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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,900 --> 00:00:02,900 Hi, I’m Kasia. 2 00:00:02,900 --> 00:00:05,230 Welcome to Oxford Online English! 3 00:00:05,230 --> 00:00:08,660 In this lesson, you can learn about parts of speech in English. 4 00:00:08,660 --> 00:00:11,900 How many parts of speech are there in English? 5 00:00:11,900 --> 00:00:16,049 Can you name them, and explain what they do? 6 00:00:16,049 --> 00:00:23,259 Understanding parts of speech—nouns, verbs, adjectives, and so on—can help you to understand 7 00:00:23,259 --> 00:00:27,130 English sentence structure and how English grammar works. 8 00:00:27,130 --> 00:00:33,520 In this class, you’ll learn the basic information about parts of speech, you’ll see some ways 9 00:00:33,520 --> 00:00:38,060 that parts of speech can be more complicated than you might expect, and you’ll have several 10 00:00:38,060 --> 00:00:39,950 chances to practice! 11 00:00:39,950 --> 00:00:44,510 So, first question: how many parts of speech are there? 12 00:00:44,510 --> 00:00:50,230 Well, I did a Google search, and many of the top results said ‘eight’. 13 00:00:50,230 --> 00:00:54,000 So there must be eight parts of speech in English. 14 00:00:54,000 --> 00:00:55,020 Wrong! 15 00:00:55,020 --> 00:00:56,550 There are nine. 16 00:00:56,550 --> 00:01:02,180 Ah, what are they? 17 00:01:02,180 --> 00:01:04,680 Number one: nouns. 18 00:01:04,680 --> 00:01:10,960 Nouns can be things, animals, or people, like doctor, pencil, tree or cat. 19 00:01:10,960 --> 00:01:16,690 Nouns can also be ideas or abstract things, like idea, happiness, time or money. 20 00:01:16,690 --> 00:01:18,150 Number two: verbs. 21 00:01:18,150 --> 00:01:24,720 Verbs can be actions, like do, run, fly or win. 22 00:01:24,720 --> 00:01:31,420 Verbs can also describe states, like be, love, believe or understand. 23 00:01:31,420 --> 00:01:34,480 Number three: adjectives. 24 00:01:34,480 --> 00:01:37,200 Adjectives describe nouns. 25 00:01:37,200 --> 00:01:41,680 For example: red, big, metal, or beautiful. 26 00:01:41,680 --> 00:01:44,080 Number four: adverbs. 27 00:01:44,080 --> 00:01:51,200 Adverbs can describe verbs, meaning they describe how someone does something. 28 00:01:51,200 --> 00:01:55,360 For example, quickly, loudly, angrily or well. 29 00:01:55,360 --> 00:02:01,369 Adverbs can also describe adjectives, other adverbs, or even whole sentences. 30 00:02:01,369 --> 00:02:10,140 For example, very is an adverb which can describe an adjective—very slow—or another adverb—very 31 00:02:10,140 --> 00:02:11,680 slowly. 32 00:02:11,680 --> 00:02:17,540 Unfortunately or sometimes are adverbs which can be used to add information to a whole 33 00:02:17,540 --> 00:02:19,310 sentence. 34 00:02:19,310 --> 00:02:20,370 For example: 35 00:02:20,370 --> 00:02:25,440 Unfortunately, they missed the train and were late to their own wedding! 36 00:02:25,440 --> 00:02:29,510 Sometimes, I wish I’d made different choices in life. 37 00:02:29,510 --> 00:02:32,549 So, adverbs are a little more complicated. 38 00:02:32,549 --> 00:02:40,079 Here’s a good way to remember it: adjectives and adverbs both describe other words. 39 00:02:40,080 --> 00:02:44,880 They are both used to add information to something else. 40 00:02:44,880 --> 00:02:54,799 Adjectives describe nouns, and adverbs describe everything else: verbs, adjectives, adverbs 41 00:02:54,799 --> 00:02:57,319 and whole sentences. 42 00:02:57,319 --> 00:03:00,200 Number five: pronouns. 43 00:03:00,200 --> 00:03:02,889 Pronouns replace or represent nouns. 44 00:03:02,889 --> 00:03:09,900 For example, I, you, she or they are pronouns which represent different people. 45 00:03:09,900 --> 00:03:16,840 You use pronouns to avoid repeating the same word, or to refer to something when it’s 46 00:03:16,840 --> 00:03:18,480 obvious what you mean. 47 00:03:18,480 --> 00:03:20,260 For example: 48 00:03:20,260 --> 00:03:23,159 How was the weather there? 49 00:03:23,159 --> 00:03:26,519 There is a pronoun which refers to a place. 50 00:03:26,520 --> 00:03:31,760 If you’ve already mentioned the place you’re talking about, you don’t need to say it 51 00:03:31,760 --> 00:03:32,680 again. 52 00:03:32,680 --> 00:03:34,360 Another example: 53 00:03:34,370 --> 00:03:36,599 Give me two, please. 54 00:03:36,599 --> 00:03:43,430 Two is a pronoun which refers to a quantity of something which has already been mentioned. 55 00:03:43,430 --> 00:03:48,969 The person you’re talking to already knows what you’re talking about. 56 00:03:48,969 --> 00:03:51,840 Number six: prepositions. 57 00:03:51,840 --> 00:03:56,459 Prepositions usually go before a noun or noun phrase. 58 00:03:56,460 --> 00:03:58,680 What’s their job? 59 00:03:58,680 --> 00:04:08,699 Prepositions can do two basic things: first, they can add an idea of time, place, or movement 60 00:04:08,699 --> 00:04:10,139 to a noun. 61 00:04:10,139 --> 00:04:12,599 For example: 62 00:04:12,599 --> 00:04:18,229 on Wednesday in the corner 63 00:04:18,229 --> 00:04:20,300 towards the door 64 00:04:20,300 --> 00:04:25,750 Secondly, prepositions can connect other words to a noun, or a pronoun. 65 00:04:25,750 --> 00:04:29,250 For example, think about the verb depend on. 66 00:04:29,250 --> 00:04:34,420 The preposition on connects the verb depend to the object of the verb. 67 00:04:34,420 --> 00:04:35,660 For example: 68 00:04:35,660 --> 00:04:37,270 It depends on the cost. 69 00:04:37,270 --> 00:04:42,110 Usually, the noun or noun phrase goes after the preposition. 70 00:04:42,110 --> 00:04:48,350 However, sometimes the preposition can link to a noun (or pronoun) earlier in the sentence. 71 00:04:48,350 --> 00:04:49,930 For example: 72 00:04:49,930 --> 00:04:51,509 What does it depend on? 73 00:04:51,509 --> 00:04:54,419 Here, on links to the pronoun what. 74 00:04:54,419 --> 00:04:57,450 Conjunctions. 75 00:04:57,450 --> 00:05:00,320 Conjunctions connect two things. 76 00:05:00,320 --> 00:05:03,310 A conjunction can connect two words: 77 00:05:03,310 --> 00:05:06,259 I like cake and ice-cream. 78 00:05:06,259 --> 00:05:10,740 A conjunction can connect two phrases: 79 00:05:10,740 --> 00:05:15,100 Do you want to go now or wait till this afternoon? 80 00:05:15,100 --> 00:05:20,560 You can also use a conjunction to connect two clauses: 81 00:05:20,560 --> 00:05:26,009 Although I’ve been trying to learn for years, I’m still really bad at drawing. 82 00:05:26,009 --> 00:05:28,500 Number eight: determiners 83 00:05:28,500 --> 00:05:31,160 Determiners go before a noun. 84 00:05:31,160 --> 00:05:39,259 They include words like a, the, this or that, which help to specify which noun you’re 85 00:05:39,260 --> 00:05:40,700 talking about. 86 00:05:40,700 --> 00:05:46,240 Words like my, your, his, her, etc. are also determiners. 87 00:05:46,240 --> 00:05:53,069 They specify which noun you’re talking about by saying who something belongs to. 88 00:05:53,069 --> 00:05:57,289 Determiners can also tell you how many of something there are. 89 00:05:57,289 --> 00:05:59,389 Look at three examples: 90 00:05:59,389 --> 00:06:02,150 ten bananas some people 91 00:06:02,150 --> 00:06:04,090 both of my brothers 92 00:06:04,090 --> 00:06:08,840 The words ten, some and both are determiners. 93 00:06:08,840 --> 00:06:12,030 Number nine: interjections 94 00:06:12,030 --> 00:06:17,420 Interjections are different, because they aren’t normally part of a sentence. 95 00:06:17,420 --> 00:06:22,880 Interjections are words or phrases which show how you feel. 96 00:06:22,880 --> 00:06:23,960 For example: 97 00:06:23,960 --> 00:06:25,540 Wow! 98 00:06:25,540 --> 00:06:27,500 Ah, crap! 99 00:06:27,500 --> 00:06:29,350 No way! 100 00:06:29,350 --> 00:06:36,600 So, now you know about the nine parts of speech in English. 101 00:06:36,600 --> 00:06:38,120 Let’s practice! 102 00:06:38,129 --> 00:06:39,740 Look at three sentences. 103 00:06:39,740 --> 00:06:42,449 Each sentence has five words. 104 00:06:42,449 --> 00:06:43,449 1. 105 00:06:43,449 --> 00:06:44,740 They told me about it. 106 00:06:44,740 --> 00:06:45,740 2. 107 00:06:45,740 --> 00:06:47,229 Look in the big cupboard. 108 00:06:47,229 --> 00:06:48,259 3. 109 00:06:48,259 --> 00:06:51,100 Put it there, but carefully. 110 00:06:51,100 --> 00:06:55,379 Can you identify which part of speech each word is? 111 00:06:55,379 --> 00:07:00,509 Pause the video and think about your answers. 112 00:07:00,509 --> 00:07:02,120 How did you do? 113 00:07:02,120 --> 00:07:05,490 Could you identify the parts of speech correctly? 114 00:07:05,490 --> 00:07:07,620 Let’s look at one more. 115 00:07:07,620 --> 00:07:10,789 I’m staying in this evening. 116 00:07:10,789 --> 00:07:13,780 What part of speech are these words? 117 00:07:13,780 --> 00:07:15,620 Think about it. 118 00:07:15,620 --> 00:07:20,999 So, I is a pronoun, am is a verb, and staying is also a verb. 119 00:07:21,000 --> 00:07:23,020 What about in? 120 00:07:23,020 --> 00:07:25,130 Did you say it’s a preposition? 121 00:07:25,130 --> 00:07:28,509 It’s not a preposition; it’s an adverb. 122 00:07:28,509 --> 00:07:30,220 How does this work? 123 00:07:30,220 --> 00:07:36,819 We had the word in in one of the sentences you saw before, and it was a preposition. 124 00:07:36,820 --> 00:07:41,360 So, what’s going on? 125 00:07:41,360 --> 00:07:43,980 Some words can only be one thing. 126 00:07:43,990 --> 00:07:50,090 For example, the words independence or hair can only be nouns. 127 00:07:50,090 --> 00:07:52,919 Believe and destroy can only be verbs. 128 00:07:52,919 --> 00:07:58,050 However, many words can be more than one part of speech. 129 00:07:58,050 --> 00:08:00,880 There are two things happening here. 130 00:08:00,880 --> 00:08:06,970 First, a word can be two different things, which have the same written form and the same 131 00:08:06,970 --> 00:08:08,539 pronunciation. 132 00:08:08,540 --> 00:08:10,920 Think about the word win. 133 00:08:10,920 --> 00:08:13,980 Is it a noun or a verb? 134 00:08:13,980 --> 00:08:15,331 It can be both. 135 00:08:15,331 --> 00:08:18,719 I’m sure they’ll win the game this weekend. 136 00:08:18,720 --> 00:08:22,440 We’ll be hoping for a win in the big game this weekend. 137 00:08:22,440 --> 00:08:24,400 Many words are like this. 138 00:08:24,400 --> 00:08:27,940 Red can be an adjective or a noun. 139 00:08:27,940 --> 00:08:31,300 What do you think about this red for the kitchen? 140 00:08:31,310 --> 00:08:34,600 I like that red top she was wearing. 141 00:08:34,600 --> 00:08:41,910 This is very common: very often, a word with one written form can be two (or more) different 142 00:08:41,910 --> 00:08:43,500 parts of speech. 143 00:08:43,500 --> 00:08:48,670 We told you there are two things happening here; what’s the other? 144 00:08:48,670 --> 00:08:54,910 Sometimes, a word can be different parts of speech depending on its function in the sentence. 145 00:08:54,910 --> 00:08:57,060 Look at two sentences: 146 00:08:57,060 --> 00:09:00,170 I have a few photos of my grandparents. 147 00:09:00,170 --> 00:09:02,280 Sure, you can have a few. 148 00:09:02,280 --> 00:09:09,470 Here’s a question: what part of speech is few in these sentences? 149 00:09:09,470 --> 00:09:14,810 In the first sentence, few is a determiner; in the second, it’s a pronoun. 150 00:09:14,810 --> 00:09:19,590 Can you explain why this is? 151 00:09:19,590 --> 00:09:23,190 Think about what few does in these two sentences. 152 00:09:23,190 --> 00:09:29,770 In the first sentence, few adds a quantity to the noun photos. 153 00:09:29,770 --> 00:09:33,770 It tells us how many photos you have. 154 00:09:33,770 --> 00:09:36,280 This makes it a determiner. 155 00:09:36,280 --> 00:09:39,800 In the second sentence, few replaces a noun. 156 00:09:39,800 --> 00:09:46,140 You don’t know which noun it replaces, but in context, you would understand what the 157 00:09:46,140 --> 00:09:47,730 person meant. 158 00:09:47,730 --> 00:09:51,850 Maybe it was ‘a few biscuits’, or ‘a few pieces of paper.’ 159 00:09:51,850 --> 00:09:53,260 We don’t know! 160 00:09:53,260 --> 00:09:59,660 But, you do know that few replaces a noun, which makes it a pronoun. 161 00:09:59,660 --> 00:10:02,980 Another example is the sentence we saw before: 162 00:10:02,990 --> 00:10:06,790 I’m staying in this evening. 163 00:10:06,790 --> 00:10:12,260 Prepositions go with nouns, and connect nouns to other words in the sentence. 164 00:10:12,260 --> 00:10:17,690 In here doesn’t go with a noun, so it can’t be a preposition. 165 00:10:17,690 --> 00:10:24,270 In here means ‘at home’, and it adds information to the verb stay. 166 00:10:24,270 --> 00:10:28,100 What kind of words add information to verbs? 167 00:10:28,100 --> 00:10:29,520 Adverbs! 168 00:10:29,520 --> 00:10:31,440 So, in is an adverb. 169 00:10:31,440 --> 00:10:37,630 Wait a minute, did we ever finish explaining what parts of speech are in this sentence? 170 00:10:37,630 --> 00:10:38,950 You’re right! 171 00:10:38,950 --> 00:10:39,950 We didn’t. 172 00:10:39,950 --> 00:10:41,330 Let’s do it now. 173 00:10:41,330 --> 00:10:47,620 You need to say what parts of speech the words this evening are. 174 00:10:47,620 --> 00:10:48,710 Can you do it? 175 00:10:48,710 --> 00:10:52,950 Maybe you said that this is a determiner, and evening is a noun. 176 00:10:52,950 --> 00:10:57,130 That’s technically correct, but it’s not the best answer. 177 00:10:57,130 --> 00:11:01,120 The best answer is that this evening is an adverb. 178 00:11:01,120 --> 00:11:05,360 How do you explain that? 179 00:11:05,360 --> 00:11:13,840 Until now, you’ve seen single words, and how single words can be nouns, verbs, etc. 180 00:11:13,840 --> 00:11:20,130 However, when you’re thinking about parts of speech, you can’t just think about single 181 00:11:20,130 --> 00:11:21,680 words. 182 00:11:21,680 --> 00:11:28,100 Phrases can also be nouns, verbs, adjectives, and so on. 183 00:11:28,110 --> 00:11:30,120 Let’s do an example: 184 00:11:30,120 --> 00:11:38,720 Add a small spoonful of brown sugar, then turn the heat down and stir the mixture gently. 185 00:11:38,720 --> 00:11:44,990 Think about the first part of this sentence: add a small spoonful of brown sugar. 186 00:11:44,990 --> 00:11:47,500 What parts of speech do we have here? 187 00:11:47,500 --> 00:11:50,750 Of course, you can go through it word by word. 188 00:11:50,750 --> 00:11:57,390 You can say, add is a verb, a is a determiner, small is an adjective and so on. 189 00:11:57,390 --> 00:12:00,930 But, is that the most useful way of looking at it? 190 00:12:00,930 --> 00:12:10,880 It makes more sense to see this as a verb—add—and a noun—a small spoonful of brown sugar. 191 00:12:10,880 --> 00:12:18,000 The noun is made up of several parts of speech: determiners, adjectives, prepositions and 192 00:12:18,000 --> 00:12:22,620 nouns, but together they have one meaning. 193 00:12:22,620 --> 00:12:26,690 These words refer to one thing. 194 00:12:26,690 --> 00:12:30,680 You can analyse a sentence in several different layers. 195 00:12:30,680 --> 00:12:38,260 So, you can see a small spoonful of brown sugar as six individual words, or one noun 196 00:12:38,260 --> 00:12:39,260 phrase. 197 00:12:39,260 --> 00:12:47,180 You could also see it as three parts: a determiner—a small spoonful, a preposition—of, and a 198 00:12:47,180 --> 00:12:49,240 noun—brown sugar. 199 00:12:49,240 --> 00:12:50,460 Confused? 200 00:12:50,460 --> 00:12:52,240 We understand! 201 00:12:52,240 --> 00:12:54,620 You want to know the answer. 202 00:12:54,620 --> 00:12:58,640 You want to know which way is ‘correct’. 203 00:12:58,640 --> 00:13:02,220 There isn’t one ‘correct’ way to say this. 204 00:13:02,220 --> 00:13:04,820 There are different perspectives. 205 00:13:04,820 --> 00:13:09,880 A better question is: which perspective makes more sense? 206 00:13:09,880 --> 00:13:15,430 In this sentence, a small spoonful of brown sugar refers to one thing in the world. 207 00:13:15,430 --> 00:13:21,000 So it makes sense to think of it as one part of speech in the sentence. 208 00:13:21,000 --> 00:13:23,850 What about the second part of the sentence? 209 00:13:23,850 --> 00:13:26,740 How would you analyse the parts of speech? 210 00:13:26,740 --> 00:13:32,510 As you saw before, there isn’t one right answer, but here’s a suggestion. 211 00:13:32,510 --> 00:13:38,890 The sentence contains a conjunction—then, and then two verb phrases linked with the 212 00:13:38,890 --> 00:13:41,240 conjunction and. 213 00:13:41,240 --> 00:13:48,970 This makes sense because the sentence is telling you to do two things: turn the heat down and 214 00:13:48,970 --> 00:13:50,550 stir the mixture gently. 215 00:13:50,550 --> 00:13:57,260 So, it makes sense to see turn the heat down as one part of speech, because it’s telling 216 00:13:57,260 --> 00:13:59,240 you do to one thing. 217 00:13:59,240 --> 00:14:02,160 Let’s put these ideas together. 218 00:14:02,160 --> 00:14:07,890 First, when you think about parts of speech, you can’t just memorise information. 219 00:14:07,890 --> 00:14:15,470 You have to look at each sentence individually, and think about what each word is doing. 220 00:14:15,470 --> 00:14:21,380 Secondly, always think about what the sentence means in the real world. 221 00:14:21,380 --> 00:14:29,230 Sentences aren’t abstract things; they refer to real people, real things and real actions. 222 00:14:29,230 --> 00:14:34,391 There is always more than one way to analyse the parts of speech in a sentence: choose 223 00:14:34,400 --> 00:14:39,760 the way that makes sense based on what the sentence is telling you about real life! 224 00:14:39,760 --> 00:14:47,980 Let’s do a more challenging practice exercise so you can see these ideas in action. 225 00:14:47,990 --> 00:14:50,120 Look at three sentences: 226 00:14:50,120 --> 00:14:51,620 Amazing! 227 00:14:51,620 --> 00:14:54,790 It’s way better than I ever thought it would be. 228 00:14:54,790 --> 00:15:00,020 She was an amazing clinician, who came up with many innovative ways to treat patients. 229 00:15:00,020 --> 00:15:01,940 I don’t believe it! 230 00:15:01,940 --> 00:15:06,100 How would you analyse the parts of speech in these sentences? 231 00:15:06,100 --> 00:15:09,790 Think about the ideas we talked about in the last section. 232 00:15:09,790 --> 00:15:15,700 Does it make sense to break the sentences into individual words, or is it better to 233 00:15:15,700 --> 00:15:18,070 group words into phrases? 234 00:15:18,070 --> 00:15:21,790 Pause the video and think about your ideas. 235 00:15:21,790 --> 00:15:23,030 Ready? 236 00:15:23,030 --> 00:15:25,940 Here are our answers. 237 00:15:25,940 --> 00:15:31,030 You can pause the video again to look at these in more detail. 238 00:15:31,030 --> 00:15:37,870 Notice how the same word can be different parts of speech in different sentences. 239 00:15:37,870 --> 00:15:45,570 For example, amazing is an interjection in one sentence, and an adjective in another. 240 00:15:45,570 --> 00:15:48,680 Notice also the different layers of analysis. 241 00:15:48,680 --> 00:15:52,850 For example, look at the phrase many innovative ways. 242 00:15:52,850 --> 00:16:00,660 You can see this as one noun phrase, or as a determiner plus a noun phrase, or as three 243 00:16:00,660 --> 00:16:05,890 individual parts: a determiner, an adjective and a noun. 244 00:16:05,890 --> 00:16:07,180 Which is correct? 245 00:16:07,180 --> 00:16:08,750 They all are! 246 00:16:08,750 --> 00:16:12,250 Choose the perspective which makes more sense to you. 247 00:16:12,250 --> 00:16:14,620 Want more practice with this topic? 248 00:16:14,620 --> 00:16:18,630 Check out the full version of this lesson on our website: Oxford Online English dot 249 00:16:18,630 --> 00:16:19,630 com. 250 00:16:19,630 --> 00:16:23,940 You can practice with a quiz to check your understanding of parts of speech in English. 251 00:16:23,940 --> 00:16:25,440 Thanks for watching! 252 00:16:25,440 --> 00:16:26,319 See you next time!20408

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