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Parts of Speech. Punctuation. Verbals. Prepositional Phrase. Adjective or Adverb. 1pt. 1 pt. 1 pt. 1pt. 1 pt. 2 pt. 2 pt. 2pt. 2pt. 2 pt. 3 pt. 3 pt. 3 pt. 3 pt. 3 pt. 4 pt. 4 pt. 4pt. 4 pt. 4pt. 5pt. 5 pt. 5 pt. 5 pt. 5 pt. T/F
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Parts of Speech Punctuation Verbals Prepositional Phrase Adjective or Adverb 1pt 1 pt 1 pt 1pt 1 pt 2 pt 2 pt 2pt 2pt 2 pt 3 pt 3 pt 3 pt 3 pt 3 pt 4 pt 4 pt 4pt 4 pt 4pt 5pt 5 pt 5 pt 5 pt 5 pt
T/F A noun shows action or links a subject to another word.
Which words in this sentence is a pronoun? B. there are none A. which D. A&C C. this
T/F There is such a thing as a “proper adjective.
Periods go A. at the end B. after initials C. After abbreviations D. all of the above
T/F Indirect questions have a “?”
This sentence was written in Atlanta, Georgia. Is it correct?
T/F Semicolons look like this “:”.
T/F Verbals are verbs but are used for other parts of speech.
T/F Verbals consist of: gerunds, participles, and adverbs.
Gerunds end in ______ ing B. ing & ed C. with “to” before it
You can use a prepositional phrase to describe a noun or a ______.
T/F Adjectives answer: “what kind?,” “which one?”, or “how many?”
Can you use a prepositional phrase to lengthen your sentence?
“On Tuesday” is a _____ adverb. when how where how long
What is the “where?” adverb in this sentence: “Meet me by the fountain, on Friday afternoon.”
T/F Adverb modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.
“There are how many puppies in the basket.” What is how many in this sentence?