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Summary English Theory Notes - Grade 9 IEB

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Grade 9 English IEB theory notes. Typed notes with colourful highlights and explanations. Includes a few poems with analysis ( may not apply to current year syllabus ).

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October 3, 2025
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Written in
2020/2021
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, LANGUAGE

GRAMMER
TYPES OF SENTENCES

BASIC PARTS OF SENTENCES

- Subject ( noun ) - the person or thing acting in the sentence
- Predict ( verb ) - the action that takes place

FOUR TYPES OF SENTENCES

- Declarative: makes a statement, and ends with a period.
- Interrogative: asks a question, and ends with a question mark.
- Exclamatory: shows strong emotion or feeling, and ends with an exclamation mark.
- Imperative: gives a direction or common and ends with a period or exclamation mark. Subject is often implied
or named.


SENTENCE TYPES 2

Vocabulary

- A clause is a group of related words containing a subject and a verb ( part of sentence )
- A predicate is a part of a sentence or clause that contains a verb and states something about the subject
( tells us about the verb )

Simple Sentence

- Consists of a single, main, independent clause and has a subject and a predicate.
- Usually has no conduction.
- Eg. I like pumpkin pie

Compound Sentence

- Consists of 2 or more main, independent clauses.
- These clauses are separated by co-ordinating conjunctions.
~ FANBOYS ( for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so ).
- Eg. I don’t know how to bake, so I buy sweets.

Complex Sentence

- Consists of one, main, independent clause, and 1 or more dependent ( sub-ordinate ) clauses.
- Uses conjunctions that don’t fit in FANBOYS ( except so - check for independent and dependant clauses ).
- Conjunction either in front of sentence or after comma in the middle.
- Eg. I will watch you swim, because I want you to win.
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