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Grammar terms with m

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Grammar terms with M
Main clause
A clause which is capable of making a complete sentence by itself. A sentence must have at least one main
clause. A simple sentence consists of only a single main clause. Example: John wrote a letter. In a compound
sentence, there are two main clauses connected by and. Susie cooked dinner and Jane washed the clothes.
Malapropism
The use of a wrong word, often especially when another word of similar sound is intended.
Manner adverb
An adverb that answers the question ‘how?’ Examples are: slowly, carefully, rashly, kindly, furiously etc.
Mass noun
A noun which denotes something which cannot be counted. Examples are: wheat, sand, milk, rice etc. A mass
noun cannot be used with numbers and it does not have a plural form.
Matrix clause
A clause which contains a subordinate clause within it. In the sentence ‘The girl who won the first prize is my
cousin’, the matrix clause is ‘The girl … is my cousin’, while the remainder is the subordinate clause.
Mood
The label mood refers to the degree or kind of reality assigned by the speaker to what she is saying. English has
four or five moods: indicative, subjunctive, imperative, optative and interrogative.
Morpheme
A morpheme is the smallest unit of word structure. For example, dog consists of a single morpheme (dog) while
happiness consists of two morphemes (happy) and (ness). A particular morpheme may have different forms which
are called its allomorphs.

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