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countable
countable noun (also ‘count noun’) is one which has both singular and plural forms: e.g. ‘apple’
- ‘apples’, ‘child’ - ‘children’. See also UNCOUNTABLE
direct object
See
OBJECT
direct speech
speech that is written down in the exact words of the original speaker. The words are usually
enclosed within inverted commas: "My purse has been stolen." Indirect speech (also called
‘reported speech’) is speech that is written down in the words of the reporter, with changes to
tenses, pronouns, adverbs etc: She said that her purse had been stolen. the incorrect use of
two negative words instead of one,
double negative
the incorrect use of two negative words instead of one, e.g. ‘Nobody never ...’ instead of
‘Nobody ever ...’
emphasis
the special force that is sometimes given to a word or phrase to draw it to the listener’s or
reader’s attention: ‘I do hope you feel better soon.’ ‘They themselves have never been to
Italy.’
finite
A finite verb is one which has a subject and a tense: e.g. ‘takes’, ‘took’, ‘has taken’, ‘was being
taken’.
first person
See
PERSON
fixed phrase
two or more words which are always used together and cannot be changed in any way: e.g. ‘as
a matter of fact’, ‘on the contrary’ (NOT ‘
on a contrary’
, ‘
on the contraries’
, etc)
formal
Formal styles are those in which words and structures are chosen with care, as in business
letters, official reports, academic textbooks, news broadcasts, public ceremonies, etc.
See
also INFORMAL
identifying
relative clause
See
RELATIVE CLAUSE
indirect object
See
OBJECT
indirect speech
See
DIERCT SPEECH
infinitive
the form of a verb that you look up in a dictionary. There are two types of infinitive, the ‘bare
infinitive’ (e.g. ‘come’, ‘take’, ‘send’) and the ‘to-infinitive’ (e.g. ‘to come’, ‘to take’, ‘to send’),
sometimes shown in this book as ‘to-v’,
informal
Informal styles are those in which language is used in a casual, spontaneous way, as in
everyday conversation and letters to friends. See also FORMAL the form of a verb which
-ing form
the form of a verb which ends in ‘-ing’, e.g. ‘coming’, ‘taking’, ‘sending’, sometimes shown in
this book as ‘v-ing’.
When an -ing form is used as a noun, it is sometimes called a ‘gerund’: e.g. ‘I like reading.’
When an -ing form is used as a verb’; it is sometimes called a present participle: ‘I saw her
talking to Dr Edwards this morning.’
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