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- A direct object follows a transitive verb.
- “Do not end a sentence with a preposition” is a prescriptive rule.
- Progressive aspect is represented as a past perfect form of a verb.
- What is the verbal morpheme that signals the present tense, third person singular?
- Where do English words come from?
- In Module Two’s video presentation, what was the issue with “poplar” versus “popular”?
- A metalanguage:
- What happens in the forming of the passive voice?
- What is the perfect aspect?
- An intransitive verb transfers action to an indirect object.
- A morpheme is the smallest sound unit of a language.
- Some grammars do not consider “be” to be a verb at all, but in a separate category.
- The passive voice is to be avoided in English composition.
- Prefixes and suffixes are free morphemes.
- Morphology is the study of phrase forms.
- The word “tree” can function as a noun or a verb.
- Modals are auxiliary verbs.
- In the video presentation for Module/Week Three, what particular grammar labeling error would make Dr. McClelland’s head “explode”?
- A nominal suffix turns a noun into a verb.
- Which of the following is “bad” grammar:
- The three basic verb types are transitive, linking and equative.
- Negatives are like conjunctive adverbs in that they can be found nearly anywhere in a clause.
- Who were the first to write grammars?
- Morphemes can change the part of speech of a word.
- An intransitive verb transfers action to an indirect object.
- In the sentence, “Candy is bad,” the subject is “candy.”
- The grammatical subject of a clause is always a noun.
- What is back formation?
- What is the auxiliary rule?
- The addition of a form of the auxiliary verb “do” is used in negating a sentence.
- According to your textbook, the word “gentleman” as a description of English is better and more elegant than “geezer.”
- A linking verb:
- The subject states the topic of a sentence.
- An infinitive phrase is the preposition “in” plus a bare form of a verb.
- “Time” is not necessarily the same as “tense.”
- What is the subject of the following: “To like raw oysters seems strange.”
- Which of the following is “form,” not “function?
- What is the function of “my friend” in the following: “John is my friend.”
- How is a transitive verb different from an intransitive one?
- A transitive verb:
- Progressive aspect is represented as a past perfect form of a verb.
- “Grammaticality” concerns what a native speaker would generate.
- In the phrase “the interesting book”, the word “interesting” is a verb in function but an adjective in form.
- Many grammar books name six tenses.
- What are characteristics of verbs?
- How does one form the negative of the following “He likes art.”
- The object of a preposition is simply whatever noun follows a preposition in a prepositional phrase.
- In the Module One video presentation, the word “shoots” illustrates:
- Why study grammar?
- Every native speaker of English uses complex English grammar in his/her hearing and speaking.