1. Country:I live in England.
  2. Adjective:He reads English literature.
  3. Noun: She is an Englishwoman.

COUNTRY

ADJECTIVE

NOUN

Africa

African

an African

America

American

an American

Argentina

Argentinian

an Argentinian

Austria

Austrian

an Austrian



ادامه مطلب

Geographical names...
Names of countries and continents

America

England

Scotland

China

Peru

Albania

Africa

Europe

Asia



تاريخ : پنج شنبه 27 شهريور 1393برچسب:, | 11:7 | نویسنده : sahar teacher |

Names of regions, states, districts etc.

Sussex

California

Queensland

Provence

Tuscany

Vaud

Florida

Costa Brava

Tyrol



تاريخ : پنج شنبه 27 شهريور 1393برچسب:, | 11:7 | نویسنده : sahar teacher |

Names of cities, towns, villages etc.

London

Cape Town

Rome

Florence

Bath

Wagga Wagga

Vancouver

Wellington

Peking



تاريخ : پنج شنبه 27 شهريور 1393برچسب:, | 11:7 | نویسنده : sahar teacher |

Names of rivers, oceans, seas, lakes etc.

the Atlantic

the Dead Sea

the Pacific

Lake Leman

Lake Victoria

Lake Michigan

the Rhine

the Thames

the Nile



تاريخ : پنج شنبه 27 شهريور 1393برچسب:, | 11:7 | نویسنده : sahar teacher |

Days of the week

Monday

Friday

Tuesday

Saturday

Wednesday

Sunday

Thursday



تاريخ : پنج شنبه 27 شهريور 1393برچسب:, | 11:6 | نویسنده : sahar teacher |

Seasons

Seasons
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter


تاريخ : پنج شنبه 27 شهريور 1393برچسب:, | 11:6 | نویسنده : sahar teacher |

Holidays

Christmas

Easter

New Year's Day

Boxing Day

May Day

Thanksgiving Day



تاريخ : پنج شنبه 27 شهريور 1393برچسب:, | 11:6 | نویسنده : sahar teacher |

Months of the year

January

July

February

August

March

September

April

October

May

November

June

December



تاريخ : پنج شنبه 27 شهريور 1393برچسب:, | 11:5 | نویسنده : sahar teacher |

COMPOUND NOUNS

COMPOUND NOUNS

Formation

Words can be combined to form compound nouns. These are very common, and new combinations are invented almost daily. They normally have two parts. The second part identifies the object or person in question (man, friend, tank, table, room). The first part tells us what kind of object or person it is, or what its purpose is (police, boy, water, dining, bed):

What type / what purpose What or who
police man
boy friend
water tank
dining table
bed room

The two parts may be written in a number of ways :

1. as one word.
Examples policeman, boyfriend

2. as two words joined with a hyphen.
Examples dining-table

3. as two separate words.
Examples fish tank.

There are no clear rules about this - so write the common compounds that you know well as one word, and the others as two words.

The two parts may be: Examples
noun + noun bedroom
water tank
motorcycle
printer cartridge
noun + verb rainfall
haircut
train-spotting
noun + adverb hanger-on
passer-by
verb + noun washing machine
driving licence
swimming pool
verb + adverb* lookout
take-off
drawback
adjective + noun greenhouse
software
redhead
adjective + verb dry-cleaning
public speaking
adverb + noun onlooker
bystander
adverb + verb* output
overthrow
upturn
input

Compound nouns often have a meaning that is different from the two separate words.

Stress is important in pronunciation, as it distinguishes between a compound noun (e.g. greenhouse) and an adjective with a noun (e.g. green house).

In compound nouns, the stress usually falls on the first syllable:

a 'greenhouse = place where we grow plants (compound noun)
a green 'house = house painted green (adjective and noun)
a 'bluebird = type of bird (compound noun)
a blue 'bird = any bird with blue feathers (adjective and noun)

*Many common compound nouns are formed from phrasal verbs (verb + adverb or adverb + verb).

Examples

breakdown, outbreak, outcome, cutback, drive-in, drop-out, feedback, flyover, hold-up, hangover, outlay, outlet, inlet, makeup, output, set-back, stand-in, takeaway, walkover.



تاريخ : پنج شنبه 27 شهريور 1393برچسب:, | 11:4 | نویسنده : sahar teacher |
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