What is English Grammar And Language?
English grammar is a set of structural rules of English. This includes the structure of words, sentences, clauses, sentences and complete texts.
This article describes today’s Generalized Standard English, a form of speech and writing used in public speech, including broadcasting, education, entertainment, government, and news, across a wide range of programs, from formal to informal. Variations of grammar described here are found in some types of historical, social, cultural, and regional English, although they differ little in pronunciation and vocabulary differences.
Modern English has largely abandoned the Indo-European inflectional case system in favor of analytic constructions. Personal pronouns retain a stronger morphological case than any other class of words (a remnant of the larger Old English German case system). For another pronoun, and for every noun, adjective and article, a grammatical function is expressed only in word order, by prepositions and by the “Saxon or possessive English genitive”.
Eight commonly identified “word classes” or “parts of speech” in English: nouns, declensions, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions and combinations. Nouns are the largest word class and verbs the second. Unlike nouns in almost all other Indo-European languages, English nouns do not have a grammatical gender. Here it is a detail list of the terminology of English…..
ENGLISH GRAMMAR AND LANGUAGE (SECTION-A)
Table of Contents
- Article
- Adverb
- Adjective
- Auxiliaries
- Analysis
- Agreement
- Auto biography
- Antonyms
- Advise
- Assertive
- American Literature
- Apostrophe
- Allegory
- Abbreviation
(SECTION-C)
- Concord
- Comparisons
- Capitalization
- Connectives
- Composition
- Conjunction
- Compound
- Complex
- Comprehension
- Communication skills
- Correction
- Conditions
- Command
- Criticism
(SECTION-D)
- Dialogues
- Drafting
- Drama
(SECTION-F)
- Figure of speech
- Finite verb
(SECTION-G)
- Gerund
(SECTION-H)
- Homonyms
(SECTION-I)
- Infinitive
- Interjection
- Idioms
- Interrogative
- Imperative
- Irony
- Illusion
(SECTION-K)
- Kinds of clauses
(SECTION-L)
- Letters
- Linguistics
- Literary terms
- Language terms
(SECTION-M)
- Mood
- Meter
- Metaphor
- Metonym
- Meaning and idea
- Musical device
(SECTION-N)
- Noun
- Narration
- Novel
(SECTION-O)
- Object
- Order of words
- Over statement
- One words substitution
(SECTION-P)
- Punctuation
- Paragraph
- Predicate
- Participle
- Preposition
- Parts of speech
- Precises
- Passages
- Paraphrase
- Pair of words
- Phrasal verbs
- Prefixes
- Parsing
- Poetry
- Prose
- Personification
- Paradox
- Pattern
- Phonetic
(SECTION-Q)
- Question tags
(SECTION-R)
- Request
- Rhythm and matter
- Roots
(SECTION-S)
- Summary
- Subject
- Simple sentence
- Synthesis
- Sequence
- Spellings
- Short answers
- Story writing
- Synonyms
- Syntax
- Suggestion
- Simile
- Symbol
- Sound and meaning
- Spoken English
- Spoken grammar
- Suffix
(SECTION-T)
- Tenses
- Transformation
- Tone
(SECTION-U)
- Usages
- Under statement
- Use of W words
(SECTION-V)
- Verb endings
- Voice
- Verb
- Verb patterns
(SECTION-W)
- Word making
What is sentence And sentence structure?