Appendix:English parts of speech

English is not a highly inflected language, and depends more on word order to indicate function. With the exception of pronouns, English words have relatively few forms. The patterns of some common inflections are outlined below.

Adjectives
Some adjectives have comparative and superlative forms:
 * comparative
 * end in, as in.
 * superlative
 * end in, as in.

Often, adjectives ending in a consonant + y have alternate acceptable forms which substitute an i, e.g., and, , and.

Generally, adjectives three syllables or longer do not have these special forms. The comparative and superlative are made using and, respectively.

There is no general rule for adjectives of two syllables. For some adjectives either method can be applied!

Adverbs
A few adverbs have comparative and superlative forms. These work the same way the adjectives do.

Like adjectives, adverbs ending in a consonant + y substitute an i. But a lot of adverbs are formed by adding ly to an adjective: is derived from. Sometimes, both the adjective and the adverb have comparative and superlative forms. These have spellings that look similar (and pronunciations that sound similar)—they only differ by li.


 * comparative
 * end in, as in . Compare it to.
 * superlative
 * end in, as in . Compare it to.

Some adverbs have the same form as their corresponding adjectives (called bare or flat adverbs). If the adjective has comparative and superlative forms, these almost always can be used as bare adverbs also: and its comparative  and superlative.

There are few irregular adverbs—very common ones in fact!—with a corresponding irregular adjective that looks different (at first). But the comparative and superlative forms are shared:

Nouns
English nouns generally have four forms, singular, plural, possessive singular, and possessive plural.

Plurals
The plural usually ends in.

Most nouns form their plural by adding an. Nouns ending in the sibilant sounds represented by the IPA characters, , , , and (for example, , , , , and , respectively) form their plurals by adding  unless they already end in an , in which case they add an. Most words ending in a consonant + form their plural by turning it into.

Many English words, especially those that have been in very common usage for a very long time, have irregular plurals, often formed by changing a vowel (ablaut). For example, the plural of is ; the plural of  is ; and the plural of  is. Other irregular plurals are formed in other ways.

Possessive
The possessive case of nouns is indicated by attaching an apostrophe followed by an to the end of a singular noun or a plural noun not ending in an, or by adding an apostrophe to a plural noun ending in. In US usage, if a singular noun already ends in "s", an apostrophe is added, optionally followed by an.

Biblical given names ending in may form their possessive by adding either an apostrophe alone or an apostrophe followed by an.

As a rule of thumb, if an is added to the noun when pronouncing the possessive, add an  when writing the possessive. For example, in “the cat's whiskers”, the possessive is pronounced like with an  added, so the possessive is written using an apostrophe followed by an. In “the cats' claws”, no is added to  when pronouncing the possessive, so only an apostrophe is added.

The same rule may be applied to names. Write if you pronounce it as ; write  if you pronounce it as.

Pronouns
Unlike most nouns in English, which have only singular and plural forms, many pronouns have several forms.

The personal pronoun has different forms depending on number (singular or plural), case (subject, object, possessive, etc.), person (1st, 2nd, 3rd person) and, in the 3rd person singular, also for gender.

Personal pronouns
The most recently developed standard pronoun is the distinctly neuter one,, and , which did not exist in Old English.

Archaic forms of the personal pronoun include, , , and  for the second person singular. was used as the French word or the German word. It disappeared as English society became mercantilist, leaving many feudal ties behind.

Another such archaic pronoun lost about the same time that replaced  in the singular is, which was used for the plural second person pronoun. (This word, though, is not to be confused with the misprint for as in “Ye Olde Tea Shoppe”.) Modern colloquial forms that replace the second person plural pronoun include, , , ,  and. These plural forms of are often heard in informal speech.

Archaic and obscure forms of the possessive adjective used before words that begin with a vowel or many words beginning with an, are (as used as the first word in the lyrics to a song of the nineteenth century, “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”) and. These were used in the same places where the indefinite article is used instead of.

Verbs
Most English verb forms, including the infinitive, the imperative, the first person singular, etc., do not have any inflection markers. A few key forms have suffixes, however. The pattern for those inflections for regular verbs is (roughly) shown in the following table.


 * Note: English has a large number of irregular verbs that do not fit the pattern.