Fortran

Guide To Learn

Linking Verbs

Compared to action verbs, linking verbs are lazy. Instead of action, they express a state or condition, connecting the subject of a sentence with a subject complement—a noun, pronoun, or adjective in the form of a single word or a phrase that identifies or describes the subject. Following are examples of linking verbs on the job: You seem terribly curious. […]

Action Verbs

Action verbs are the movers and shakers of the English language; they build and demolish, love and despise, hope and despair. They cower in the corner of one sentence and emerge triumphant at the end of another. Action verbs fuel your writing, so make them your go-to verbs instead of making them sit it out on the sidelines. USAGE TIDBIT In chess, players have come up with standard relative […]

Taking Action with Verbs

Verbs are words that express an action, state of being, or relationship between two things. They tell the reader what the subject (actor) in a sentence does or is or is being. Verbs come in three types: action, linking, and helping, as described in the following sections. PRACTICAL POINT Both nouns and verbs can be inflected; that is, you […]

Differences in Noun and Pronoun Behavior

With nouns and pronouns, you’re likely to observe an inequality: pronouns come in nine flavors, but nouns have only four. Why? Because nouns change form only to become plural or possessive, whereas pronouns change to become personal, possessive, reflexive, intensive, demonstrative, and so on, all in the singular and plural. Check it out. Regardless of […]

The Supporting Cast: Pronouns

Just as nouns represent classes of objects or individual persons, places, or things, pronouns represent nouns. The English language provides you with pronouns so you don’t have to keep repeating the noun, which can become quite annoying. Most pronouns have an antecedent—a noun that the pronoun represents, as in the following example: Sally always traveled with her dog. Sally is […]

The Lead Actors: Nouns

Nouns conjure up images of creatures, locations, or objects—dog, tornado, neighbor, Popeye, Australia. Anything that can act, be acted upon, or just plain be has a noun that names it. Nouns come in four basic types: Common: Your average everyday nouns that represent a class of objects as opposed to a particular individual. Words such as car, cat, toe, tree, […]

Meeting the Actors: Nouns and Pronouns

Nouns and pronouns represent beings: people, places, and things, including abstract things such as love and freedom. In any given sentence, they’re the ones doing the action or on the receiving end of the action. The following sections explain the difference between nouns and pronouns and provide additional relevant details for dealing with them.

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