Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. What is conventional (school) grammar primarily based on?
2. Which of these is (or are) generally left outside the traditional eight parts of speech?
3. Which kinds of definitions of the parts of speech are most powerful, that is, least easily proved wrong?
4. "A verb is an action word". What's the problem with this definition of the verb as a part of speech?
5. A clause contains a finite verb. Which of these provides the most accurate defintion of "finite verb"?
6. Which of these best describes the status of the statement: "A verb is a doing word"?
7. Does English have emphatic pronouns?
8. In which of these contexts does it make *least* sense to teach the "verbs of perception" (such as "to hear", "to see", "to feel", "to notice") as a distinct group?
9. All English words ending in "-ly" are adverbs.
10. Every clause has a subject (unless omitted after a co-ordinating conjunction) and a predicate. Which of these provides the *most accurate* description of "the predicate" of a clause that makes a statement?
Source: Author
bloomsby
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Bruyere before going online.
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