Nouns, Pronouns, and Adjectives€¦ · pronouns and 2 sentences using demonstrative pronouns....

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Nouns, Pronouns, and Adjectives

Seventh Grade Grammar

Review- What is a noun?

O A noun names a person, place, thing, or an idea.

Person Place Thing Idea (Katniss) (District 12) (Bow) (Bravery)

Collective Nouns

O Nouns that name groups of people or things. O Club

O Herd

O Orchestra

O Committee

O Class

Which of these are collective nouns?

1. Collar club fur

2. Team dish claw

3. Ball litter toys

4. Snout group paw

5. Ribbon brush class

Which of these are collective nouns?

1. Collar club fur

2. Team dish claw

3. Ball litter toys

4. Snout group paw

5. Ribbon brush class

Challenge O WRITE YOUR ANSWER ON YOUR

PAPER. What is the difference between plural nouns and collective nouns?

O A plural noun represents more than one of something (elephants, birds).

O A collective noun is a singular noun that represents a group of things (a herd, a flock).

Compound Nouns

O A noun made up of two or more words

Separate Words Hyphenated Words

Combined Words

Post office Bull’s-eye Flagship

Middle school Daughter-in-law Railroad

Golden Gate Bridge

Left-hander Doorknob

Practicing Identifying Nouns

O Complete exercises 1 and 2 on Workbook page 3

Common vs. Proper Nouns

O Common Noun: names any one of a class of people, places, and things; not capitalized

O Proper Noun: names a specific person, place, or thing; capitalized

church VS Notre Dame

Types of Pronouns 7th Grade Grammar

Antecedents of Pronouns The noun or group of nouns for which a pronoun stands.

The firefighters explained how they did their jobs.

Finally the rescue worker appeared . She appeared to be unharmed.

How Kim was rescued is amazing. It is a story that will be told often.

Everyone knows the truth.

Indefinite pronoun

Doesn’t need an antecedent because its meaning is clear without one.

The noun and its pronoun antecedent must always agree.

Make sure that your reader can tell what antecedent the pronoun is referring to.

Tom gave Jerry his pencils to take to his next class.

Personal Pronouns O Refer to the person speaking (1st), the person

being spoken to (2nd), or the person, place, or thing being spoken about (3rd).

Singular Plural

1st I, me, my, mine We, us, our, ours

2nd You, your, yours You, your, yours

3rd He, him, his, she, her, hers, it, its

They, them, their, theirs

Personal Pronouns O Personal pronouns can be

SUBJECTIVE (subject of sentence) O you O he or she O it O we O they

O Personal pronouns can be OBJECTIVE (direct object or object of preposition) O me O you O him O her O it O us O them

O Personal pronouns can be POSSESSIVE O my, mine O your, yours, O his O her, hers O its O ours O their, theirs

Practice with personal pronouns:

O Complete exercise 1 on page 7 of your workbook. Additionally, identify whether each pronoun is first, second, or third person. Also identify whether each pronoun is subjective, objective, or possessive.

Demonstrative Pronouns

O Points to a specific person, place, or thing

O Be careful: These words can also function as adjectives

Singular Plural

This That These Those

Demonstrative pronouns are often used in infomercials.

Practice Demonstrative Pronouns

Decide if it is a pronoun or an adjective. 1. This is my house. 2. This teddy bear is for sale. 3. These cats are cute. 4. These are the cutest cats. 5. Those dogs like to bark.

Interrogative Pronouns

O Interrogative pronouns are used to begin a question.

What Which Who

Whom Whose

Indefinite Pronouns Do not refer to a

definite person or thing O anybody – Anybody can see the

truth. O anything – Anything can happen if

you just believe. O either – Either will do. O enough – Enough is enough. O everybody – Everybody was

invited. O little – Little is known about this

period of history. O no one – No one thinks that you

are mean O nothing – Nothing is impossible. O other – One was singing while the

other played the piano.

O something – Something makes me

want to dance. O whoever – Whoever did this? O whichever – Choose whichever is

better. O both – Both are guilty. O several – Several were chosen. O most – Most would agree. O some – Some of the biscuits have

been eaten. O such – Such is life.

Indefinite Pronouns

O Practice: Complete Exercises 1 and 2 on workbook page 11.

Using Adjectives as Modifiers

OAdjectives modify (slightly

change) nouns and pronouns. OThey tell more about the noun

or pronoun: What kind? Which one? How many? How much?

new car striped tie

this swan every page

one hamburger many geese

no food little rain

Using Adjectives as Modifiers

OPractice: Workbook Page 21, Exercise 1

Using Articles O Articles ALWAYS come before the noun or

pronoun they modify. O Articles answer the question “Which one?”.

Definite article Indefinite article Indefinite article

The A (for consonant

sounds) An (for vowel

sounds)

refers to a specific person, place, or thing

point out a type of person, place, or thing, but do not refer to a specific

one

the canon the trumpeter

swan

a yellow hat a happy time

a onetime nesting area

a unicorn

an endangered bird

an honest person an old map an uncle

Using Articles O Distinguishing Between Definite and Indefinite Articles. Fill in

each blank with the kind of article described in the parentheses.

O EXAMPLE: the large tiger (definite)

O 1. ________ honorable person (indefinite)

O 2. ________ new novel (definite)

O 3. ________ elderly man (indefinite)

O 4. ________ impossible undertaking (indefinite)

O 5. ________ uniform with gold braid (indefinite)

O 6. ________ old, stone castle (indefinite)

O 7. ________ one-sided game (indefinite)

O 8. ________ small, green parakeet (definite)

O 9. ________ unwritten essay (indefinite)

O 10. ________ road to success (definite)

Using Nouns as Adjectives O Nouns can sometimes be used as

adjectives. O A noun used as an adjective usually

comes directly before another noun. O It answers the question What kind? Or

Which one? O Examples:

O A shoe salesperson O The waterfowl refuge

O Practice: Workbook Page 24, Exercise 2

Using Nouns and Pronouns as Adjectives

O A noun or pronoun is used as an adjective if it modifies a noun.

OExamples: O The duck pond sometimes

freezes. O We see the ducklings on this

side of the pond. O Which ducks are males?

Using Nouns and Pronouns as Adjectives

O Possessive Adjectives: O The personal pronouns my, your, his,

her, its, our, and their are often used before nouns and answer the question Which one?

O They are pronouns because they have antecedents.

O Example: OThe ducks flapped their wings.

“Their” is an adjective because it modifies wings. “Their” is also a pronoun because it replaces “ducks.”

Using Nouns and Pronouns as Adjectives

O Possessive Nouns: O Possessive nouns function as

adjectives when they modify a noun.

O Examples: OThe pond is on Mr. Smith’s

property. OThe duck’s feathers are colorful.

Using Nouns and Pronouns as Adjectives

O Practice O Workbook Page 27, Ex. 1 & 2

O Write two sentences. Pick a

noun and use it as a noun in one sentence and as an adjective in the second sentence.

Using Proper Adjectives O A proper adjective is a proper noun used as

an adjective: O Examples:

O The Truman library O Florida wetlands O December weather

OR O A proper adjective is an adjective formed

from a proper noun O Examples:

O American history O Victorian ideas

O Practice: Workbook Page 26, Exercise 1

Using Demonstrative Adjectives ODemonstrative pronouns (this,

that, these, those) are often used as demonstrative adjectives.

OAdjective: These gulls are searching for food.

O Pronoun: What are these? O Practice: Workbook pg. 29,

Exercise 1

Using Interrogative Adjectives O Interrogative pronouns (which,

what, whose) are often used as interrogative adjectives.

OAdjective: Which parrot do you

think he will buy? O Pronoun: Which do you think he

will choose? O Practice: Workbook pg. 29,

Exercise 2

More Practice with Pronouns No Pronoun Personal Indefinite Interrogative

John laughed. He laughed. Someone laughed.

Who laughed?

The carriage turned into a huge orange

pumpkin.

Darren did not know where

Darren’s gifts were hidden.

Molly’s hair is different today.

Grandma fixed tacos.

More Practice with Pronouns No Pronoun Personal Indefinite Interrogative

John laughed. He laughed. Someone laughed.

Who laughed?

The carriage turned into a huge orange

pumpkin.

It turned into a huge orange

pumpkin.

Something turned into a huge orange

pumpkin.

What turned into a huge

orange pumpkin?

Darren did not know where

Darren’s gifts were hidden.

He did not know where his gifts were hidden.

Everyone knew where his gifts were hidden.

Who did not know where his

gifts were hidden?

Molly’s hair is different today.

Her hair is different today.

Somebody’s hair is different

today.

Whose hair is different

today?

Grandma fixed tacos.

She fixed tacos.

Someone fixed tacos.

Who fixed tacos?

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