6th Grade Study English Guide

Noun – names a person, place, thing, or idea.

Types of nouns

Common noun – names any one of a class of people, places, things, or ideas.

Proper noun – names a particular person, place, or thing.

Collective noun – denotes a group of persons, places, or things, considered as

one.

Concrete nouns – person, place, or thing that you can experience with your

senses.

Abstract noun – expresses a quality, condition, or an action apart from any

object or thing.

Qualities of nouns

Person – quality of a noun through which the speaker, the one spoken to, or the one spoken about is indicated.

First person denotes the speaker.

Second person denotes the one spoken to.

Third person denotes the one spoken about.

Number – the quality of a noun that denotes whether is refers to one person,

place, or thing or more than one person, place, or thing.

Gender – the quality of a noun that expresses which sex is distinguished.

Masculine

Feminine

Neuter – denotes objects

Some nouns may be taken as wither masculine of feminine.

Cases of nouns

Case is the quality of a noun that shows its relation to some other word or words in the sentence.

Nominative Case – subject nouns

Subject – the person, place or thing the sentence is about.

Subject complement – refers to the same person, place, or thing as the

subject.

-renames or describes the subject

-follows a linking verb

(Some linking verbs- is, am, are, was, were, be, being, been)

Possessive Case – expresses possession, ownership, or connection

Objective Case – object nouns

Direct object – answers whom or what after the action verb.

Indirect object – answers to whom or for whom the action is done.

Object of the preposition – follows a preposition

Object complement – follows the direct object, renames the object

Sentences – group of words that express a complete thought.

Sentences must have a subject and a predicate.

Classified by purpose

Declarative sentence – makes a statement

Interrogative sentence - asks a question

Imperative sentence – command or request

Exclamatory sentence – conveys emotion or excitement.

Clause – group of words that has a subject and a predicate

Independent Clause – expresses a complete though

Dependent clause – does not express a complete thought and cannot stand alone out of the sentence.

Classified by form

Simple Sentence – consists of one independent clause

Compound Sentence – contains two or more independent clauses joined by a comma and a coordinate conjunction, a semicolon, or a semicolon, and an adverb

Complex Sentence – contains an independent clause and one or more dependent clauses

Pronoun – a word that takes the place of a noun

Antecedent – a word to which a pronoun refers

Personal Pronouns

Nominative case – subject pronouns – used as subjects and subject complements

SingularPlural

1st person I we

2nd person you you

3rd personhe, she, itthey

Objective case pronouns – used as direct objects, indirect objects, objects of prepositions

SingularPlural

1st person me us

2nd person youyou

3rd personhim, her, it

them

Possessive case pronouns – stand alone (while possessive adjectives precede nouns)

SingularPlural

1st personmineours

2nd personyoursyours

3rd personhis, hers, itstheirs

Compound pronouns – intensive and reflexive

SingularPlural

1st personmyselfourselves

2nd personyourselfyourselves

3rd personhimself, herself, itselfthemselves

Interrogative pronouns – used to ask a question

who, whom, whose, which, what

Demonstrative pronouns – point out a particular person, place, or thing

this, that, these, those

Indefinite pronouns – refer to any or all of a group of persons, places, or things

Singular:another, anybody, anyone, anything, each, either, everybody, everything, much, neither, nobody, no one, nothing, one, other, somebody, someone, something

Plural:both, few, many, others, several

Singular & Plural:all, any, more, most, none, some

Adjective – modifies a noun or a pronoun

Types of Adjectives

Descriptive adjectives – describes or limits the noun or pronoun it modifies

- may come before or after the word it modifies

-may be used as a subject complement

Demonstrative adjectives – point out definite persons, places, and things.

-this, that, these, those

Interrogative adjectives– are used in questions.

-what, which, whose

Indefinite adjectives – refer to any or all of a group.

-both, few, every, several, all, another, some, many, most, each, either, neither

Degrees of comparison of adjectives

–positive, comparative and superlative

-one and two syllable adjectives – add erfor the comparative andestfor the superlative

-three or more syllable adjectives – add more for the comparative and most for the superlative

- some adjectives have irregular comparison

example: (good, better, best)

Writing Traits

Ideas

Organization

Word Choice

Sentence Fluency

Voice

Conventions

Writing Process

Prewriting – think and plan

Drafting – writing it down

Revising – improve my ideas, words, sentences, and organization

Editing – correcting grammar, spelling, punctuation, capitalization

Publishing – sharing my writing