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CEUET Language ProficiencyGrammar Fundamentals — Parts of Speech & DeterminersFlash Cards

Practice flashcards for CEUET Language Proficiency — Grammar Fundamentals — Parts of Speech & Determiners. Built for the retrieval-practice technique that consistently outperforms re-reading. Covers every high-yield concept Centro Escolar University tests in this chapter of the CEUET 2026.

Exam context

On the CEUET 2026, the Language Proficiency subtest carries a "Core" weight in Centro Escolar University's pattern. Grammar Fundamentals — Parts of Speech & Determiners lands at position 1st out of 7 in the standard review order. Target score is Competitive overall score, and roughly a meaningful share of items come from Language Proficiency on a typical CEUET paper.

Grammar Fundamentals — Parts of Speech & Determiners - Flashcards

Master the building blocks of English grammar with these comprehensive flashcards covering all eight parts of speech, their functions, and the various types of determiners. These cards are designed to help UPCAT and college entrance exam students develop a solid foundation in grammatical analysis and usage.

Cards

What are the eight parts of speech in English grammar?

The eight parts of speech are: 1) Noun (person, place, thing, idea), 2) Pronoun (replaces nouns), 3) Verb (action or state), 4) Adjective (describes nouns), 5) Adverb (modifies verbs, adjectives, adverbs), 6) Preposition (shows relationships), 7) Conjunction (connects words/phrases), 8) Interjection (expresses emotion). Each serves a specific grammatical function in sentence construction.

Tags

  • overview
  • fundamental_concepts
  • basic

Topic

Parts of Speech Overview

Card Id

FC1

Difficulty

basic

Image Prompt

Noun

A word that names a person, place, thing, or idea. Types include: Common nouns (general: dog, school), Proper nouns (specific: Manila, Jose Rizal), Abstract nouns (ideas: happiness, freedom), Concrete nouns (tangible: book, tree), Count nouns (countable: students), Mass nouns (uncountable: water, knowledge), and Collective nouns (groups: team, family).

Tags

  • definition
  • types
  • basic

Topic

Nouns

Card Id

FC2

Difficulty

basic

Image Prompt

What is the difference between transitive and intransitive verbs?

Transitive verbs require a direct object to complete their meaning (e.g., 'She reads books' - 'books' is the direct object). Intransitive verbs do not need a direct object (e.g., 'The baby sleeps' - no direct object needed). Some verbs can be both depending on usage: 'He runs daily' (intransitive) vs 'He runs the company' (transitive).

Tags

  • verb_types
  • application
  • intermediate

Topic

Verbs

Card Id

FC3

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

Personal Pronoun

A pronoun that refers to specific people or things. Categories: Subjective (I, you, he, she, it, we, they), Objective (me, you, him, her, it, us, them), Possessive (my/mine, your/yours, his, her/hers, its, our/ours, their/theirs), Reflexive (myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves). Person and number determine the form used.

Tags

  • definition
  • categories
  • intermediate

Topic

Pronouns

Card Id

FC4

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

How do you determine the correct order of multiple adjectives?

Follow this order: Determiner → Opinion → Size → Shape → Age → Color → Origin → Material → Purpose/Qualifier → Noun. Example: 'The beautiful small round antique red Chinese wooden jewelry box.' Not all categories need to be present, but when used together, they should follow this sequence for natural-sounding English.

Tags

  • order
  • application
  • advanced

Topic

Adjectives

Card Id

FC5

Difficulty

advanced

Image Prompt

What are the five types of adverbs based on what they modify?

1) Adverbs of Time (when: yesterday, soon, always), 2) Adverbs of Place (where: here, everywhere, outside), 3) Adverbs of Manner (how: quickly, carefully, well), 4) Adverbs of Degree (to what extent: very, extremely, quite), 5) Adverbs of Frequency (how often: often, never, sometimes). They modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs.

Tags

  • types
  • function
  • intermediate

Topic

Adverbs

Card Id

FC6

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

Preposition

A word that shows the relationship between a noun/pronoun and other words in a sentence. Types: Time prepositions (at, on, in, during), Place prepositions (at, on, in, under, beside), Direction prepositions (to, from, through, toward), and others (by, with, for, about). Always followed by an object (noun/pronoun) to form a prepositional phrase.

Tags

  • definition
  • types
  • basic

Topic

Prepositions

Card Id

FC7

Difficulty

basic

Image Prompt

Compare coordinating and subordinating conjunctions with examples.

Coordinating conjunctions (FANBOYS: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) connect equal elements and can join independent clauses: 'I studied hard, but I still failed.' Subordinating conjunctions (because, although, when, if, since, etc.) connect dependent clauses to independent clauses: 'I failed because I didn't study enough.' Subordinating conjunctions create hierarchical relationships between clauses.

Tags

  • comparison
  • types
  • intermediate

Topic

Conjunctions

Card Id

FC8

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

What are the four main categories of determiners?

1) Articles (a, an, the), 2) Demonstratives (this, that, these, those), 3) Possessives (my, your, his, her, its, our, their), 4) Quantifiers (all, some, many, few, several, each, every). Determiners come before nouns and help specify which or how many things we're talking about. They provide essential context for noun identification.

Tags

  • categories
  • function
  • basic

Topic

Determiners

Card Id

FC9

Difficulty

basic

Image Prompt

When do you use 'a' versus 'an' as indefinite articles?

Use 'a' before words that begin with consonant sounds: 'a book,' 'a university' (starts with 'you' sound), 'a one-hour meeting' (starts with 'w' sound). Use 'an' before words that begin with vowel sounds: 'an apple,' 'an hour' (silent 'h'), 'an FBI agent' (starts with 'ef' sound). Focus on the sound, not the letter.

Tags

  • usage_rules
  • application
  • intermediate

Topic

Articles

Card Id

FC10

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

What is the difference between common and proper nouns? Give Filipino examples.

Common nouns are general names for people, places, things, or ideas (not capitalized unless starting a sentence): president, city, school, love. Proper nouns are specific names (always capitalized): President Duterte, Quezon City, University of the Philippines, Rizal Park. Proper nouns often represent unique entities that can be identified specifically.

Tags

  • comparison
  • examples
  • basic

Topic

Nouns

Card Id

FC11

Difficulty

basic

Image Prompt

Identify the verb tenses: simple, progressive, perfect, and perfect progressive.

Simple tenses show basic time (I walk/walked/will walk). Progressive tenses show ongoing action (I am/was/will be walking). Perfect tenses show completed action with relevance (I have/had/will have walked). Perfect progressive tenses show ongoing action with completion aspect (I have/had/will have been walking). Each has past, present, and future forms, creating 12 total tenses.

Tags

  • tenses
  • forms
  • intermediate

Topic

Verbs

Card Id

FC12

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

What are the three degrees of comparison for adjectives and adverbs?

1) Positive degree: basic form (tall, quickly), 2) Comparative degree: compares two things, uses -er or 'more' (taller, more quickly), 3) Superlative degree: compares three or more, uses -est or 'most' (tallest, most quickly). Irregular forms exist: good/better/best, bad/worse/worst. Use 'than' with comparatives, 'the' with superlatives.

Tags

  • degrees
  • comparison
  • intermediate

Topic

Adjectives and Adverbs

Card Id

FC13

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

Demonstrative

A determiner that points to specific nouns based on distance and number. 'This' (singular, near): this book. 'That' (singular, far): that mountain. 'These' (plural, near): these students. 'Those' (plural, far): those buildings. They can also function as pronouns when used alone: 'This is mine,' 'Those are expensive.' Context determines distance reference.

Tags

  • definition
  • usage
  • basic

Topic

Determiners

Card Id

FC14

Difficulty

basic

Image Prompt

How do modal verbs function differently from regular auxiliary verbs?

Modal verbs (can, could, may, might, must, shall, should, will, would, ought to) express possibility, necessity, permission, or ability. They don't change form (no -s, -ed, -ing), are always followed by base form verbs, and express attitude toward the action. Regular auxiliaries (be, have, do) help form tenses and don't inherently express modality.

Tags

  • modal_verbs
  • function
  • advanced

Topic

Verbs

Card Id

FC15

Difficulty

advanced

Image Prompt

What is the difference between relative and interrogative pronouns?

Relative pronouns (who, whom, whose, which, that) introduce relative clauses that modify nouns: 'The student who studied hard passed.' Interrogative pronouns (who, whom, whose, what, which) ask questions: 'Who is coming?' Same words, different functions. Relative pronouns connect; interrogative pronouns question.

Tags

  • comparison
  • function
  • intermediate

Topic

Pronouns

Card Id

FC16

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

Identify the error: 'Between you and I, this exam is difficult.'

The error is using 'I' instead of 'me.' After prepositions, use objective pronouns. Correct: 'Between you and me, this exam is difficult.' The preposition 'between' requires objective case pronouns. A quick test: remove 'you and' - you wouldn't say 'between I,' so 'between me' is correct.

Tags

  • common_errors
  • application
  • intermediate

Topic

Pronouns

Card Id

FC17

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

What are quantifiers and how do they work with count vs. non-count nouns?

Quantifiers specify amounts. With count nouns: many/few books, several students, a few apples. With non-count nouns: much/little water, some advice. Both: all, some, most, no, any. 'Less' with non-count (less time), 'fewer' with count (fewer students). Understanding count vs. non-count determines correct quantifier choice.

Tags

  • quantifiers
  • usage_rules
  • intermediate

Topic

Determiners

Card Id

FC18

Difficulty

intermediate

Image Prompt

Interjection

A word or phrase that expresses sudden emotion or feeling, often standing alone and followed by an exclamation point. Examples: Oh! Wow! Alas! Hey! Ouch! They don't grammatically relate to other sentence parts. In Filipino context: 'Ay!' 'Naku!' 'Sayang!' Strong emotions use exclamation points; mild emotions may use commas.

Tags

  • definition
  • examples
  • basic

Topic

Interjections

Card Id

FC19

Difficulty

basic

Image Prompt

Analyze this sentence: 'The brilliant young Filipino scientist quickly discovered an amazing new cure.' Identify all parts of speech.

The (article/determiner), brilliant (adjective), young (adjective), Filipino (adjective), scientist (noun/subject), quickly (adverb), discovered (verb), an (article), amazing (adjective), new (adjective), cure (noun/direct object). This demonstrates how multiple parts of speech work together to create meaning and grammatical structure in complex sentences.

Tags

  • application
  • analysis
  • advanced

Topic

Sentence Analysis

Card Id

FC20

Difficulty

advanced

Image Prompt

Tag Distribution

Basic

6

Types

4

Advanced

3

Analysis

1

Examples

2

Function

4

Comparison

3

Definition

6

Application

5

Usage Rules

3

Intermediate

11

Common Errors

1

Topic Distribution

Nouns

2

Verbs

3

Adverbs

1

Articles

1

Pronouns

3

Adjectives

1

Determiners

3

Conjunctions

1

Prepositions

1

Interjections

1

Sentence Analysis

1

Adjectives And Adverbs

1

Parts Of Speech Overview

1

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