English Vocabulary part 1
Abbreviations
letter(s) or shortened word used instead of a full word or phrase
Accent
the features of pronunciation which indicate the regional or the social identity of a speaker
Acquisition
the process by which language skills are developed – particularly in infancy
Adjectives
a word which modifies a noun or a pronoun
Adverbs
a word which modifies a verb, an adverb, or an adjective
Agreement
the grammatical logic and coherence between parts of a sentence
Alliteration
the repetition of consonant sounds – usually at the beginning of words
Apostrophes
a raised comma used to denote either possession or contraction
Articles
a word that specifies whether a noun is definite or indefinite
Assonance
the repetition of vowel sounds
Audience
the person or persons receiving a speech or piece of writing
Brackets
Curved or square punctuation marks enclosing words inserted into a text
Capitals
Upper-case letters used to indicate names, titles, and important words
Clauses
a structural unit of language which is smaller than the sentence but larger than phrases or words, and which contains a finite verb
Cliché
an over-used phrase or expression
Colons
a punctuation mark indicating a pause ranking between a semicolon and a full stop
Commas
a punctuation mark indicating a short pause in a sentence
Conjunction
a word which connects words or other constructions
Consonant
an alphabetic element other than a vowel
Context
the setting in which speech or writing takes place
Dialect
a form of speech peculiar to a district, class, or person
Diglossia
the existence of two official languages in a society
Diphthong
two vowel characters representing the sound of a single vowel
Ellipsis
the omission of words from a sentence
Figure of speech
expressive use language in non-literal form to produce striking effect
Form
the outward appearance or structure of language, as opposed to its function, meaning, or social use
Full stop
a punctuation mark indicating the end of a sentence
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