Step-1 |
|
Title: Early |
Grade: 2-a Lesson: S3-L4 |
Explanation: Hello Students, time to practice and review the steps. Let us take next 2-5 minutes to solve the steps for the problems. This is a good exercise to check your understanding of the concepts.Second student to identify and review important steps.Focus on understanding the concepts and application to solving problems step by step. |
Step | Type | Explanation | Answer |
---|---|---|---|
1 |
Problem |
What is the parts of speech for the word 'Early'? |
|
2 |
Clue |
An adjective is a word that describes a noun or noun phrase. |
|
3 |
Sumup |
Can you summarize what you’ve understood in the above steps? |
|
4 |
Choice.A |
Choice A is incorrect. "Early" is not a noun; it is an adjective. Adjectives describe nouns, like "early morning" or "early riser." Nouns are names for people, places, or things, like "dog" or "school." So, "early" is an adjective, not a noun. |
Noun |
5 |
Choice.B |
Choice B is incorrect. The word "Early" is not a pronoun; it’s an adverb. Adverbs describe actions like when, where, or how something happens. For example, "I woke up early" tells us when I woke up. So, "early" describes the time of waking up, not a person or thing, like a pronoun would. |
Pronoun |
6 |
Choice.C |
Choice C is correct. The word 'early' is an adjective because it describes when something happens, like "early morning." Adjectives tell us more about nouns (like 'morning'). Just like 'big' describes a 'dog,' 'early' describes 'morning.' |
Adjective |
7 |
Choice.D |
Choice D is incorrect. "Early" is an adjective, not an adverb, because it describes a noun (like "early morning"). Adverbs usually describe verbs and often end in "-ly" (like "quickly"). So, "early" tells us more about a thing, not an action. |
Adverb |
8 |
Step: |
The keyword "Early" - It describes or modifies a noun. |
|
9 |
Step: |
Hence, the parts of speech of the word Early is Adjective. |
Choice C |
Copyright © 2020-2022 saibook.us Contact: info@saibook.us Version: 1.5 Built: 25-April-2024 7:30PM EST