Tagged

Parts of speech analyzer tagging the sentence with adjectives, adverbs, conjugations, determiners, nouns, numbers, prepositions, pronouns and verbs.

Advertising

Sentence analyzed

Syntactic analyzation of "Hundreds of people are feared dead in Mississippi, and the Louisiana city of New Orleans is badly flooded." This part of speech text is verified.

# Word Part of speech Syntactic relation
1. Hundreds Noun Plural
2. of Preposition
3. people Noun Plural
4. are Verb Auxiliary
5. feared Verb Past Tense.
6. dead Adjective Positive
7. in Preposition
8. Mississippi Proper Noun Singular
9. , Punctuation
10. and Conjuction Coordinating
11. the Determiner
12. Louisiana Proper Noun Singular
13. city Noun Singular
14. of Preposition
15. New Proper Noun Singular
16. Orleans Proper Noun Singular
17. is Verb Auxiliary
18. badly Adverb
19. flooded Verb Past Tense.
20. . Punctuation

Eight parts of speech

Below you can see a brief explanation of the eight main parts of speech. Memorize each word type to get a better understanding of the composition of a sentence.

Noun

A noun names a person, place, things or idea. Examples dog, cat, horse, student, teacher, apple, Mary etc...

Adverb

An adverb tells how often, ho, when, where. It can describe a verb, an adjective or an adverb. Examples loudly, always, never, later, soon etc...

Verb

A verb is a word or group of words that desribes an action, experience. Examples realize, walk, see, look, sing, sit, listen etc...

Adjective

An adjective describes a noun or pronoun. Examples red, tall, fat, long, short, blue, beautiful, sour etc...

Preposition

A preposition is used before a noun, pronoun, or gerund to show place, time, direction in a sentence. Examples at, in, to, for, from etc...

Conjuction

Conjuntions join words or groups of words in a sentence. Examples and, because, yet, therefore, moreover, since, or, so, until, but etc...

Pronoun

Pronouns replace the name of a person, place, thing or idea in a sentence. Examples he, she it, we, they, him, her, this, that etc...

Interjection

Interjections express strong emotion and is often followed by an exclamation point. Examples Bravo! Hooray! Yeah! Oops! Phew!

Tag your own sentence

Want to tag your sentence? Use our free part of speech tagger and detector. Write or paste your text and see the parts of speech of any sentence.

Part of speech tagger
Advertising
Advertising