From a11cd9f35d6d33e92c5cf37a12d1ff3d826dfe59 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: chrisjarka Date: Thu, 18 Oct 2018 20:39:51 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Update 'translate/figs-partsofspeech/01.md' --- translate/figs-partsofspeech/01.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/translate/figs-partsofspeech/01.md b/translate/figs-partsofspeech/01.md index a7ea6aa..b8a55eb 100644 --- a/translate/figs-partsofspeech/01.md +++ b/translate/figs-partsofspeech/01.md @@ -17,4 +17,4 @@ Parts of speech are categories of words. The different categories of words have **ADJECTIVES** are words that describe nouns and express such things as quantity, size, color, and age. Some examples are: many, big, blue, old, smart, tired. Sometimes people use adjectives to give some information about something, and sometimes people use them to distinguish one item from another. For example, in my elderly father the adjective elderly simply tells something about my father. But in my eldest sister the word eldest distinguishes that sister from any other older sisters I might have. More information about this can be found on [Distinguishing versus Informing or Reminding](../figs-distinguish/01.md). -**ADVERBS** are words that describe verbs or adjectives and tell such things as how, when, where, why, and to what extent. Many English adverbs end in ly. Some examples of adverbs: slowly, later, far, intentionally, very. \ No newline at end of file +**ADVERBS** are words that describe verbs or adjectives and give details such as how, when, where, why, and to what extent. Many English adverbs end in ly. Some examples of adverbs: slowly, later, far, intentionally, very. \ No newline at end of file