أجاويد بني معروف



أهلا وسهلاً بكل أحبابنا بني معروف من أينما أتيتم
يرجى التقييد بالشروط العامة للمنتدى
يرجى التسجيل بالغة العربية

أبو شهاب
أي أستفسار أو مشكلة يرجى مراسلة الادارة


أجاويد بني معروف

أهلا بك يا {زائر} في موقع الأجاويد ننتظر كل جديد منك

بكم نكبر فاالنعمل على تحسين وتطوير الموقع كلمتنا لكم دائماً  بكم نكبر أرجو المساعدة من الأخوة الأعضاء والأداريين والمشرفيين والزوار فلنبدأ التغيير مـــــــــــــــــن هنـــــــــــــــــــــــــاااا تم تنسيق جميع المنتديات وأختصار البعض منها ودمجها مع الأخر

    Grammar Basics

    شاطر

    عبـ البحر ـير
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    المدير العام

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    m14 Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف عبـ البحر ـير في الإثنين فبراير 15, 2010 4:56 pm


    هااي اليوم حبيت انقلكم اساسيات قواعد اللغه الانجليزيه
    وان شاء الله بالمستقبل راح نحكي عن كل شي
    كل موضوع لوحده
    بس حبيت تكون عنا نظره سريعه ع الاساسيات
    بتمنى الافاده للجميع
    واي حد بيحب يضيف اهلا وسهلا


    Parts of Speech




    NOUN
    a person, place, or thing. Can be the subject or object of a sentence. Ex: cat, horse, mother, Denmark

    PRONOUN
    a word that replaces or stands for ("pro" = for) a noun. Ex: he, she, it

    VERB
    an action word. Ex: sit, laugh, screw

    ADJECTIVE
    a word that describes or modifies a noun. Answers the questions "how many," "what kind," etc. Ex: happy, suicidal, red, dangerous

    ADVERB
    a word that describes or modifies a verb. Ex: carefully, quickly, wisely. Also sometimes modifies an adjective. ("She was very tall." 'Very' is an adverb modifying 'tall,' which in turn is an adjective modifying 'she'.) Adverbs usually, but not always, end in "-ly". (However, not every word ending in "ly" is an adverb: "friendly," for example, is an adjective.)

    PREPOSITION
    (literally "pre-position") a word that indicates the relationship of a noun (or noun phrase) to another word. Examples of prepositions are to, at, with, for, against, across.
    Putting Words Together



    PHRASE
    an expres​sion(can be a single word, but usually more) which contains a single thought but is not necessarily a complete sentence. Words make up phrases; phrases make up sentences. By some definitions, a phrase cannot contain a verb.

    PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE
    A phrase beginning with a preposition. Heh, heh. You could have figured that out, right? Example:
    I am sitting in the bushes."I am sitting" is a complete sentence unto itself; it contains a subject ("I") and a verb ("am sitting"). The phrase "in the bushes" is a prepositional phrase ("in" being the preposition) that expands upon the basic concept.


    SENTENCE
    the basic unit of writing. A sentence should have a subject and a predicate. The subject is the noun to which the sentence's verb refers; the predicate is the verb plus whatever other parts modify or elaborate on it. Example:
    My mother sings."My" is a possessive pronoun; "mother" is the subject (noun); "sings" is the verb.

    There are several types of sentences. The major ones are:


    DECLARATIVE
    The majority of sentences are declarative. A declarative sentence makes a statement. This sentence is declarative, as are the previous two.

    INTERROGATORY
    An interrogatory sentence asks a question. Do you understand that? Which of these sentences is an example?

    IMPERATIVE
    An imperative sentence gives a command. Ex: "Shut up and kiss me." Note that an imperative sentence does not require a subject; the pronoun "you" is implied.

    RUN-ON SENTENCE
    A sentence that is too long and should be broken into two or more sentences. One sentence should present one basic concept; if it presents more than that, it may be a run-on. A large number of "and"s, "but"s, and similar joining words is one warning sign of a run-on.

    SENTENCE FRAGMENT
    A phrase that is acting like a sentence but is incomplete. Examples:
    My favorite color.This is not a sentence because it contains no verb.
    Walking very slowly.This is not a sentence because it contains no noun.
    On the table.This is not a sentence because it contains neither a verb nor a subject.

    Sentence fragments are acceptable as answers to direct questions: "Where is my sword?" "In the bushes."


    PASSIVE vs. ACTIVE VERBS
    A verb is active when the subject performs the verb. A verb is passive when the subject is the recipient of the verb. In general, passive verb construction is considered "wimpy" or nonspecific.
    Xena was watched by the villagers. Xena is the subject of the sentence, but the verb is "watch" and Xena is not doing the watching; therefore the verb is passive and "the villagers" is the object. This construction is not ideal.
    The villagers watched Xena. Now the villagers are the subject, Xena is the direct object, and the verb is active. This is better than the previous example.


    CONJUGATION
    To conjugate a verb is to state the form the verb takes for each person. For example, to conjugate the verb "to have" (in the present tense) you say "I have, you have, he/she/it has, we have, y'all have, they have."

    TENSES
    I assume we all know what past, present and future are. Most verbs take different forms depending on tense. For example, "I eat" is present, "I ate" is past and "I will eat" is future.
    In addition, every verb has a past participle (p.p.). Use a form of "to have" plus the p.p. to indicate nonspecific past events.
    Example: The p.p. of "to eat" is "eaten." For a specific event, use "ate": "Yesterday I ate an apple for lunch." For something that happened in the past at an unspecified time, or over a period of time, use "have" plus the p.p.: "I have eaten many apples in my lifetime." For double-past (talking about something that happened before something else in the past) use "had" plus the p.p.: "Yesterday Xena offered me an apple for dinner, but I had eaten one for lunch, so I had an orange instead."
    Most (but certainly not all!) past participles end in -en, e.g. eaten, spoken, ridden.


    Miscellaneous



    DIRECT vs. INDIRECT OBJECT
    An object is a noun that is the recipient of the verb in the sentence. It's easier to demonstrate than to explain:
    Xena grabbed her sword.
    Xena is the subject, because she performs the verb. "Grabbed" is the verb; "her" is a possessive pronoun; the sword is the direct object because the grabbing is performed upon it.
    Xena put her sword on the table.
    Xena is the subject; "put" is the verb; the sword is the direct object; the table is the indirect object.

    PERSON
    Tells whom the speaker (or writer) is speaking (or writing) about. The majority of stories are written in the third person singular: "Xena woke up. She was hungry, so she started a fire and made pancakes."
    Some stories (notably "If on a winter's night a traveler" by Italo Calvino; also all those "Choose Your Adventure" books we loved when we were kids) are written in the second person: "You look around and see Xena approaching. You reach for your sword."
    A good number of stories ("Catcher in the Rye," all the Sherlock Holmes novels, etc.) is written in first person: "I woke up to find Xena had abandoned me again. 'Gabrielle,' I said to myself, 'this is the last straw.'"
    The plurals are: first person "we/us," second person "you" (or "y'all"), third person "they/them."

    DECLENSION
    Irrelevant in English; declension is the noun analog to conjugation. In many other languages (e.g. Latin), nouns take different forms depending on how they function in sentences.

    PARSING
    To parse a sentence means to take it apart and identify each element in the sentence. In my mom's day, diagramming sentences (literally drawing a diagram that shows how each word and clause functions in the sentence) was a standard part of elementary education.


    عدل سابقا من قبل حسون في الإثنين فبراير 15, 2010 6:48 pm عدل 1 مرات (السبب : عدل للتثيبت فقط)

    منيف نمور
    نائب المدير
    نائب المدير

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    m14 رد: Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف منيف نمور في الإثنين فبراير 15, 2010 5:29 pm

    My sister Princess Bani Marouf
    Thank your theme is beautiful and valuable and useful
    Encouraged to write down if relented paragraph comes in English
    And will be explained in Arabic
    Shan of the idea and be clear to all

    And receptive traffic and greetings

    Ajaci Munif

    مجد
    الفقيرلله
    الفقيرلله

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    m14 رد: Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف مجد في الإثنين فبراير 15, 2010 6:15 pm

    thank you
    amera on

    جهودك


    أبو حسين
    ..

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    m14 رد: Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف أبو حسين في الإثنين فبراير 15, 2010 6:46 pm

    Princess Thank you and I hope that the
    administration would agree to this section you may be honorable
    But before Astsmgm Sorry installed
    Subject
    Greetings
    Goldfinch

    عاشقة السويداء
    صلاحيات عامة
    صلاحيات عامة

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    m14 رد: Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف عاشقة السويداء في الإثنين فبراير 15, 2010 9:32 pm

    Thanks Galletti subject of a valuable and useful the basics of a great

    Thank you for the installation Hassoun

    Because he deserves
    Enlightening
    Hdddoowoowo

    ma3roufi lebnani
    عضو جديد
    عضو جديد

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    m14 رد: Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف ma3roufi lebnani في الثلاثاء فبراير 16, 2010 1:51 pm



    Dear, you’re always shining us with the subjects you release.

    I hope we get benefit from this lesson

    Actually I thing English will be a piece of cake with such instructor.

    But if you excuse me I would like to make a small comment: Not every sentence in Arabic can be translated world by word to English otherwise the sentence will decent into chaos.

    Please accept my humble comment


    أبو حسين
    ..

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    m14 رد: Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف أبو حسين في الثلاثاء فبراير 16, 2010 2:55 pm

    ma3roufi lebnani كتب:

    But if you excuse me I would like to make a small comment: Not every sentence in Arabic can be translated world by word to English otherwise the sentence will decent into chaos.

    Please accept my humble comment


    نعم معروفي لبناني صدقت
    ليس كل جملة في اللغة العربية يمكن أن تترجم إلى العالم عن طريق الكلمة الإنكليزية
    وإلا فإن الحكم سيكون لائق في حالة من الفوضى.
    شكراً
    الحسون

    عبـ البحر ـير
    المدير العام
    المدير العام

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    m14 رد: Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف عبـ البحر ـير في الثلاثاء فبراير 16, 2010 3:46 pm

    اود ان اشكر كل من مر من هنا
    واتمنى الافاده للجميع
    واخي حسون مشكور للتثبيت
    كما ذكرت اخي معروفي لبناني
    لا نستطيع ان نترجم كلمه بكلمه من لغه لاخرى
    ولكن من السهل ان نستنج المعنى من خلال الجمله المكتوبه
    وانا من جهتي اي حد بيحب انه اوضحله ما عندي مانع
    لان بصرااحه انا بعتقد موضوع القواعد الانجليزيه ما فينا نترجمه بيطلع مو حلو
    بس اي مساعده انا جاهزه
    واكيده كمان اي حد من الاعضاء بيقدر يساعد ما عنده مشكل بيقدم اللي بيقدر عليه

    ma3roufi lebnani
    عضو جديد
    عضو جديد

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    m14 رد: Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف ma3roufi lebnani في الثلاثاء فبراير 16, 2010 5:12 pm

    From my side, I’m absolutely satisfied with the roles you typed

    But my comment (if it made some doubts), was a general hint, it do not consider any of the subjects written till now

    I also display my service to help and I’m ready any time you needs me

    Regards to you

    جبل لبنان
    عضو مميز
    عضو مميز

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    m14 رد: Grammar Basics

    مُساهمة من طرف جبل لبنان في الخميس مارس 18, 2010 12:19 pm

    Very special and unique idea to teach us the correct English

    I wish that all of us will get benefit

    Best regards sis


      الوقت/التاريخ الآن هو الأحد مايو 20, 2012 1:38 am