is the third time this week he's been late.
A with
B for
C from
D of
10. As he took his suit out of the ., he noticed a stain on the
sleeve.
A cabinet
B cupboard C wardrobe
D drawer
B. Cross out the incorrect word. (30p)
1
Our house hasn't got a garage, but it's got a huge back garden besides..
2
She will has been cleaning the attic since early this morning.
C. Complete the second sentence using the word in bold. You can use two to five
words including the word given. Do not change the word given. (30p)
1. That's the most interesting book I've ever read.
never I
.. interesting book before.
2. We've arranged to have a barbecue next Sunday.
are
We
..
3. It's more than a month since I last went out.
next Sunday.
been I
over a month.
4. The smell of roast beef has been coming from their kitchen all day.
smelling Their kitchen roast beef all day.
5. Mary is still painting the living room.
finished Mary ............................................... the living room yet.
BONUS 10p
125
125
44