QUESTION IMAGE
Question
applications of grammar book 3 (rev. ed.)
test 4
unit 4: lessons 22-29
emma faith cleveland 861427 0
fill in the blank on the left with the correct answer. (26 pts)
- a _____ refers to any word, phrase, or clause that has the qualities and uses of a noun.
- words that are normally nouns can be used as _____, modifying other nouns.
- _____ is a term indicating whether a part of speech refers to singular or plural.
- _____ signifies the time frame in which the action or condition expressed by a verb occurs.
- a term indicating the sex of the person, place, thing, quality, or idea is called _____
- _____ refers to the form substantives take to indicate their relation to other words.
- pronouns have first, second, and third _____.
- _____ indicates whether the subject in a sentence is acting or being acted upon.
- the state of mind or manner in which a statement is being made is called _____.
- verbs used as other parts of speech are called _____.
- _____ are verbals used as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs.
- verbals used only as adjectives are called _____.
- _____ are verbals used as nouns.
match each substantive on the right with the correct definition on the left. (14 pts)
- it is about which a sentence makes a statement. a. object complement
- it
eceives\ the action of a verb or verbal expression, or shows the result of the action. b. direct object
- it tells \to\ or \for whom\ or \for what\ the action of the verb is done. it follows a preposition and is related by the preposition to some other word in the sentence. c. appositive
- text may be truncated, but options include d. subject, e. predicate nominative, f. indirect object, g. object of a preposition
- it is used after a direct object to complete its meaning.
- it follows a linking verb and renames or identifies the subject of the verb.
- it follows another substantive to further identify or explain the first substantive.
true or false: write the full word in the blank on the left. (16 pts)
- english nouns belong to one of three possible genders.
- tone indicates simple or progressive time or emphasis.
- nouns used as appositives are in the same case as the nouns that they rename.
- nouns that show ownership are in the nominative case.
- \both,\ \few,\ \some,\ and \many\ are indefinite nouns.
- there are only two tones of english verbs: simple and progressive.
- an intransitive verb can be in either an active or passive voice.
- the three moods of english verbs are indicative, imperative, and subjunctive.
identify: in the blank at the left, indicate whether the case of the noun in dark print is nominative (n), objective (o), or possessive (p). (12 pts)
- the girl’s team won the game.
- her hair needs daily brushing.
- the speaker is the pastor of the church.
- the top of the wall was stenciled.
- she made him president of the class for a day.
- jesus’ death on the cross was the payment for our sin.
Fill in the Blank Answers:
- Noun substantive (A noun substantive refers to any word, phrase, or clause that has the qualities and uses of a noun.)
- Adjectives (Nouns can function as adjectives to modify other nouns, e.g., “book shelf” where “book” modifies “shelf.”)
- Number (Number (singular/plural) indicates if a part of speech is singular or plural.)
- Tense (Tense signifies the time frame of a verb’s action/condition.)
- Gender (Gender indicates the sex of a person, place, thing, etc.)
- Case (Case shows a substantive’s relation to other words.)
- Person (Pronouns have first (I), second (you), third (he/she/it) person.)
- Voice (Voice indicates if the subject acts (active) or is acted upon (passive).)
- Mood (Mood reflects the state of mind or manner of a statement.)
- Verbals (Verbs used as other parts of speech (noun, adjective, adverb) are verbals.)
- Verbals (Verbals (gerunds, participles, infinitives) function as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs.)
- Participles (Participles (present/past) are verbals used only as adjectives.)
- Gerunds (Gerunds (verb + -ing) are verbals used as nouns.)
Match Answers:
- D (Subject) (The subject is what the sentence is about.)
- B (Direct object) (The direct object “receives” the verb’s action.)
- F (Indirect object) (Indirect object tells “to/for whom/what” the action is done.)
- G (Object of a preposition) (Follows a preposition and relates to another word.)
- A (Object complement) (Completes the meaning of a direct object.)
- E (Predicate nominative) (Follows a linking verb and renames the subject.)
- C (Appositive) (Explains or identifies another substantive.)
True or False Answers:
- True (English nouns have three genders: masculine, feminine, neuter.)
- False (Tense (not tone) indicates time; tone relates to emphasis/attitude.)
- True (Appositive nouns match the case of the noun they rename.)
- False (Possessive nouns show ownership (e.g., “girl’s”), not nominative.)
- True (“Both,” “few,” “some,” “many” are indefinite nouns.)
- False (English verbs have more than two tenses (simple, progressive, perfect, perfect progressive).)
- False (Intransitive verbs cannot be passive (no direct object to “receive” action).)
- True (English verb moods: indicative (statement), imperative (command), subjunctive (wish/hypothetical).)
Identify (Case) Answers:
- P (Possessive) (“girl’s” shows ownership of “team.”)
- N (Nominative) (“hair” is the subject of “needs.”)
- N (Nominative) (“pastor” follows a linking verb (“is”) and renames “speaker” (nominative case).)
- O (Objective) (“wall” is the object of the preposition “of.”)
- O (Objective) (“president” is an object complement (objective case) after direct object “him.”)
- P (Possessive) (“Jesus’” shows ownership of “death.”)
(Note: For fill - in - the - blank, match, true/false, and identify questions, the above answers are based on English grammar rules related to parts of speech, case, tense, mood, voice, and noun/verbal functions.)
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Fill in the Blank Answers:
- Noun substantive (A noun substantive refers to any word, phrase, or clause that has the qualities and uses of a noun.)
- Adjectives (Nouns can function as adjectives to modify other nouns, e.g., “book shelf” where “book” modifies “shelf.”)
- Number (Number (singular/plural) indicates if a part of speech is singular or plural.)
- Tense (Tense signifies the time frame of a verb’s action/condition.)
- Gender (Gender indicates the sex of a person, place, thing, etc.)
- Case (Case shows a substantive’s relation to other words.)
- Person (Pronouns have first (I), second (you), third (he/she/it) person.)
- Voice (Voice indicates if the subject acts (active) or is acted upon (passive).)
- Mood (Mood reflects the state of mind or manner of a statement.)
- Verbals (Verbs used as other parts of speech (noun, adjective, adverb) are verbals.)
- Verbals (Verbals (gerunds, participles, infinitives) function as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs.)
- Participles (Participles (present/past) are verbals used only as adjectives.)
- Gerunds (Gerunds (verb + -ing) are verbals used as nouns.)
Match Answers:
- D (Subject) (The subject is what the sentence is about.)
- B (Direct object) (The direct object “receives” the verb’s action.)
- F (Indirect object) (Indirect object tells “to/for whom/what” the action is done.)
- G (Object of a preposition) (Follows a preposition and relates to another word.)
- A (Object complement) (Completes the meaning of a direct object.)
- E (Predicate nominative) (Follows a linking verb and renames the subject.)
- C (Appositive) (Explains or identifies another substantive.)
True or False Answers:
- True (English nouns have three genders: masculine, feminine, neuter.)
- False (Tense (not tone) indicates time; tone relates to emphasis/attitude.)
- True (Appositive nouns match the case of the noun they rename.)
- False (Possessive nouns show ownership (e.g., “girl’s”), not nominative.)
- True (“Both,” “few,” “some,” “many” are indefinite nouns.)
- False (English verbs have more than two tenses (simple, progressive, perfect, perfect progressive).)
- False (Intransitive verbs cannot be passive (no direct object to “receive” action).)
- True (English verb moods: indicative (statement), imperative (command), subjunctive (wish/hypothetical).)
Identify (Case) Answers:
- P (Possessive) (“girl’s” shows ownership of “team.”)
- N (Nominative) (“hair” is the subject of “needs.”)
- N (Nominative) (“pastor” follows a linking verb (“is”) and renames “speaker” (nominative case).)
- O (Objective) (“wall” is the object of the preposition “of.”)
- O (Objective) (“president” is an object complement (objective case) after direct object “him.”)
- P (Possessive) (“Jesus’” shows ownership of “death.”)
(Note: For fill - in - the - blank, match, true/false, and identify questions, the above answers are based on English grammar rules related to parts of speech, case, tense, mood, voice, and noun/verbal functions.)