AFPSAT Verbal Ability — Parts of SpeechDetailed Explanation
Detailed explanations for AFPSAT Verbal Ability — Parts of Speech. This page treats you like a serious reviewer: we unpack the concepts thoroughly, show worked examples of how Armed Forces of the Philippines frames Parts of Speech questions, and explain the underlying reasoning that gets you to the right answer every time.
Exam context
For the Armed Forces of the Philippines Service Aptitude Test, Armed Forces of the Philippines tests Verbal Ability under a "Core" label, with Parts of Speech in the 1st slot across 7 chapters. AFPSAT candidates must clear the AFP-set percentile cut on the 2026 paper, which draws about a meaningful share of Verbal Ability questions. Date to watch: Multiple schedules yearly.
Parts of Speech - Detailed explanation
Parts of speech are the building blocks of the English language. Understanding them is crucial for success in the Civil Service Examination and other professional exams in the Philippines. Each word in a sentence functions as one of eight parts of speech: noun, pronoun, verb, adjective, adverb, preposition, conjunction, or interjection. Mastering these categories will help you construct clear, grammatically correct sentences and excel in verbal ability sections of major Philippine exams like CSE, UPCAT, LET, and others.
Concepts
Noun
A noun is a naming word that identifies persons, places, things, events, and ideas. Nouns serve as the foundation of sentences, typically functioning as subjects, objects, or complements. In Filipino context, understanding nouns helps in both English proficiency and translation between English and Filipino languages.
Examples
Proper nouns are always capitalized because they refer to specific persons, places, or things. Common nouns are general categories.
Scenario
Identifying proper and common nouns in a sentence about Philippines
Solution
In 'Dr. Jose Rizal wrote Noli Me Tangere in Europe', 'Dr. Jose Rizal' and 'Noli Me Tangere' and 'Europe' are proper nouns (capitalized, specific), while 'book' would be a common noun
Add apostrophe + s for singular nouns, just apostrophe for regular plurals, and apostrophe + s for irregular plurals.
Scenario
Forming possessive nouns correctly
Solution
The student's book (singular possessive), The students' books (plural possessive), Children's toys (irregular plural possessive)
Applications
- Subject-verb agreement in sentences
- Forming possessive constructions
- Using appropriate determiners (a, an, the)
- Creating clear, professional communication in government work
Misconceptions
- Thinking all nouns ending in 's' are plural (news, physics, mathematics are singular)
- Incorrectly forming possessives (it's vs its - it's means 'it is', its shows possession)
- Confusing mass nouns with count nouns (adding 's' to water, rice, etc.)
Related Concepts
- Pronouns (noun substitutes)
- Adjectives (noun modifiers)
- Articles (noun determiners)
Common Exam Questions
Example
Identify the abstract noun: The teacher showed great patience during the difficult lesson. Answer: patience
Approach
Look for naming words and categorize them as proper/common, concrete/abstract, count/mass
Question Type
Noun identification and classification
Example
Correct the possessive: The girls dress is torn. Answer: The girl's dress is torn (singular) or The girls' dresses are torn (plural)
Approach
Determine if noun is singular or plural, then apply appropriate apostrophe rules
Question Type
Possessive noun formation
Key Points To Remember
- Nouns can be proper (specific names like Manila, Jose Rizal) or common (general names like city, hero)
- Count nouns can be singular or plural (book/books), while mass nouns cannot be counted directly (rice, water)
- Collective nouns refer to groups (team, family, class)
- Abstract nouns represent ideas and feelings (freedom, love, patriotism)
- Concrete nouns represent physical objects (flag, building, carabao)
- Nouns have cases: nominative (subject), objective (object), and possessive (ownership)
Pronoun
Pronouns are words that replace nouns to avoid repetition and create smoother, more natural-sounding sentences. They must agree with their antecedents (the nouns they replace) in gender, number, and person. Understanding pronouns is essential for clear communication in professional and academic contexts.
Examples
Use nominative case for subjects, objective case for objects, and possessive case to show ownership.
Scenario
Choosing correct pronoun case
Solution
Between you and me (not 'I') - objective case after preposition. He and I (not 'me') went to the store - nominative case as compound subject
Pronouns must match their antecedents in number and gender.
Scenario
Pronoun-antecedent agreement
Solution
Every student must bring his or her book (not 'their' - since 'every student' is singular). The team celebrated its victory (not 'their' - team is singular collective noun)
Applications
- Avoiding repetitive language in essays and reports
- Creating cohesive paragraphs through proper pronoun reference
- Professional correspondence and government communications
- Academic writing and research papers
Misconceptions
- Using 'they/their' with singular antecedents (each, every, everyone)
- Confusing 'who' (subject) and 'whom' (object)
- Mixing up 'its' (possessive) and 'it's' (contraction for 'it is')
Related Concepts
- Nouns (antecedents)
- Verbs (subject-verb agreement)
- Case (grammatical function)
Common Exam Questions
Example
Choose correct pronoun: The award was given to John and ___. (A) I (B) me. Answer: B - objective case after preposition 'to'
Approach
Identify if pronoun functions as subject, object, or shows possession
Question Type
Pronoun case selection
Example
Each of the girls brought ___ lunch. (A) their (B) her. Answer: B - 'each' is singular
Approach
Find the antecedent and match the pronoun in number and gender
Question Type
Pronoun-antecedent agreement
Key Points To Remember
- Personal pronouns have three cases: nominative (I, he, she), objective (me, him, her), possessive (my, his, her)
- Demonstrative pronouns point to specific things (this, that, these, those)
- Indefinite pronouns refer to non-specific things (someone, everybody, nothing)
- Relative pronouns connect clauses (who, which, that, whose, whom)
- Reflexive pronouns refer back to the subject (myself, himself, themselves)
- Interrogative pronouns ask questions (who, what, which, whose, whom)
Verb
Verbs express actions, states of being, or conditions. They are the heart of every sentence and carry important information about time (tense), number (singular/plural), and voice (active/passive). Mastering verbs is crucial for constructing grammatically correct sentences in professional communication.
Examples
Compound subjects joined by 'and' take plural verbs. With 'or/nor', the verb agrees with the nearer subject.
Scenario
Subject-verb agreement with compound subjects
Solution
Juan and Maria are (not 'is') studying. Either Juan or Maria is (not 'are') coming. Neither the teacher nor the students were (not 'was') present
Choose tense based on when the action occurs and its relationship to other actions.
Scenario
Correct tense usage
Solution
I have lived in Manila for five years (present perfect - action continuing to present). I lived in Manila for five years (past - completed action). I will have finished by tomorrow (future perfect - action completed before future time)
Applications
- Writing clear, time-appropriate sentences in reports
- Constructing proper questions and statements in interviews
- Creating accurate documentation in government work
- Academic writing with proper tense consistency
Misconceptions
- Confusing irregular verb forms (I seen vs I saw, I have saw vs I have seen)
- Using wrong tense with time expressions (since vs for with present perfect)
- Ignoring subject when prepositional phrases intervene (The box of books are heavy - should be 'is')
Related Concepts
- Nouns (subjects)
- Adverbs (verb modifiers)
- Tense (time expression)
Common Exam Questions
Example
The group of students (A) is (B) are excited. Answer: A - 'group' is singular subject
Approach
Identify the true subject and match verb number, ignoring intervening phrases
Question Type
Subject-verb agreement
Example
Choose correct tense: By next year, I ___ my degree. (A) will complete (B) will have completed. Answer: B - future perfect
Approach
Determine the time frame and maintain consistent tense throughout
Question Type
Tense consistency
Key Points To Remember
- Action verbs show what the subject does (run, write, think)
- Linking verbs connect subjects to complements (is, seem, become)
- Helping verbs work with main verbs (has written, will go, is running)
- Regular verbs form past tense by adding -ed (walk/walked)
- Irregular verbs have unique past forms (go/went, write/wrote)
- Tense indicates time: present, past, future, and their perfect forms
Adjective
Adjectives modify or describe nouns and pronouns, providing more specific information about size, color, quality, origin, and other characteristics. They help create vivid, precise descriptions essential for effective communication in professional and academic contexts.
Examples
English follows a specific order: opinion, size, age, shape, color, origin, material, purpose.
Scenario
Correct adjective order
Solution
A beautiful old Filipino wooden table (opinion-age-origin-material-noun). Not: A wooden Filipino old beautiful table
Use -er/-est for short adjectives, more/most for long adjectives, and special forms for irregular adjectives.
Scenario
Proper degree of comparison
Solution
Manila is larger than Cebu (comparative for two cities). Manila is the largest city in the Philippines (superlative for more than two). He is more intelligent than his brother (more/most with long adjectives)
Applications
- Writing descriptive reports and documentation
- Creating engaging presentations and proposals
- Professional correspondence requiring precise descriptions
- Academic writing with detailed analysis
Misconceptions
- Using adjectives instead of adverbs (She runs quick vs quickly)
- Incorrect comparison forms (more better vs better, most unique vs unique)
- Wrong article usage (a apple vs an apple, the Philippines vs Philippines)
Related Concepts
- Nouns (words modified)
- Adverbs (similar function)
- Articles (special adjectives)
Common Exam Questions
Example
She speaks (A) clear (B) clearly. Answer: B - modifies the verb 'speaks'
Approach
Determine if the word modifies a noun (adjective) or verb/adjective/adverb (adverb)
Question Type
Adjective vs adverb usage
Example
Of all students, Maria is the (A) more (B) most intelligent. Answer: B - superlative for more than two
Approach
Count items being compared and use appropriate degree
Question Type
Degrees of comparison
Key Points To Remember
- Adjectives usually come before the nouns they modify (beautiful flower)
- Predicate adjectives come after linking verbs (The flower is beautiful)
- Degrees of comparison: positive (tall), comparative (taller), superlative (tallest)
- Articles (a, an, the) are special adjectives called determiners
- Proper adjectives are formed from proper nouns and are capitalized (Filipino culture)
- Some adjectives change completely in comparative forms (good/better/best)
Adverb
Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, providing information about how, when, where, or to what extent something happens. They add precision and clarity to sentences, making communication more effective and detailed.
Examples
Adverb placement depends on type and emphasis needed.
Scenario
Adverb placement in sentences
Solution
She carefully reviewed the document (manner adverb after subject). Yesterday, we had a meeting (time adverb at beginning). The meeting was very important (degree adverb before adjective)
Use adjectives with linking verbs and to modify nouns; use adverbs to modify action verbs.
Scenario
Distinguishing adjectives from adverbs
Solution
He is a careful driver (adjective modifying noun 'driver'). He drives carefully (adverb modifying verb 'drives'). The food tastes good (adjective after linking verb 'tastes'). She cooks well (adverb modifying verb 'cooks')
Applications
- Adding precision to reports and analyses
- Describing processes and procedures clearly
- Enhancing professional presentations
- Academic writing requiring detailed explanations
Misconceptions
- Using adjectives instead of adverbs with action verbs (runs quick vs quickly)
- Thinking all -ly words are adverbs (friendly, lovely are adjectives)
- Confusing good (adjective) with well (adverb) in expressions like 'doing well'
Related Concepts
- Verbs (words modified)
- Adjectives (similar function)
- Degrees of comparison
Common Exam Questions
Example
The music sounds (A) beautiful (B) beautifully. Answer: A - after linking verb 'sounds'
Approach
Identify what word is being modified - noun/pronoun (adjective) or verb/adjective/adverb (adverb)
Question Type
Adjective vs adverb choice
Example
She works (A) more efficiently (B) most efficiently than her colleagues. Answer: A - comparative for two items
Approach
Apply comparison rules similar to adjectives
Question Type
Adverb degree and comparison
Key Points To Remember
- Most adverbs end in -ly (quickly, carefully, honestly)
- Adverbs of manner answer 'how?' (She sang beautifully)
- Adverbs of time answer 'when?' (yesterday, soon, always)
- Adverbs of place answer 'where?' (here, there, everywhere)
- Adverbs of degree answer 'how much?' or 'to what extent?' (very, quite, extremely)
- Some adverbs have the same form as adjectives (fast, hard, late)
Preposition
Prepositions are words that show relationships between other words in a sentence, typically indicating location, direction, time, or manner. They are followed by objects (usually nouns or pronouns) to form prepositional phrases that function as adjectives or adverbs.
Examples
Use 'at' for specific times, 'on' for days and dates, 'in' for months, years, and longer periods.
Scenario
Correct preposition usage with time
Solution
at 3 o'clock, on Monday, in January, in 2024, at night, in the morning, on Christmas Day
Use 'in' for enclosed spaces and larger areas, 'on' for surfaces and streets, 'at' for specific points.
Scenario
Prepositions of place
Solution
in the Philippines (country), in Manila (city), on Rizal Street (street), at the corner (specific location), at home, in the office, on the second floor
Applications
- Describing locations in reports and documentation
- Explaining time relationships in schedules and plans
- Creating clear directions and instructions
- Professional correspondence requiring precise language
Misconceptions
- Confusing 'in', 'on', and 'at' for time and place (in Monday vs on Monday)
- Using wrong prepositions with certain verbs (differ from vs differ with)
- Ending sentences with prepositions in formal writing
Related Concepts
- Nouns (objects of prepositions)
- Adjectives (phrases function as)
- Adverbs (phrases function as)
Common Exam Questions
Example
The meeting will be held (A) in (B) on (C) at December 15. Answer: B - use 'on' for specific dates
Approach
Consider the relationship being expressed (time, place, direction) and choose appropriate preposition
Question Type
Correct preposition selection
Example
The book on the table is mine. 'On the table' modifies 'book' (adjective phrase)
Approach
Find the preposition and its object, then determine what the phrase modifies
Question Type
Identifying prepositional phrases
Key Points To Remember
- Common prepositions of place: in, on, at, under, over, beside, between, among
- Common prepositions of time: at, on, in, before, after, during, since, until
- Common prepositions of direction: to, from, into, onto, through, across
- Prepositions always have objects (except in certain constructions)
- Never end a sentence with a preposition in formal writing
- Some words can be prepositions or adverbs depending on usage
Conjunction
Conjunctions are connecting words that join words, phrases, clauses, or sentences. They help create complex, sophisticated sentences by showing relationships between ideas such as addition, contrast, cause and effect, or choice.
Examples
Use commas before coordinating conjunctions only when joining independent clauses.
Scenario
Using coordinating conjunctions correctly
Solution
I studied hard, and I passed the exam (comma before 'and' joining two complete sentences). I studied hard and passed the exam (no comma - joining two verbs with same subject)
Dependent clauses at the beginning of sentences need commas; those at the end usually don't.
Scenario
Subordinating conjunctions and complex sentences
Solution
Because it was raining, we stayed inside (comma after dependent clause at beginning). We stayed inside because it was raining (no comma when dependent clause follows)
Applications
- Creating complex, sophisticated sentences in reports
- Showing logical relationships between ideas
- Writing persuasive arguments and proposals
- Academic writing requiring nuanced expression
Misconceptions
- Using 'and' too frequently instead of varied conjunctions
- Incorrect punctuation with conjunctions (missing or extra commas)
- Starting sentences with coordinating conjunctions in formal writing
Related Concepts
- Clauses (structures connected)
- Punctuation (comma rules)
- Sentence types (compound, complex)
Common Exam Questions
Example
She studied hard, ___ she still failed. (A) and (B) but (C) so. Answer: B - shows contrast
Approach
Determine the relationship between ideas (addition, contrast, cause-effect) and select matching conjunction
Question Type
Choosing appropriate conjunctions
Example
I like tea(,) and coffee. vs I like tea(,) and I like coffee. First needs no comma, second needs comma
Approach
Identify if conjunction joins independent clauses (use comma) or just words/phrases (no comma)
Question Type
Punctuation with conjunctions
Key Points To Remember
- Coordinating conjunctions (FANBOYS): for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so
- Subordinating conjunctions: because, since, although, while, when, if, unless
- Correlative conjunctions work in pairs: either...or, neither...nor, both...and, not only...but also
- Use commas before coordinating conjunctions joining independent clauses
- Subordinating conjunctions create dependent clauses
- Maintain parallel structure with correlative conjunctions
Interjection
Interjections are words or phrases that express strong emotions or sudden reactions. They stand apart from the grammatical structure of sentences and are typically followed by exclamation points or set off by commas, depending on the intensity of emotion expressed.
Examples
Strong interjections stand alone with exclamation points; mild ones are set off by commas.
Scenario
Punctuating interjections correctly
Solution
Wow! That's an amazing achievement. (strong emotion - exclamation point) Well, I suppose we should start (mild - comma)
Filipino English includes cultural interjections that may appear in informal contexts.
Scenario
Cultural interjections in Filipino English
Solution
Ay! I forgot my keys. (Filipino influence) Anak! Come here right now. (term of address used as interjection)
Applications
- Adding emotional impact to creative writing
- Representing direct speech in narratives
- Informal communication and dialogue
- Understanding cultural variations in language use
Misconceptions
- Overusing interjections in formal writing
- Incorrect punctuation (forgetting exclamation points or commas)
- Confusing interjections with other parts of speech that express emotion
Related Concepts
- Punctuation (exclamation points, commas)
- Tone (emotional expression)
- Register (formal vs informal language)
Common Exam Questions
Example
Oh, I didn't see you there! The interjection is 'Oh' - expresses surprise
Approach
Look for words expressing emotion that stand apart from sentence structure
Question Type
Identifying interjections
Example
Alas the weather is terrible vs Alas! The weather is terrible. Second is correct - strong emotion needs exclamation
Approach
Determine intensity of emotion and punctuate accordingly
Question Type
Proper punctuation of interjections
Key Points To Remember
- Express emotions: joy (Hooray!), surprise (Wow!), pain (Ouch!), disapproval (Tsk!)
- Can be single words (Oh!) or phrases (Good heavens!)
- Use exclamation points for strong emotions
- Use commas for mild interjections within sentences
- Not grammatically connected to rest of sentence
- More common in informal speech than formal writing
Practice Problems
Each word's part of speech depends on its function in the sentence. Brilliant and modern modify nouns (adjective), carefully modifies a verb (adverb), several quantifies a noun (adjective), scientist, experiments, and laboratory name things (nouns), his shows possession (pronoun), and yesterday indicates time (adverb).
Problem
Identify the part of speech for each underlined word: The brilliant Filipino scientist carefully conducted several experiments in his modern laboratory yesterday.
Solution
brilliant (adjective), scientist (noun), carefully (adverb), several (adjective), experiments (noun), his (pronoun), modern (adjective), laboratory (noun), yesterday (adverb)
Use 'me' (objective case) after the preposition 'between'. 'Each student' is singular, so use singular pronouns 'his or her', not 'their'. 'There' should be 'their' (possessive) to show the students own the studies.
Problem
Correct the errors in pronoun usage: Between you and I, each student should bring their own materials because they want to succeed in there studies.
Solution
Between you and me, each student should bring his or her own materials because he or she wants to succeed in his or her studies.
'Group' is a collective noun treated as singular, so use 'has'. 'Each' is always singular, so use 'deserves' and 'his or her' (not 'their') for agreement.
Problem
Choose the correct verb form and explain: The group of dedicated teachers (has/have) been working tirelessly, and each of them (deserve/deserves) recognition for (his or her/their) efforts.
Solution
The group of dedicated teachers has been working tirelessly, and each of them deserves recognition for his or her efforts.
Exam Preparation Tips
- Practice identifying parts of speech in context - the same word can function differently in different sentences
- Master pronoun-antecedent agreement rules, especially with indefinite pronouns (each, everyone, somebody)
- Memorize irregular verb forms commonly tested in Philippine exams (go/went/gone, write/wrote/written)
- Learn preposition usage patterns for time (at/on/in) and place - these are frequently tested
- Practice subject-verb agreement with tricky subjects (collective nouns, compound subjects, inverted sentences)
- Review degrees of comparison for adjectives and adverbs, including irregular forms (good/better/best)
- Understand conjunction types and punctuation rules for joining clauses
- Focus on common Filipino English patterns and corrections needed for standard usage
- Practice with actual CSE and other exam questions to familiarize yourself with question formats
- Create sentences using each part of speech to reinforce understanding through active practice
In summary
Mastering the eight parts of speech is fundamental to success in verbal ability sections of Philippine professional exams. Each part serves a specific function in creating clear, grammatically correct sentences. Regular practice with identification, usage rules, and common error patterns will build the strong foundation needed for the Civil Service Examination and other competitive tests. Remember that context determines function - the same word can serve different roles in different sentences. Focus on understanding relationships between parts of speech rather than memorizing isolated rules, as this approach will serve you better in complex exam questions and real-world communication.
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